On a weekly basis I have long, multi-part conversations with Amazon couriers who can't find this address, despite Amazon packages being (eventually) delivered here on a regular basis.
I would have thought one successful delivery might be enough to send useful location data back upstream for use on the next delivery.
Just yesterday, an Amazon courier said they would return a parcel unless I changed the address or went to a pick up point, because they tried to deliver and it was 'impossible to access'.
Surely there are straightforward solutions that harness the data from at least one successful delivery?
In the US, the USPS runs the Address Management System used as (basically) the canonical source of mailing addresses used by most if not all couriers and you can reach your "local" AMS office by way of https://postalpro.usps.com/ppro-tools/address-management-sys... to inquire about your address. This is commonly done during new construction, subdivisions, and so on but typically starts with the postmaster in your local office forwarding onto AMS for edits.
That was not for deliveries, but that is what is needed.
I work in an office building that has a confusing address. I can easily use DoorDash and Uber Eats because they have this feature but GrubHub does not and those drivers always get lost.
Engineering effort to efficiency gotta see this being a win.
My solution is I added signs, and delivery instructions that reference the signs.