DHL Vietnam now threatens to destroy an entire shipment because of a few disputed items. I’ve authorised removal of those items only — but the clock is ticking. Leaders take note: proportionality matters, and silence only deepens reputational damage
Category: Expat
DHL HQ can’t plead ignorance anymore. Their Vietnam branch’s false paperwork and mishandling have been exposed, and every major inbox has been notified. Silence only deepens reputational damage — DHL must act now to restore trust and accountability The post DHL HQ can’t claim ignorance now appeared first on vietnam leadership coach.
DHL Vietnam claims my shipment was “30 days overdue.” My passport stamp proves it was 16 days. This open letter to DHL, Pack & Send, regulators, and media demands accountability — and shows why denial only multiplies reputational damage. Read the full open letter here → The post Open letter to DHL and Pack &…
DHL Vietnam has been given a final escalation warning: resolve my shipment within 48 hours or face escalation to public, regulatory, and global executive levels. Leadership lesson: silence and evasion always multiply reputational damage. Read the full warning here… The post DHL Vietnam warned: resolve this or face escalation appeared first on vietnam leadership coach.
DHL Vietnam’s latest excuse? That my shipment was “30 days overdue.” The truth: it’s built on false paperwork DHL themselves created. Leaders—take note. Silence and evasion always worsen reputational fallout. Read the full evidence and analysis now The post DHL Vietnam’s false 30-day excuse: When incompetence blocks shipments appeared first on vietnam leadership coach.
DHL Vietnam’s shipment saga shows how contradictions and evasions erode trust. This isn’t just one failed delivery — it’s a reputational case study for leaders everywhere. Silence doesn’t buy time; it buys damage. Read the full timeline and lesson for leaders The post DHL Vietnam’s long saga of delay and denial appeared first on vietnam…
DHL Vietnam’s latest claim is that my shipment is “30 days overdue.” But this excuse rests on false paperwork DHL created themselves. Read how bureaucratic fiction turns into real risk, and why leaders can’t hide behind it
Instead of answers, DHL Vietnam sent an auto-reply: “We’re closed for National Day, skeleton staff available by phone.” My shipment remains trapped. This isn’t customer service — it’s avoidance with a smile. Context transforms communication, and DHL failed that leadership test
In its formal letter, DHL Vietnam claimed it has “no direct contractual relationship” with shipper or consignee. This distancing tactic highlights a refusal to take accountability for admitted errors. Read my open response and see why avoidance won’t protect their reputation
After ignoring my ultimatum, DHL tried a new tactic—phone calls from hidden and semi-hidden numbers. Calls leave no paper trail, no accountability. I log every attempt so their avoidance strategy becomes part of the public record—because silence won’t save them