Courier services for IT and technical service businesses
IT and technical work runs on equipment that’s expensive to replace, sensitive to handle, and almost always needed somewhere specific by a particular time. The courier requirements that come with that aren’t quite the same as standard parcel work.
We work with IT service businesses, equipment suppliers, and technical service providers across Melbourne — handling the deliveries that keep field technicians working and client sites running.
The kind of work we handle
Equipment to and from client sites — laptops, network gear, hardware swaps, anything that needs to reach a technician or be returned to base.
Parts and replacement components — same-day to a service call, often urgent because someone’s waiting on the other end.
Inter-office and warehouse transfers — moving stock between your locations, or between you and your suppliers, on regular or scheduled patterns.
Document and small-equipment delivery — contracts, hardware, accessories, anything where the courier needs to actually understand what they’re carrying.
Care matters
Most of what we move for technical customers is either valuable, fragile, or both. Our drivers handle it accordingly — proper packaging, sensible loading, and the kind of attention that comes from familiar people doing the work consistently rather than a different driver every time.
When timing is the whole job
Technical work has a lot of jobs where the courier is part of a chain that can’t move without it. A field technician needs a part by 2pm or the customer is going home. A replacement laptop has to reach a client site before the user starts work tomorrow. A failed device needs to be back at the supplier before the SLA expires.
For those jobs, we use urgent or direct service properly — assigned, priced, and handled like the time-sensitive work it is. For everything else, standard same-day usually does the job.
A good fit if
You run a technical business with regular delivery needs, you want a courier provider who treats your equipment carefully, and you understand the difference between routine and time-critical work.
