
What Is Reverse Geocoding?
Reverse geocoding is the opposite process to geocoding, which involves appending latitude and longitude coordinates to address data. With reverse geocoding, software links geographic coordinates to address data.
Reverse geocoding is the opposite process to geocoding, which involves appending latitude and longitude coordinates to address data. With reverse geocoding, software links geographic coordinates to address data.
Geolocation is the process of converting an address into a geocode, which specifically refers to latitude and longitude coordinates. The main use case for geolocation is to standardize location data into a universal system that is not dependent on a regional postal code.
NCOA is an acronym for National Change of Address. It is a database that keeps track of permanent changes of addresses for individuals, families, and businesses.
CASS is an acronym for Coding Accuracy Support System. It is a certification program, established and maintained by the United States Postal Service (USPS), for software vendors that rely on official address records.
For businesses that reach customers in North America, returned mail is a multi-billion dollar problem. For eCommerce companies that sell physical goods, especially, the problem can be quite frustrating due to restocking, chargebacks and redelivery fees.
According to research by MetaPack, 5% of all online orders fail to make it to their intended location. Even if the failed delivery was actually caused by the courier, 78% of consumers still expect the retailer to resolve the issue. The average cost of a failed delivery is $17.78.
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