Why is PackageX Receive an Alternative for Notifii Track?
Simply put, PackageX Receive and Notifii cater to the same industry segment. We help businesses with efficient package management, providing a streamlined experience for staff. Both apps allow you to manage a bulk of packages and mail with a similar set of features, but we take the lead with our OCR-enabled app that helps the staff scan multiple packages within a few seconds in one go. Isn't it amazing?

How Do We Help the Mailroom Operators?
What does a mailroom operator want? To save time and increase productivity. PackageX Receive and Notifii help the operators achieve this goal with a range of features. We help them alleviate personal risk, improve client experience, and effectively manage staff. The key to efficient package management is to help the mailroom operator do their job more succinctly. PackageX Receive keeps this aim a top priority and helps the operators perform better with the advanced technological capabilities.
Increased Productivity
Scan Quickly with OCR
One of the most noticeable differences between Notifii and PackageX Receive is that we use the industry's most advanced optical character recognition (OCR). Our groundbreaking technology turns your regular smartphone cameras into scanners that can scan barcodes, QR codes, handwritten labels, and any additional information within a few seconds. Don't worry about partially obscured, covered, or ripped barcodes because our scanner is smart enough to comprehend the meaning.
Mails usually do not come with a barcode, and that is where Notifii users run into trouble. They need to identify the recipients manually, place their mail in the correct folder, scan a barcode to attach to the folder, and notify the recipient. This process increases room for error. On the contrary, PackageX Receive's mobile app scans mail quickly and notifies the recipients automatically via email or a text message.
Package Automation
Instead of scanning barcodes and manually typing in recipient names to send notifications, as you do with Notifii, PackageX Receive's OCR technology automatically links the contents of the scanned label to the recipient in its system. In order to send a notification, the mailroom operator has to press a button simply. Then the whole process is done with minimal human involvement with PackageX Receive.
How Do We Help Mailroom Managers?
While the mailroom operators are worried about faster and easier package processing and alleviating personal risk, managers are more concerned about increasing efficiencies and saving costs. Managers are often looking for a package management app that provides sturdy analytics, easy integration, and the right price.
Analytics & Reports
A digital package management system means having access to analytics and reports. Off the bat, both Notifii and PackageX Receive do basic analytics such as package arrival times and dates and show you this information in dashboards.
Where the two products diverge is Notifii will send you curated reports that show monthly package counts, package activity by hour and day, speed of pick-up, and age of pending packages. It's a nice touch to see reports at a glance. Conversely, PackageX Receive shows package activity by the day and hour in its dashboards. These statistics are exportable into CSV files that can help you make decisions to save operational costs.

Notifii Track and PackageX Receive use a form of a technology called optical character recognition (OCR) that clearly identifies recipients when scanning packages. But PackageX Receive's OCR works by searching through label text and matches names with the associated recipient list. Notifii's OCR, on the other hand, only reads barcodes. Operators need to enter data manually if the barcode is unavailable or missing, creating more room for error.
When you get labels or barcodes that aren't exactly legible, you want the best OCR, so you don't have to waste time manually logging packages. PackageX Receive's stand-out feature is its OCR. With it, you can remain confident scanning in partially obscured, torn, or handwritten labels.