Postal firm DX confident that doubling its size is in the bag
DX, the postal business bought last year by private equity firm Candover Partners, is confident it can double in size over the next few years as deregulation of the postal industry gathers pace.
The firm – originally known as Document Exchange – was started nationally in the mid-1970s on the back of a major postal strike. The legal profession and law societies decided that they needed an alternative postal network. With a network of branches across the UK, DX is now one of the biggest competitors to Royal Mail.
DX, which has more than 27,000 private and public sector customers, stands to benefit if Royal Mail staff press ahead with the first national postal strike for 11 years.
Earlier this month, some 69,000 members of the Communication Workers Union – 77 per cent of those voting – backed a strike over pay and cost efficiency plans.
As well as legal practices, DX services surveyors, accountants, estate agents and other professional services firms. Its new Rutland Square facility can count all of the major Scottish law firms among its users.
Although DX is focused primarily on next-day business mail services, its clients have access to a special delivery product that covers both business and residential addresses.
Candover paid almost £350m last July to secure DX. The venture capital heavyweight also bought Secure Mail Services, which delivers cheque books and credit cards to consumers, for an undisclosed sum.
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