Tag: Canada

Canada Post enhances unaddressed admail

The National Association of Major Mail Users (NAMMU) has reported that “Canada Post is introducing enhancements to the Unaddressed Admail order creation process based on customer feedback, effective April 16. Designed to enhance flexibility, these changes include the ability to create a new mailing plan from a previous order; access improved functionality to import and export mailing information from one system to another; print Admail Delivery Slips and Container Labels before the order is transmitted to Canada Post. Full descriptions of changes and enhancements are in a brochure mailed to clients this month.”

Read More

Canada’s postal service helping U.S. retailers

Consumer-goods companies in the United States are taking advantage of the Internet to reach Canadian consumers who are growing more comfortable buying from foreigners.

For years, retailers such as Best Buy, Sears and Wal-Mart have had stores north of the border, but many consumer-goods companies have yet to set foot in Canada, for a variety of reasons – labor costs and distribution difficulties among them.

For those companies, catalogs, and now the Internet, are the way to reach a Canadian market that saw $200 billion in retail sales during 2005, the latest full year for which sales data is available.

Canada Post – Canada’s postal administration – is looking to help U.S. companies reach into the country with its Borderfree service.

The service helps companies market directly to Canadians, who’ve been reluctant to buy through catalogs or on the Internet.

The service provides marketing data to retailers and consumer-goods companies looking to find the residents most likely to buy their goods, smooths out the ordering process and helps get the goods through customs and into buyers’ hands.

“The Canadian market is a little bit different than the U.S. market,” said Patrick Bartlett, of Canada Post.

For one, Canada is larger than the United States, but has about one-tenth the population – 32.3 million people in 2005, according to Statistics Canada, the country’s national statistics agency.

Marketing data on Canadians are not as detailed as they are on Americans, Bartlett said, making it harder for companies to find customers.

“We built this service to close that gap,” he said. “We help them build a marketing plan.”

Borderfree helps complete sales as well, with software that calculates customs duties, transportation handling fees and taxes and then converts the total to Canadian dollars.

“In crossing the border, there’s some issues and some difficulties,” Bartlett said.

Borderfree helps move the goods to shoppers’ doorsteps. It operates collection centers in Michigan and New York where goods are shipped for distribution into Canada.

In some cases, Borderfree maintains computers inside U.S. shipping terminals to direct goods headed to Canada.

More than 80 U.S. companies take advantage of Borderfree, including Brookstone, of Merrimack, N.H. The gadget retailer is a familiar presence in U.S. malls, operating more than 300 stores in the United States and Puerto Rico but not a single one in Canada.

Brookstone was one of the first U.S. companies to use Borderfree, signing up for the service in 2001 at the same time the company launched its own Web site for shoppers, said Steve August, Brookstone’s operational vice president.

Canada is Brookstone’s largest market outside the United States, he said, with annual sales in that country “north of seven figures.”

Among the tasks Borderfree handles are: processing customs paperwork; determining duty fees and Canadian provincial taxes and calculating exchange rates.

Getting the products to Canadians was once problematic for Brook-stone, August said, as buyers were sometimes forced to pick up purchases at a customs office.

“We would have to go through a whole bunch of gyrations,” he said, to complete sales to Canadians. Using Borderfree “is far simpler and cleaner.”

When someone in Canada orders a product through Brookstone’s Web site, he or she is ultimately redirected to Borderfree, which handles the billing.

Depending on what the customer orders, the goods are shipped from Brookstone’s distribution center in Mexico, Mo., to Borderfree’s collection depots, where workers re-route the goods to destinations in Canada.

The system has worked well enough for the company to put off opening stores in Canada, August said.

Opening stores there would force Brookstone to hire workers and managers there as well as deal with aspects of Canada’s consumer laws – such as product labeling – that it doesn’t have to now, he said.

“It just introduc

Read More

Cost of maintaining rural mail service questioned

Lorelei Beal says it’s “ridiculous” that Canada Post plans to fork over more than CD500 million to maintain rural mail delivery across the country.

The Conservative government ordered the post office late last year to continue rural roadside delivery amid concerns about the safety of mail carriers on busy rural roads.

Beal, who lives on Highway 7 between Guelph and Rockwood, said postal workers haven’t expressed any safety concerns about door-to-door mail delivery for years.

She is one of the rural residents who’s still getting mail delivered to her mailbox. Not all residents have been so lucky.

Some Puslinch Township residents were irked last year when they were told they wouldn’t get their mail delivered to the end of their laneway anymore, but instead had to pick up letters at a communal super-mailbox.

Canada Post spokesperson John Caines said this week it will cost CD153 million over the next two years to implement their rural delivery plan.

However, Canada Post expects to spend more than CD500 million over five years to ensure rural residents are receiving their mail, he said.

Caines said staff have to be hired to assess 843,000 rural customers in five years, which explains the huge cost.

He said Canada Post expects within the next 18 months to examine whether service to 5,500 rural mailboxes should be restored.

Wellington-Halton Hills MP Michael Chong isn’t certain what Canada Post’s solution will entail, but said rural Canadians expect home delivery.

Canada Post has been given a monopoly on mail delivery and in return residents should expect to get their mail, Chong said.

Read More

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

P&P Poll

Loading

What's the future of the postal USO?

Thank you for voting
You have already voted on this poll!
Please select an option!



Post & Parcel Magazine


Post & Parcel Magazine is our print publication, released 3 times a year. Packed with original content and thought-provoking features, Post & Parcel Magazine is a must-read for those who want the inside track on the industry.

 

Pin It on Pinterest