Tag: Deutsche Post

Deutsche Post to maintain regular mail prices and reduce mass mailing prices for 2004

Deutsche Post AG will maintain existing prices for regular mail and reduce prices for most mass mailings in 2004, the company said. The price for a standard letter weighing up to 20 grams for European delivery remains at €.55, while the price for non-advertising mass mailings drops to €.40 from €.45. Deutsche Post said its prices ranked seventh in comparison with other European postal services. The U.S. Postal Service charges $0.37 for domestic delivery of letters up to 28.6 grams.

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Deutsche Post – key prices for letters and postcards to be maintained in 2004

Deutsche Post will be maintaining its key prices for letters and postcards in the coming year. The Regulatory Authority for Telecommunications and Posts has approved the rates from 1 January 2004 as part of the review it conducts every year. Under the new scale of rates, “Standardbrief” items (up to 20 grams) will continue to cost EUR 0.55, “Kompaktbrief” items (up to 50 grams) will still cost EUR 1.00, “Großbrief” items (up to 500 grams) EUR 1.44, “Maxibrief” items (up to 1,000 grams) EUR 2.20 and postcards EUR 0.45.

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Deutsche Post faces complaint by publishers

BVDA, the German association of publishers of advertising papers, and BDZV, the German newspaper publishers’ association, are reported to have lodged a complaint with the German antitrust authority against Deutsche Post, the German national postal service operator. They are hoping to prevent the postal group from continuing to deliver an advertising journal in a pilot project together with a free TV programme information magazine.

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Europe's express-delivery king Deutsche Post aims for U.S. market

Deutsche Post World Net CEO Klaus Zumwinkel likes to point out to visitors that he can see no fewer than three ancient castles from his office atop the company’s ultramodern new headquarters in Bonn. But when it comes to reach and influence, the old German barons had nothing on Zumwinkel.

Other German business titans, such as Ron Sommer of Deutsche Telekom or Henning Schulte-Noelle of insurer Allianz, were ousted after their grand strategies went awry. Zumwinkel is still unassailable after 13 years at the top of Deutsche Post, the German postal service. The company is still majority owned by the government and still delivers the mail, but under Zumwinkel, it also has become a profitable, publicly listed multinational with annual sales of $46 billion and the largest express-delivery business in Europe and Asia. “We want to be the leading logistics company in the world,” declares Zumwinkel, who also sits on the supervisory boards of Deutsche Telekom and Lufthansa, and who counts German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder among his friends.

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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.

 

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