Tag: Domestic

Union wants delay in opening up Dutch post market

The Netherlands should open its postal market to full competition only when all workers in the sector get minimum wages and have labour contracts, a senior official at Dutch union FNV Bondgenoten said on Tuesday.

“We do not want workers to pay for an open market,” Jan de Jong, an FNV Bondgenoten director responsible for road transport and haulage affairs, told Reuters in an interview.
“At this moment, lots of postal workers do not have minimum wages. Workers at Selekt Mail and Sandd earn less than 40 percent of minimum wages. They only work two, three days a week. There should be a level playing field for everybody,” he said.

The Dutch government postponed the full opening of the market, due in January, in part because of the introduction of a minimum wage for postal workers in Germany, which it said impedes competition and where TNT had hoped to expand its operations.

It also cited ongoing talks on labour conditions for postmen in the Netherlands. The economy ministry is expected to update Parliament by this week on the situation.
Dominant mail company TNT NV has the remaining monopoly for letters up to 50 grammes, with the market estimated to be worth about 1 billion euros in 2007.

TNT’s workers have employment contracts, but rivals Sandd and Deutsche Post’s Dutch unit Selekt Mail usually do not offer contracts and pay postal workers by the number of items delivered.

This situation should only be tolerated in the short term until the companies are able to compete more effectively with TNT, said de Jong.

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DX call for rebalancing of mail market in UK

DX Mail services has reminded Postcomm that the present VAT exemption enjoyed by Royal Mail makes the mail market in the UK somewhat unbalanced and since Postcomm has no powers to change this directly, it should consider ‘levelling the playing field upwards through the adoption of measures that positively discriminate in favour of new entrants’

DX argue that the VAT exemption status of Royal Mail means that rivals are at a disadvantage in comparison with RoyalMail, and TNT and UK Mail (who use Royal Mail for the final mile delivery) are able to take advantage of the recently introduced agency agreements to minimise VAT liability for their customers whereas DX has to apply VAT.

The European Commission sent formal requests to the UK, Germany and Sweden in 2006 with regard to VAT application on postal services and more recently TNT, the Dutch postal operator has raised concerns over VAT in Germany where Deutsche Poste AG also enjoys VAT exemption for 40 pct of its operations.

However, the German Economy Minister, Michael Glos, recently announced plans to restrict the VAT privalege, and the USO in Germany will in future by VAT free for competitors as well as Deutsche Poste.

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Why are SMEs so reluctant to switch postal operator?

Two years after the market for postal services was liberalised, it is not just the funding for the Mailing Preference Service which is under threat. Royal Mail is also starting to feel the impact. At the same time as mail volumes declined by 2 per cent in 2006/07, downstream access (DSA) licence holders accounted for 11.8 per cent of volume.

The effect of competition is disproportionate at this early stage – those DSA-mailed items accounted for 19 per cent of Royal Mail’s revenues. The reason why revenue share is higher than volume share can be found in the Business Customer Survey carried out by Postcomm in December 2007.

It found that among all mail users, 15 per cent were using multiple service providers. In the top segment, this figure was 35 per cent. Indeed, large business have been the quickest to switch, with 41 per cent using more than one mailing service provider.

Among SMEs, the picture is different. Postcomm found 21 per cent of medium-sized businesses were taking advantage of multiple mail providers, while only 17 per cent of small businesses were doing so.

This may explain why the IDMF in April will feature a Postal Switch Centre. Both DSA licence holders and overseas postal services will be grouped together in a specific area of the exhibition to try to encourage the mid-market to look at using rival postal services.

As Graham Cooper, managing director of OnePost, which is exhibiting in the switching centre, says: “There is a whole heap of activity in the mid-market company area and using an organisation like ours takes the pain out of it.”

His business is attracting 18 new clients per month and has passed the 10 million items monthly mark. “They are not all major direct mail users,” Cooper points out. Significantly for the opening up of the market, the DSA licence holders went for the big mailers first.

The early days of competition did bring with them anecdotal evidence of problems. Prime among these was a lack of logistical resources within the DSA operations. Two years on, investment has filled these gaps and mailing houses have learned to work across multiple providers efficiently.

End users are generally unaware of these problems. Instead, their focus has been principally on price and secondly on service and quality of service. For the mid-market, the answer in both of those areas is not that switching would lead to improvements.

Ben Allan is managing director of Tilt, an agency which publishes the collaborative marketing title Asrecommended. “We have looked at the postal services market from a cost perspective and no-one has got close to Royal Mail’s Mailsort 3,” he says.

With something like nine out of ten cold acquisition items being sent via this service, Royal Mail may have grounds for feeling secure in its market share. “The others are about 1p per item off,” says Allan.

He believes the significant account wins by rivals have been in other mailstreams. “Switchers appear to be those with time-sensitive items, like bills and statements. They are going to rivals which are competitive from a cost point of view. For direct mail prospect mailings, they are not competitive,” he says.

One service offered by DSA licence holders which has gained attention is the two-day delivery guarantee. Where a campaign is likely to trigger a high volume of calls, clients need to ensure they have the right resource in place. Knowing on what days a mailing will arrive is helpful and can lead to cost-savings.

But Allan argues that many acquisition campaigns do not need this: “The two-day drop is not useful to us. Mailsort 3 drops over a ten-day period which is more than sufficient.”

Alternative providers simply do not exist for national brands that want to use unaddressed mail. “No-one has got the coverage,” says Allan. “Free newspapers don’t work well for financial services. Consumers respond to them at one-fifth the rate of Royal Mail unaddressed, but the medium only costs half the

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Revocation notice for Challenger Security Services (Admin) Limited

Postcomm has today gvien 30 days’ notice to revoke Challenger Security Services (Admin) Limited’s licence following receipt of the company’s consent to do so.

More information on licensing is available at the postal licences and operators section of the website.

http://www.psc.gov.uk/postcomm/live/policy-and-consultations/consultations/licensing–challenger-security-services/2008_02_25_Challenger_-_licence_revocation_notice.pdf

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Portuguese postal unions to strike. UNI demands Portugal Post (CTT) start proper negotiations

Two of UNI’s Portuguese affiliates, SNTCT and SINDETELCO, are taking strike action Monday 25 February to protest against work deregulation and to demand the renegotiation of a decent collective agreement. The unions action is taken to try and stop CTT – Correios de Portugal, S.A (the Portuguese Postal Service) from destroying the benefits of the workers that have been gained in the past through negotiations.

UNI Post & Logistics has sent a message of solidarity to the workers and has called on CTT to immediately start meaningful negotiations with the trade unions.

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