Tag: Domestic

City Link's Strategic Sales team won the "International Sales Change Management Award" at the National Sales Awards

Award winning courier company, City Link, has been decorated with yet another accolade, this time acknowledging its best practice approach to change management.

The team at City Link received the ‘International Sales Change Management Award’ at the National Sales Awards this month in recognition of the City Link Strategic Sales team’s success during a period of significant change for the company which included the centralization of the sales function and the company’s franchise buy-back.

Strategy & Marketing Director Kriss Cocomazzi said: “The National Sales Awards programme recognizes best practice in the professional sales industry and we were up against some fierce competition. The award shows the priority we have given to improving our strategic sales activity and becoming more customer focused during a period of significant change.”

“We want to be known as the carrier of choice for high value services and customer partnerships. Receiving this award is further evidence that we are going about meeting our objectives in the right way.”

In 2006 the premium next-day delivery company was awarded the prestigious title of ‘UK Courier Company 2007’ in an independent review of the industry conducted by the Institute of Transport Management.

This is City Link’s first award since joining with Target Express to form the UK’s premier express delivery company specializing in next-day deliveries across the UK and Ireland as well as international deliveries to over 200 countries worldwide.

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Vietnam: Foreign investors sniff postal sector opportunity

Foreign companies are lining up as Viet Nam opens its post and telecommunications industry, which is expected to be one of the most lucrative sectors in the country.

Last June, Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung issued a new directive easing the way for more foreign investment.

The Ministry of Post and Telematics is required to come up with a plan to open up the domestic post and telecommunications market for foreign companies in line with Viet Nam’s World Trade Organisation commitments.

In the postal service field, foreign companies will be allowed to enter into a joint venture with a Vietnamese post partner and their capital contributions to these projects must be less than 51 per cent.

Deputy Minister Nguyen Duc Lai said that the telecommunications ministry is drafting a decree with specific regulations for foreign investors.

The new decree includes measures aimed at removing impediments to investment activities in the posts and telecommunications field. The draft may be submitted to the government by year’s end.

Pham Hong Hai, director of the Telecommunications Department, predicted that foreign investors will be most interested in partnerships involving mobile services and renting of network infrastructures.

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Postcomm proposes to reject Royal Mail's zonal pricing application

Postcomm, the independent regulator for postal services, has announced that it is proposing to reject Royal Mail’s application to charge large mailers – using products which are not part of the universal service – different prices depending on where in the UK their mail is delivered (Royal Mail calls this zonal pricing).
Postcomm will issue a consultation document in August that will set out in detail why it is proposing to reject Royal Mail’s application. However, in the interests of reducing market uncertainty, the regulator is making this announcement today.
Royal Mail’s ‘zonal pricing’ application did not include services paid for by stamps or those bulk mail products that are included within the definition of the universal service which must, under the Postal Services Act, remain priced at a uniform rate regardless of delivery zone across the country. It is open to Royal Mail to submit a new application if it can be framed to meet the regulatory tests in Royal Mail’s licence and Postcomm’s statutory duties.
Royal Mail wanted to introduce this new pricing structure to these business mail products:
Mailsort 120 – first, second and third class, OCR and CBC;
Mailsort 700 – first, second and third class
Mailsort 1400 – third class;
Presstream – first and second class; and
Walksort – first and second class.

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Statement of Postmaster General/CEO John E. Potter subcommittee on federal workforce, postal service, and the District of Columbia of the committee on oversight and government reform House of Representatives, Washington, DC

Good afternoon, Mr. Chairman and members of the Subcommittee. I am pleased to be with you this afternoon to discuss one of the most difficult challenges faced by the Postal Service today – the need to balance rising costs within a rate structure defined by a price cap. By law, we are required to keep price adjustments at or below the rate of inflation for market-dominant products, over 90 percent of our revenue base.

In an ideal world, this would mean that our costs would not exceed the rate of inflation. Unfortunately, our costs are not governed by this same standard and many have been rising faster than the consumer price index.

Work-hour costs for our career employees have been growing at a rate above inflation. At the same time, First-Class Mail volume, which represents 50 percent of our revenue base, is declining. The number of addresses we serve is increasing by almost two million new households and businesses each year. This means that, on average – even with the recent rate change – we are delivering fewer pieces of mail to each address and average revenue per delivery is decreasing.

This is not a formula for long-term success. The challenge is to close the gap between prices and costs while maintaining quality service. The question is, “How do you do that?” As I see it, management can proceed along any of three paths.

First, we can continue to operate as we’ve been operating for more than three decades. After all, that brought us a level of success that no one could have imagined when the modern Postal Service was created in 1970. Service rose to record heights. We achieved our statutory “break even” mandate. And we reached unprecedented levels of efficiency.

The problem with this approach is that the ground rules have changed. To proceed along the path of business-as-usual would be inconsistent with our obligations under the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act of 2006. With the statutory rate cap imposed by the Act, we no longer have the option of adjusting rates to balance costs, and we experiencing competition in all product categories, including First-Class Mail. We have to do more, much more, if we are to keep our costs in check, with overall growth no higher than the rate of inflation. Prudent exercise of our fiduciary responsibility demands that we intensify our focus on the business imperative of driving costs out the system. We cannot afford to do any less.

A second path to closing the gap between rates and costs would be the absolute expansion of cost-reduction strategies such as the outsourcing of work now performed by Postal Service employees – whenever and wherever possible. This would certainly be effective when viewed from a pure cost-management perspective. But business success is not solely a factor of reducing costs. It is also a reflection of the entire organization working cooperatively to meet the needs of its customers. Proceeding along this path, while potentially reducing significant direct costs, could come with the intangible – but just as significant – costs, of undermining this primary goal.

That is why I prefer a third path – working directly with our unions to confront the critical issues we are facing as an organization, such as improving service to meet the changing needs of our customers in the marketplace, as well as the need to increase revenue and reduce costs. By doing this, we can develop the solutions that can help us overcome them.

The tentative collective-bargaining agreement we reached with the National Association of Letter Carriers last week does this. It keeps the most important focus where it must be – on our customers – by helping us to improve service and operational efficiency. It provides our employees with a fair wage. And it commits both parties to growing the business. This is more important than ever, as we operate in a competitive environment in which customers vote with their feet, no longer bound by a monopoly that is meaningle

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Americans approve of the new "forever" stamp

Americans apparently think the new “forever” stamp is a good idea.
Postmaster General John Potter says 1.2 billion of them have been sold since April. And he says he expects sales to jump in the months before any new rate increase.
The stamps will always be good for first-class postage, no matter what happens to postal rates.
Americans may be able to use the “forever stamp” to lock-in what they pay to send a letter, but the post office can’t lock-in its own expenses. And Potter says the biggest change he’s dealing with is a new law that limits rate increases to the rate of inflation.

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