Tag: Europe

First time buyers are overstretched and under protected

Nearly half (48 per cent) of first time buyers (FTBs) would only be able to meet their mortgage repayments for six months if they lost their regular income tomorrow, reveals new research by Post Office® Financial Services.

With the average house deposit now at GBP 11,710, many FTBs are left overstretched financially. A third then face the additional shock of household running costs, which are much higher than they expected.

The Post Office® research reveals that despite these financial pressures, many FTBs are skimping on protecting themselves. Almost half (45 per cent) of FTBs don’t have any kind of protection against loss of income, from accident, sickness or unemployment (Payment Protection Insurance). Of those who are unprotected, the majority (44 per cent) have avoided doing so because they think it’s too expensive. Almost a third just don’t think they need it.

Read More

Find the best post offices in Britain

Your local post office could be based in an unusual venue such as a pub, tearoom, church, or farmyard. Or maybe you live in a city and value the friendly service of your busy urban branch. Whatever the case, your Post Office needs you.

In a nationwide competition organised by the Post Office and launched by TV presenter Ben Fogle, customers are being asked to nominate the best rural, urban and most innovative branches.

Your local post office could be based in an unusual venue such as a pub, tearoom, church, or farmyard. Or maybe you live in a city and value the friendly service of your busy urban branch. Whatever the case, your Post Office needs you.

Prizes will be awarded in six categories. There is one for the best rural branch, the best town or city branch, and the best main branch directly managed by Post Office Ltd. Then there is the ‘above and beyond’ prize for the staff and branch that has gone the extra mile for its customers, a charity and fundraising prize for the one that has done the most for charity or community action, and finally a ‘most innovative’ branch award.

Cash prizes of between Pounds 500 and Pounds 1,000 will be made to regional finalists and national winners will also receive a prize of Pounds 1,000 with the same sum donated to a local charity or community project of their choice. The prize money goes to postmasters, who can distribute it as they wish.

With the network of post office branches in chronic decline, what better way to send a message of support than vote for your own?

Read More

Small firms set to pay more for post

Small Businesses will have to pay pounds 1.5 billion more each year on postage due to Royal Mail’s price restructuring, a survey suggests.
The prediction came as Postwatch, the consumer watchdog, gave a warning that post offices were ill-prepared for tomorrow’s introduction of Pricing in Proportion (PiP), with a third of them having inadequate information to explain the changes to customers.
Research by the Forum of Private Business (FPB), a lobbying organisation, found that a quarter of Britain’s four million small companies believe PiP will saddle them with an increase in postage costs of 15 per cent or more.
According to Postcomm, the postal service regulator, a small business with fewer than 50 staff pays, on average, up to pounds 10,000 a year. If these companies continue to use the service at current volumes – more than 19 billion letters and parcels a year – the one million companies that will be affected by the changes will see an average increase in their costs of pounds 1,500 each, or pounds 1.5 billion overall.

Read More

Mizuho, SMBC to share finger-vein biometric ATMs with Japan Post – report

Mizuho Bank and Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp are in the final stages of separate talks with Japan Post about sharing each other’s ATMs using the same biometric authentication system, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun reported, citing sources close to the matter.

The banks aim to start the service in October, it said.

At present, bank cards that use finger-vein or palm-vein authentication technology, which are considered highly secure due to the difficulty of counterfeiting, can only be accepted by ATMs of banks that issue the cards.

If such cards were compatible with the postal savings system’s ATMs, the most extensive network in Japan, it will fuel the spread of biometric cards.

Read More

Post offices `not ready for new charges'

A third of post offices are not ready for the introduction of postal charges based on size rather than weight, a Government watchdog has warned.
Postwatch predicted long queues at post offices on Monday as the new regulations come into effect.
The Royal Mail said postage for more than 80% of items, including business post, will stay the same or be cheaper.
The change was being introduced so prices reflected more fairly the actual cost of collecting, sorting and delivering mail, it said.
A survey conducted by Postwatch found that 37% of offices had not put up a poster explaining the changes, known as Pricing in Proportion (PiP).
Leaflets explaining the new system were not available at 32% of 307 offices visited and 34% did not have a measuring template displayed so that customers could check the size of their post.
Under PiP, the price of an average first class letter will be 32p but if its length exceeds 240mm, its width 165mm or its thickness 5mm, it will be classed as a large letter. This will cost 44p to post if it weighs less than 100 grammes.
Anything more than 353mm long or 250mm wide or 25mm thick will be considered to be a packet and will cost between GBP 1 and GBP 4.74, depending on its weight.

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