Tag: hybrid mail

Web post can save the planet and cut costs

First there was VOIP – the revolutionary new way to make cheap phone calls over the internet. Now there’s POIP – or post-over-internet-protocol – which promises to slash the cost of sending business letters.

A new company called Viapost has opened its doors and is advertising its services directly to small firms.

Founded by serial entrepreneur Ben Way, 27, Viapost will charge only 24p to deliver a one sheet letter the next day to anywhere in the UK – and it will pay for the stationery and ink.

advertisementViapost’s chief executive Simon Campbell, 28, said: “We are doing for the postal market what Skype has done for the telephone market. It’s so simple in many ways: it’s cheaper, it’s faster and it’s greener.”

Like Skype, firms register on the site, download the free software and add credit to an account, which is then accessed on a pay as you go basis.

Viapost has developed the software and has partnered with printing centres around the country so that letters can be printed close to where they are to be delivered. The firm still uses the Royal Mail’s postmen to deliver the letters to people’s homes.

Mr Campbell said the firm would have 10 printing centres in major cities like London, Manchester, Leeds and Glasgow to start with. The target is 30 for full national coverage.

At the same time, Viapost is planning international expansion. “We are talking about sending a letter to Hong Kong that will arrive tomorrow and only cost you the price of a local stamp,” said Mr Campbell. “We want to go into the deregulated German market and the States. Within three years we are looking at handling over three billion items a year.”

Mr Campbell said large companies like banks and utilities were particularly interested by the environmental savings that could be made.

Carbon Planet, an Australian firm that conducts carbon audits, has just inspected the firm. “They found our processes will reduce 75pc of the carbon footprint of sending a letter,” said Mr Campbell, who is a serial entrepreneur having set up four businesses in the last six years.

Mr Way said he came up with the idea two years ago when he first read about the proposed deregulation of postal services.

“The more I looked into it the more excited I got,” he said. “I have to say that Viapost, if it’s a success, is the biggest project I have worked on in my life. It’s a GBP 5bn industry.”

Mr Way made his name developing a search technology called Waysearch, which later became a business-to-business product called Pulsar.

The business went bust during the dot.com crash, but he has bounced back and is now involved in eight ventures via his intellectual property development firm Rainmakers and in his role as chief innovations officer of Bright Station Venture’s GBP 100m venture capital fund.

Viapost has assembled an impressive board, all of whom have invested in the company. The non-executives include Chris Moss, founder of directory assistance service 118118, advertising guru MT Rainey, former Microsoft UK board director Natalie Ayres and David Bland, the former south east chairman of consumer champion Postwatch.

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Viapost service to challenge postal operators

Royal Mail and other postal operators will face a new competitive challenge next month, with the launch of a service that promises to cut the cost of business mail and reduce the carbon emissions of sending letters through the post.

Viapost will allow customers to e-mail letters to distribution centres around the country, where they will be printed out, folded and sorted before being handed over to local Royal Mail distribution centres for final delivery to the recipients.

Although Royal Mail will deliver for Viapost over “the final mile”, the new service is likely to take business from its collection and sorting business where t has already lost a large share of the market to competitors such as TNT Post and UK Mail.

The state-owned operator is currently locked in negotiations with the postal union over its modernisation plans, with a deadline of Tuesday for reaching agreement to avoid further strikes.

However, the new service will also pose a threat to Royal Mail’s competitors, since it could prove attractive to the large business mailers that have already switched to private-sector providers but want to reduce their carbon footprint.

The Viapost regional centres will be much closer to the 70 Royal Mail access points that take in post for final delivery and using them will reduce carbon emissions associated with mailings by up to 60 per cent.

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Workers at four of DHL's independent carriers join Teamsters

About 70 workers at four independent carriers that serve DHL joined the Teamsters, a union official said Friday.

Workers at E.D. Express and Supreme Delivery Service voted for the move this week, while employees last week ratified the union’s presence at Jennings and Associates, according to Dennis Hower, vice president of Teamsters Local 773 in Allentown.

At a fourth company, Northeastern Express, the employer voluntarily recognized the workers’ right to unionize, Hower said.

The four businesses are on Marcon Boulevard in Hanover Township, Lehigh County.

Meanwhile, about 400 workers at DHL’s distribution center in Upper Macungie Township have been stymied in efforts to unionize.

The American Postal Workers Union organized a news conference July 12 to call attention to the issue and what the union calls the unjust firing of an employee and labor organizer, Eliana Rios.

The Teamsters, which represents about 12,000 workers either at DHL or affiliated contractors, is also attempting to organize workers at the DHL facility in Lehigh County, Hower said Friday.

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IQ Letternet: Press Release

IQ Letternet is a new hybrid mail organisation that is linked to last mile delivery. The press release explains what it has achieved in its first month of operation. They also give details of their systems, internal/physical structure and why they believe they would be a good option for organisations/customers to use. They are seeking partners.

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Saharan Hybrid service

Hybrid mail is to go nationwide in morocco as the first part o f a wider e-services initiative. Danish postal IT company IDP will supply an advanced hybrid mail solution in the market, together with additional support and services.
The Morocco Post, one of the most sophisticated postal organisations in north Africa, is planning to launch a series of advanced services to meet the requirements of its customers. The first step in implementing this strategy is the launch of a hybrid mail service.

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