Tag: North America

DHL "Virtual Warehouse" service relaunched

DHL announced a new shipment visibility enhancement to its DHL Global Forwarding Consolidated Distribution Service (CDS), a US Import service that enables customers to reduce brokerage fees and shorten delivery times for shipments originating in Asia, Europe, and Latin America. The new web-based tracking service provides point-to-point tracking for shipments as they pass through DHL’s international freight forwarding and U.S. Express network.

The relocation of manufacturing bases worldwide has required businesses to operate on a global scale, with products moving greater distances across multiple borders. To speed up shipments through this lengthened supply chain, DHL created CDS, a “virtual” warehouse which eliminates the need for a costly distribution center. With CDS, bulk shipments sent from overseas can be broken down and inducted directly into the DHL US Express or Global Forwarding network for final delivery to the end consumer, bypassing time-consuming warehouse stops.

With web-based tracking, DHL customers can now get full visibility of their goods through the CDS service, from point of production to point of purchase. Customers can track shipments from a single tracking site, and obtain near real time information on the status of shipments as they transfer from bulk international air or ocean line-haul shipments to smaller units within the DHL U.S. Express or Global Forwarding heavyweight network.

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Postal Regulatory Commission sets date for comments on USPS

The Postal Regulatory Commission has set 20th April 2007 as the deadline for comments on the U.S. Postal Service’s request to allow the testing of the placement of repositionable notes on mailing envelopes until April 2, 2008.

The USPS filed a request with the PRC on April 2 to postpone the April 3 termination date for the repositionable notes test and extend the termination date for one additional year.

RPNs are sticky notes that can be placed on envelopes, catalogs, magazines or newspapers to highlight information or an offer. Because the notes can be removed easily, the recipient can place them somewhere handy as a reminder of the offer. The service was implemented on April 3, 2005.

The USPS also said that the filing of the request acts to postpone the current termination date. The USPS was granted a one-year extension of the repositionable note program in 2006 to take it through April 3, 2007.

At the time, the USPS said the extension was needed to make sure there is no disruption in service to customers planning spring mailings using RPNs, also known as “yellow stickies.”

RPNs are allowed on all letter- and flat-sized mail sent at discount First Class, Standard and Periodicals rates. The rate for RPN-bearing mail is 0.5 cents for First Class pieces and 1.5 cents for Standard and Periodicals pieces

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UPS employment rises over 20,000 in Louisville

UPS employment in the Louisville area has topped 20,000 for the first time, and the shipping giant expects to add more than 5,000 workers with the completion of a USD1 billion expansion of the Worldport air-package hub at Louisville International Airport in November 2010.

UPS’ 20,674 workers at the end of last year outnumbered Jefferson County Public Schools’ employment and represented an increase of nearly 2,300 workers from a year earlier.

The June opening of a 700,000-square-foot heavy-freight air hub, which has about 1,100 workers, made up a significant part of the hiring, said Pat Murphy, work force planning manager.

Employment was relatively steady at UPS’ air division, including pilots, package handlers and administrative positions; its ground division, which includes the brown-truck package delivery service; and Supply Chain Solutions, the company’s logistics operation, Murphy said.

In 1982, when United Parcel Service introduced overnight service to a small air-package sorting center it had opened in Louisville the previous year, the company had 115 workers here.

Murphy said he does not expect more large increases in employment until the first phase of the Worldport expansion is complete in 2009, with final construction work ending the next year. UPS expects the added capacity will create 1,284 full-time jobs and 3,787 part-time positions.

Worldport was the largest capital expansion project in UPS history, doubling the air hub’s size to 4 million square feet and boosting the sorting capacity from 215,000 packages per hour to 304,000.

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UPS franchisees call delivery giant their biggest rival

UPS Store owners all over the country are packing it in, including 10 in the Dallas-Fort Worth area in the last two years. And the numbers could grow, raising alarms about a possible franchise fiasco.

Mike Gorlano, 50, couldn’t get back half of what he paid for his UPS Store in Carrollton. He’s living off his savings while looking for a new career. Andy Weir, 43, faces thousands of dollars of debt after closing his UPS Store in Richardson. The problem stems from an unusual situation: The stores can’t compete with United Parcel Service Inc.’s Web site.

Many current and former franchisees accuse the package delivery giant of using the Internet to take away their customers.

Most of the franchisees that failed are mom-and-pop operations that sank all of their savings into their stores. The owners say UPS is destroying their livelihoods and retirement dreams.

In his nearly two years as a UPS Store franchisee, Mr. Davis never broke even. He invested $180,000 to get the franchise, cashing out his 401(k), selling stock and taking out a loan.

Atlanta-based UPS denies that it’s undercutting its franchisees.

The problem isn’t limited to the Dallas-Fort Worth market, which has 49 stores. UPS Stores in other cities are also losing money, and some are shutting their doors.

To fight back, a group of 220 current and former franchisees from around the country, including a few from the Dallas area, is suing UPS and its franchisor, Mail Boxes Etc., accusing them of breach of contract, fraud, unfair trade practices and other actions.

UPS has been encouraging its franchisees to put more emphasis on nonshipping services, particularly copying and faxing. It’s running television commercials with the tag line “The UPS Store … the place for document services and a whole lot more.”

Focusing on these services produced positive results in tests at some stores, Mr. Hallabrin said.

But even if the strategy works, it may be too late for many franchisees, who say document services account for only a tiny portion of their revenue. They also note that UPS Stores are not known for these services and don’t have the equipment and expertise of rivals like FedEx Kinko’s.

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DHL relaunches 'Virtual Warehouse'

DHL introduced a Web-based service to provide point-to-point tracking for shipments as they pass through the company’s international freight forwarding and U.S. Express network. The service is an enhancement to the Consolidated Distribution Service that handles U.S. imports.

CDS acts as a “virtual” warehouse for bulk shipments from overseas by breaking them down and inducting them directly into the DHL US Express or Global Forwarding network for final delivery to the end consumer, bypassing time-consuming warehouse stops.

“By linking the unique capabilities of DHL’s heavy weight and express operations, we have created a virtual moving warehouse for customers in the air or over water,” said Bruce Grout, Senior Vice President of DHL Global Forwarding Consolidated Distribution Service.

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