Brief country report: United States of America – Main developments in the postal sector (2006-2008)
Brief country report: United States of America – Main developments in the postal sector (2006-2008)
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Brief country report: United States of America – Main developments in the postal sector (2006-2008)
Read MoreUnited Parcel Service said its plan to take over U.S. air shipments for Plantation-based DHL Express will preserve competition and 40,000 U.S. jobs.
The House Judiciary Committee held a hearing in Washington on competition in the package-delivery industry. UPS and DHL are still negotiating an agreement, Wallace said. Malcolm Berkley, a UPS spokesman, said before the hearing there is no timetable for reaching a deal.
UPS is trying to blunt criticism from Ohio lawmakers and labor-union leaders that its plan with DHL will harm competition and cost jobs. UPS said May 28 it was working an agreement to take over shipments from two DHL vendors with a hub in Wilmington, Ohio.
Removing business from existing DHL vendors, Miami-based Astar Air Cargo and Ohio-based ABX, will cost 10,000 jobs, said John Prater, president of the Air Line Pilots Association, in testimony. Prater said his union represents 500 Astar pilots.
Read MoreThe Board of Directors of Pitney Bowes Inc. announced that effective January 1, 2009 Pitney Bowes Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Murray D. Martin will become Chairman of the Board of Directors. Mr. Martin has been CEO since May 2007 and he will retain these responsibilities when this new appointment becomes effective. The company previously announced Michael J. Critelli’s decision to retire as Executive Chairman and Director at the end of 2008.
Read MoreUPS Capital, the financial services arm of UPS, is offering a new service – UPS Capital Cargo FinanceSM – enables small U.S. importers to use their in-transit UPS shipments as collateral for loans, reducing the need to rely on paper-intensive letters of credit to finance international trade transactions.
UPS Capital Cargo Finance is designed for U.S. companies with annual revenues up to USD 50 million that import 1-to-10 ocean or air freight containers of goods per month.
Most global trade transactions for small companies are financed via letters of credit or cash in advance, with trading on open account terms typically available only to large companies. While effective, letters of credit are time-intensive and costly. Cash-in-advance transactions can strain cash flow for small companies. Additionally, traditional financial service companies may be hesitant to lend against goods that are in-transit or housed in a foreign location, leaving few options for small businesses that want to participate in global trade.
Read MoreMargot A. Myers is the manager of retail in-store programs for the U.S. Postal Service.
The Postal Service made progress with the testing and deployment of large, complex communication networks. In 1996, we introduced Postal Vision, an employee communications network that now is integrated with our USPS-TV network. As an “early adopter” of digital signage, we began testing the impact of digital vs. static menu boards in retail lobbies in 1999.
And in 2003, we laid the groundwork for a test of digital signage that began in selected post offices in 2004 – The Post Office Channel. This third effort took advantage of the advances that had taken place in a growing medium including content delivery methods and the declining costs of technology.
One of our challenges is to improve the customer experience in more than 32,000 retail locations. Digital signage can have a positive impact on the retail environment in several ways. One opportunity is to increase the range of information available to customers while they are waiting to be served. The Post Office Channel features product and service messages to educate and inform retail customers. For example, one message compares the product features of overnight express mail and two-to-three-day priority mail. Another compares delivery confirmation to signature confirmation and shows which form to use depending on which service the customer chooses.
A second opportunity is to redirect customers and actually change customer behavior. Part of the long-standing tradition of how customers behave in our retail space is that many are totally focused on getting in the full-service queue and getting served as quickly as possible. That sounds reasonable.
But what if there are 10 people in line and all you need are some stamps? Can digital signage help change customer behavior and redirect them to the Automated Postal Center (APC), a fully automated kiosk that not only sells stamps but also allows customers to mail packages?
We focused on changing this customer behavior specifically by including a digital screen at the main entrance to each of the test sites. Nicknamed the “Stop and Turn” device, it is a 30-inch screen hung portrait fashion in a custom mount. The content on this screen is all very short (3-5 seconds), bright colors, and designed to catch the eye of customers as they walk into the post office. It’s also very direct in its messages. “Jump the line. Ship packages at the APC.” Or, “Get out of line. Buy stamps at vending.”
In addition to 2,500 APCs, the Postal Service offers 70,000 alternate access locations where customers can buy stamps or mail packages without ever setting foot in a Post Office. This includes supermarkets, drug stores, convenience stores, ATMs and a robust online commerce site at usps.com.
We established four key metrics for our digital signage test: revenue lift in products promoted on the screens, actual and perceived wait time in line, customer satisfaction and shift to alternate access. For the fourth metric, we defined success in three ways:
Re-direct traffic away from fill-service
Increase number of customers using self-service options (APCs and vending machines)
Increase awareness and usage of alternate access channels for purchasing stamps and other simple transactions.
The shift to alternate access channels was the most successful result in the test. The Post Office Channel had a positive impact on redirecting customers to in-store self-service options. Customers who saw the Stop and Turn screen were more likely to use vending (8.7% vs. 6.5%) and the APC (7.4% vs. 3.4%).
We also tracked revenue changes in the test sites as compared to alternate access locations within a five-mile radius. We measured customer awareness of the availability of alternate access locations before we installed the digital signage and again post-installation and found that awareness rose by 22 percent. Revenue from stamp sales decli
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