Tag: North America

U.S. National Postal Forum Workshops Help Businesses Find Success in Mail

The 2008 National Postal Forum is going to extremes to help businesses navigate the terrain of mail more smoothly. This year’s theme is “extreme performance” and workshops will offer attendees the opportunity to hear from industry experts on proven strategies for success.
The Package Symposium offers shippers the opportunity to learn how to cut shipping costs and how increased technology can provide a wealth of new information about packages. Recent changes in postal law offer the Postal Service unprecedented freedoms to develop new products and quickly bring them to market. Experts will host roundtable discussions on the latest case studies and market briefings.
Sustainability continues to take center stage. The Direct and Green Symposium shows marketers how to create successful direct marketing campaigns in a dynamic, resource-friendly way. Experts in the field offer tips on leveraging green-smart practices to improve consumer response.
Intelligent Mail barcodes will become a requirement for discount eligibility in 2009. Intelligent Mail can streamline addressing, preparation, acceptance, processing, transportation and delivery methods. At the Intelligent Mail Symposium, experts discuss how businesses can implement Intelligent Mail to achieve ultimate end-to-end visibility, improve address quality and turn data into information that can drive greater business results.

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Canada Post unveils its first Braille stamp

Canada Post is issuing its first ever Braille stamp featuring guide dogs to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the founding of Canada’s oldest association for the blind, it said Wednesday.
Some 3.5 million copies of the domestic 52-cent stamp have been printed with Braille embossing and larger-than-usual typeface for the vision-impaired, and featuring a yellow Labrador retriever, to coincide with the 100th anniversary of the Montreal Association for the Blind.
“We provide vital communication links to all Canadian households and to offer a Braille stamp reinforces our commitment to meet the needs of all Canadians,” said Bob Waite, a Canada Post senior vice-president.
The first Braille embossed stamp in the world was produced by Brazil in 1974 to commemorate the Fifth World Council for the Welfare for the Blind in Sao Paulo.
Almost a dozen countries have also since printed Braille stamps, however most were said to be symbolic because the light paper used to make the stamps did not typically hold the raised Braille for very long before being flattened.

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Canada Post Manages Thirteenth Consecutive Year of Profitability

In its 2007 Annual Report, Canada Post Corporation reported its thirteenth consecutive year of profit for its Group of Companies. The Corporation recorded a consolidated net income of CAD54 million for the fiscal period ended December 31, 2007.

The return on equity for 2007 was 3.8 per cent. The corporation will make an annual dividend payment at the rate of 40 per cent of net income to its shareholder and is expecting to pay a dividend of approximately CAD22 million to the Government of Canada in 2008. The total dividends paid over the last five fiscal periods amount to CAD267 million.

Canada Post Corporation’s consolidated net income of CAD54 million was down 54.3 per cent from CAD119 million in 2006. Consolidated revenues reached CAD7.5 billion, an increase of 2.5 per cent trading day adjusted or CAD210 million over the comparative period a year ago, while the cost of operations increased by 3.2 per cent to CAD7,346 million. Canada’s population growth added some 200,000 new points of delivery during the year.

On a consolidated basis, Canada Post Corporation processed 11.8 billion pieces during the 12-month period, even as Transaction Mail volumes decreased by 1.6 pct year over year adjusted for trading days. In 2007, Canada Post met the corporate on-time service performance target of 96 per cent for the delivery of Lettermail. 1.00 USD = 1.00892 CAD

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U.S. postal authorities report run on 'forever' stamps as rate increase looms

A looming increase in U.S. postal rates appears to be turning Americans into penny-pinchers.
Just ask U.S. postal authorities who say there has been a run on so-called Forever stamps in advance of next month’s planned rate increase. Officials say that with the postal rate increase just two weeks away, Americans are buying 30 million Forever stamps a day.
The cost of sending a first-class letter will rise a penny to 42 cents on May 12. But the Forever stamps – currently selling for 41 cents – will remain valid after the increase.
Forever stamps were introduced in the United States last year and since then more than six billion have been sold.
Unlike the Forever stamps, other 41-cent stamps will require additional postage when the new rates take effect. Postal officials say they have printed an additional 1.5 billion one-cent stamps in anticipation of the demand.
Also, for the first time the Postal Service has stamps available at the new rate before the change takes effect.
A set of five 42-cent stamps honouring pioneering journalists went on sale last week, as did a set of four stamps featuring the American flag flying at different times of day.
Postage rates last went up in May 2007, with a first-class stamp jumping 2 cents to the current 41-cent rate.
The first-class postal rate is the one that most people notice, but other prices will also rise.

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Postal optimisation: A growing business imperative (U.S)

As U.S. postal rates continue to rise each year—including a projected increase of around 4 pct this May—direct marketers are continually challenged to offset these costs, which can represent up to 65 pct of total direct mail project budgets. Yet many marketers fail to focus their cost-reduction efforts on postage, trying instead to reduce expenses involving printing, materials and other campaign elements. Only by focusing more on reducing postage costs and optimizing campaigns will marketers be able to proactively manage budgets for profitability while still maintaining the integrity of their direct mail programs.
It will be up to marketers and their industry partners to find ways to lessen the hardships created by escalating postal costs. No longer can postage be considered a “pass-through” cost over which marketers have little or no control. This would lead to dwindling budgets for program execution and less effectiveness overall for direct mail. It also could potentially move customers to look more closely at other marketing platforms that could be viewed as economically advantageous due to the rising costs of print mail.

In addition to examining creative ways to reduce the cost of postage itself, the overall optimization of a campaign has become paramount. Diminished consumer response rates, postal waste due to the large amount of undeliverable-as-addressed mail and inefficiencies in the National Change of Address system pose their own unique challenges, as does the movement toward environmentally friendly business practices to reduce paper usage.

Smart marketers already have begun meeting these challenges by aggressively integrating postal optimization, logistics strategies and campaign optimization techniques that not only promise to curb postal costs but also to improve address accuracy and enhance response rates, contributing significantly to the ultimate success of a campaign.

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