Tag: Republic of Ireland

eBay.ie & An Post introduce new e-Parcel Card

eBay.ie, the dedicated Irish eBay website, and An Post have joined forces to introduce a new pilot scheme to reward eBay sellers resident in Ireland.

The e-Parcel Card, which launches last 21 August 2007 and will be reviewed in April 2008, offers eligible eBay users favorable prices on national and international parcels weighing up to 5kg, sent using An Post. eBay users can make a saving of up to 45 pct on national parcels and 75 pct on international postage.

The new service is easy to use, free to join and open to all eBay users in Ireland who have a minimum feedback score of 90, with at least 98 pct positive.

Eligible eBay users can effortlessly sign up for the scheme by visiting www.e-Parcel.ie. Once registered, they will receive an e-Parcel Card, which they can produce at one of 1000 local automated post offices nationwide whenever they are sending an eBay parcel to allow them to benefit from the preferential pricing.

eBay.ie, which earlier in the year announced that it has over 500,000 CRUs (confirmed registered users) in Ireland, is partnering with An Post to reward its loyal and growing Irish user base.

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The Postal Market 2010 and Beyond – Emerging

Postcomm’s Strategy ReviewA summary of emerging themes from Postcomm’s Strategy Review
In August 2006 Postcomm published a Strategy Review document for consultation. The review looked at whether we needed to alter our regulatory policies so we can continue to protect mail users in the future – from 2010 and beyond – and yet allow mail operators the flexibility to adapt to changes in the market.

This document briefly summarises emerging themes in the responses we received to that Strategy Review document.

Full document – Postcomm’s Strategy Review. The postal market 2010 and beyond: Emerging Themes (pdf, 429KB)
What respondents told us
Royal Mail said the current regulatory framework is no longer fit for purpose and is subjecting the company to serious financial pressure. It said Postcomm should allow Royal Mail to compete in the business market without any restrictions and limit regulatory interventions to stamped mail.
Royal Mail’s competitors pointed out that Royal Mail, which is focusing hard on retaining every item of mail, enjoys the advantages of economies of scale and the unique privilege of VAT exemption. They questioned whether our current regulatory tools are sufficient to deal with Royal Mail’s market dominance.
Postcomm’s main conclusions in the emerging themes document, on which we are seeking feedback, are:

Customers are benefiting from competition. However, Royal Mail is finding the impact of competition and of new media very difficult to cope with, in part because of its slow progress in improving efficiency and in developing new services. The universal service (USO) remains profitable and is being provided to a very high quality of service.
More innovation is needed in order to exploit the changing mail market. Mail operators in the UK are not fully grasping the opportunities – or facing up to the challenges – of new communications media to the extent that some of their European and North American counterparts are. Mail has some important characteristics, such as personalisation and hand delivery, which valuably differentiate it in a digital world. If operators focus on how their mail products can add value for users, there is no reason to accept the prospect of a contracting mail market.
Postcomm reaffirms its aim to move to less detailed regulation. If Royal Mail can improve its cost transparency and respond better to the changing market, Postcomm should be able to scale back the regulatory regime from 2010 onwards.
The universal service will be secured in a changing mail market. Postcomm is responding to Royal Mail’s request to remove business products from the universal service and, in doing so, it wants to promote a wider debate as to how the scope and specification of the USO should adapt to changing social, economic and technological conditions. However, the basic right to post a stamped letter anywhere in the UK for the same price will remain at the centre of the universal service.

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Migrant workers prompt postal boom

The large number of migrants from Lithuania working overseas are responsible for a boom in the country’s postal service, Lietuvos Paštas has confirmed.

Since Lithuania became a member of the European Union, the amount of international letters, postcards, and small parcels has grown hugely, with the most traffic coming from Great Britain, Ireland and Spain, where the majority of Lithuanian currently live and work.

By the end of 2006 the amount of outgoing mail correspondence to Great Britain had increased by more than 220 percent and stood at 96.13 tons per year, accounting for more than a quarter of outgoing correspondence, and the amount of incoming mail had improved by 25 percent to 60.1 tons per year.

Last year, the volume of outgoing parcels to Ireland had increased by 39 percent to 23.9 percent, the amount of incoming parcels from Ireland had gone up by 18 percent to 12.9 tons.

Communication with Lithuanians in Spain is livelier than ever, as well. In 2006, the amount of mail sent from Spain to Lithuania was as much as 23 times greater than in 2004 (6.6 tons), and the volume of outgoing correspondence to Spain had risen by 26.1 percent to 5.86 tons.

In 2006, the Lithuanian post office delivered 5.9 million items or 457.25 tons of foreign mail to addresses in Lithuania, and the amount of outgoing mail from Lithuania stood at 4.73 million items or 369.1 tons.

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