Tag: Sepomex

Postal service’s bumper revamp

When the national mail delivery system is all but defunct, maybe the best promise a major modernization campaign can make is simply that the mail will arrive at all.
“Te llega” (You’ll get it) is the banner head of a major overhaul for Mexico’s postal service, announced this month.
Gone is the grim SEPOMEX acronym, swapped for the friendlier and historically familiar Correos de Mexico, with a bright pink-and-lime palate adding cheer to the sleek new logo.
After a year of consulting with international postal advisors on the myriad challenges facing Mexico’s underfunded agency, so mistrusted that it has been largely abandoned in favor of private carriers, Carpinteyro concluded a complete image change would be fundamental to reenergizing the demoralized institution.
She stressed that the “Te llega” campaign isn’t just about image, and that Correos de Mexico is changing its entire structure to deliver mail consistently and efficiently.
The federal government outlined a 32-percent increase in the service’s budget for 2009, which Carpinteyro said will be used primarily to purchase equipment and 40 percent more vehicles to handle increased volume. The agency will also hire some 2,500 additional carriers.
Around the nation’s 4,000 postal offices, networked computers will replace typewriters, digital machines will replace antiquated scales, automated sorters will replace burlap sacks and delivery routes will be redesigned. Employees will be trained in updated organizational practices to improve productivity, says Carpinteyro.
Post offices, especially those serving rural communities, will offer prepaid Internet service.
Correos de Mexico also announced a partnership with federally-funded discount grocer Diconsa to sell stamps and offer basic postal services inside their 23,000 locations nationwide. In turn, post offices will sell and ship discount non-perishable food kits (called canastas basicas) for low-income families.

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Mexico's postal blues remade in hot pink

Changes include a new logo, new uniforms and pink-and-lime-green painted post offices. Some will also sell cut-rate rice, beans and powdered milk alongside stamps. Coffee mugs and envelopes — something the post office didn’t sell before — will also be available, but only in hot pink and lime green.

The service’s new symbol — a white carrier pigeon holding a letter in its beak — hit the streets last Tuesday 9th September, a day after President Felipe Calderon unveiled the new look at a gala ceremony. The government hopes the new image and services will help the post office break even next year, after annual losses of up to USD 50 million.

But in a country where mail theft is widespread and letters often arrive weeks after they’re sent, the public is skeptical.

The new name, Correos de Mexico, or Mexican Mail, is actually a throwback to the days of the early 20th century, when the service was trusted and the government built a main post office meant to look like a Renaissance palace.

Alberto Izquierdo, a native of Madrid who was waiting in a long line to mail a letter at the main downtown post office, wasn’t impressed.

“I think they’re focusing a little too much on appearances and not substance,” he said.

Mexico’s postal service delivers only about seven pieces of mail per inhabitant per year; Americans get an average of 700.

The low volume reflects a lack of confidence. Federal officials acknowledge most businesses won’t send bills, statements or receipts through the mail, preferring pricey but safer private courier services, about 4,000 of which have sprung up here, according to industry estimates.

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Mexico's Postal Service Aims For MXN 10 Billion in Revenue By 2012

Mexico’s postal service said Thursday it aims to be self-funding with annual revenue of more than 10 billion pesos (USD 923.9 million) by 2012 under a five-year modernization plan.

In a press release, the postal service, or Sepomex, said to reach that goal, it will increase the number of mail carriers to 30,000 and open about 500 new offices by the end of 2012.

Sepomex currently has about 20,000 employees, 1,370 offices and annual revenue of about USD 250 million.

As part of its modernization program, the postal service will implement a tracking system for packages and has reached an agreement with the postal employees union to improve productivity.

Most firms in Mexico use private package delivery companies because of reliability problems with the postal service.

Sepomex has only two major corporate customers – phone company Telefonos de Mexico (TMX) and Citigroup Inc.’s (C) local unit, Banamex.

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USPS, Mexican PS Work to Improve Cross-Border Services

The U.S. Postal Service has agreed to help the Servicio Postal Mexicano (SEPOMEX) improve its management structure and processes, and to re-engineer its operations. SEPOMEX, in return, has agreed to work with the USPS in improving cross-border services.

The two groups have also agreed to explore joint business opportunities, writes DM News.

SEPOMEX handles about 700 million letters a year, compared to the 200 billion handled by the USPS. About 90 percent of what SEPOMEX handles is bulk mail, an area upon which both the USPS and the Mexican postal system hope to improve.

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Mexico plans to upgrade Postal Service

The Mexican government plans to upgrade the country’s much-criticized postal service and signed an agreement Tuesday with the U.S. Postal Service to help in the process.

Communications and Transport Minister Luis Tellez said the Mexican Postal Service, or Sepomex, has been neglected for years, while the USPS is “an example of modernity, efficiency and quality.”

Under the agreement signed Tuesday, Sepomex staff will visit U.S. facilities to analyze procedures and equipment, and the two will also cooperate to improve cross-border services.

The agreement also includes the development of a tracking and location system for the implementation in 2009 of a payment-by-performance agreement for packages.

The USPS will also support Mexico in setting up a postal inspection group, including selection, recruitment and training of inspectors.

U.S. chief postal inspector Alexander Lazaroff said at the signing event that the agreement will address security concerns in both countries with enhanced security procedures.

Tellez told reporters the government plans to make significant investments in the modernization and automation of the postal service.

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