Tag: UK

Where parcels go next – The UK Express Market

The value of the UK express market will increase by 3% to reach £2.6bn (Euro4.3bn) in 2001, slightly lower than a projected 4% growth rate to 788m packages. The disparity is due to continued price competition and higher value deliveries in the international sector,
says MSI in a new market report.
On domestic deliveries, average revenue per parcel has declined throughout the last 10 years, and will fall by a further 3% this year. The international sector has consistently outgrown the domestic market through the review period and will grow by 10% to
60.3m packages in 2001. The value increase will be 8% to £lbn (Euro1.7bn). International deliveries are expected to account for 8% of the total market by volume, but 39% by value.
International traffic will continue to outpace domestic over the next five years, MSI says, but price pressure will remain, both at home and abroad, despite volume and value growth.

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Thousands of jobs may go in Consignia cuts: Union condemns Slash and Burn as one in 10 staff face axe in postal group's plans to reduce costs by £1.2 billion

Thousands of jobs may be axed at the postal services group Consignia in a swingeing cost cutting programme condemned last night by unions as a policy of “slash and burn”.

Around one in 10 jobs could disappear in some areas of the Royal Mail and Post Office organisation in plans to cut costs by pounds 1.2bn over the next 18 months. Capital spending programmes are expected to be cut and some parts of the business could be hived off to private companies.

Other savings under consideration include scrapping second deliveries which carry only a small amount of mail but are relatively expensive.

Consignia, formerly the Post Office, said it needed to make the cuts – equivalent to 15% of its total costs – to improve efficiency in the face of new commercial pressures in Britain’s postal services.

As managers began briefing staff about the proposals yesterday morning, the state owned group insisted that no decision had yet been taken on the overall level of job losses.

But the cost cutting exercise, applauded by Postwatch, the consumer watchdog, drew a withering response from Post Office unions which have pledged to fight a “cack handed, panic measure”.

Strike action has not been ruled out. John Keggie, deputy general secretary of the Communication Workers Union, said the government had to ask how a business that was profitable for 20 years before commercial freedom was granted was now in such a financial mess.

“Blaming efficiency levels and the workforce is just not on,” he said last night. “The measures being proposed by the Consignia board can only be described as a ‘slash and burn’ policy. Any attempts to outsource parts of the industry into private hands or to introduce compulsory redundancy will be vigorously opposed.”

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UK Government plans to split Consignia into 2 companies

LONDON (AFX) – Consignia, the renamed Post Office, will be split into two companies under a radical proposal being examined by the government, the Sunday Times reported without citing sources.

It said ministers are considering a plan to merge Royal Mail and Parcel Force into one company and put Post Office Counters (POC), which runs the network of 17,800 regional post offices, into another. Each company would have a separate board and management structure.

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Ministers consider postal service split;Consignia

CONSIGNIA, the renamed Post Office and one of Britain’s biggest employers, will be split into two companies under a radical proposal being examined by the government.

Ministers are considering a plan to merge Royal Mail and Parcel Force into one company and put Post Office Counters (POC), which runs the network of 17,800 regional post offices, into another. Each company would have a separate board and management structure.

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Last post; Business Focus (Consignia)

Britain’s postal service is facing the biggest shake-up in its history. By John Waples and Rupert Steiner.

LAST JULY, in the early hours of a Monday morning, a group of senior directors from Consignia, the renamed Post Office, drove to the five-star Pennyhill Park Hotel in Bagshot, Surrey, for the group’s annual think-tank session.

In their briefcases they carried copies of the latest trading figures, which showed targets had been missed, costs had spiralled and -in the new deregulated environment -competitors were chiselling away at its business. They painted a picture of a service in rapid decline, and each executive was aware that tough decisions needed to be made over the course of the next two days.

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