Tag: UK

Postal Service Manager Featured in “Women worth Watching”

Pritha Mehra, the Postal Service’s manager of marketing technology and channel management, has been recognized nationally by the Profiles in Diversity Journal special issue celebrating the achievements of leading women executives.

“Women Worth Watching” are nominated by colleagues, peers and mentors for showing outstanding initiative and professional achievements. The special issue, to be published this month, focuses on executive’s contributions in helping an organization achieve company-wide goals and her ability to mentor other women toward success.

Mehra’s current project is focused on leveraging technology, including the Postal Service’s Intelligent Mail barcodes, to make sure mail remains a key communications medium in the digital age.

As manager of marketing technology and channel management, Mehra provides leadership significantly improved how business mail is handled, with work focusing on new technologies that increase customer convenience.

She was integral in expanding PotalOne!, an “e-Documentation system” that allows business mailers to submit postage statements electronically and gain online access to postal accounts 24 hours a day, seven days a week. PostalOne! streamlines acceptance and verification of mail, and allows automatic postage payment, mail entry scheduling and status reports on mail.

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Joan Collins and Westlife to star in new Post Office UK tv advertising campaign

The series of TV commercials are set in a fictional Post Office branch which will welcome some famous faces in the coming months, with customers including Westlife, Bill Oddie and Keith Harris and Orville.

The fictional Post Office team is led by sub-postmaster Ken, played by John Henshaw, whose has previously appeared in The Royle Family, Early Doors and Life on Mars.

Post Office marketing director Gary Hockey-Morley said: “Our marketing has been key in helping us to become the fastest growing financial provider in the UK. We have exceeded one million financial services customers, GBP 2bn has been invested in our savings accounts and one in every 25 credit cards is from the Post Office.

“But the business continues to face major commercial challenges so it is vital that we respond to create a sustainable branch network. The TV advertisements will form the backbone of a major new marketing campaign highlighting the uniqueness of our service and the broad range of competitively priced products on offer at local Post Office branches.

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The IT crowd

Fashion has moved from an almost parochial business to an international one. Certainly, any retailers in the sector with significant growth ambitions are having to spread their horizons and look well beyond their home markets. According to Verdict Research growth is flattening in big markets like Germany, France, the UK and Italy while all the really exciting growth is in East European countries like Estonia or Slovakia ”where fashion markets are less saturated and consumer appetites have yet to be sated.”

The big European retailers have become adept at stealing each others’ customers. Leading Continental retailers have made major inroads into international markets and the top five non-UK clothing retailers in the EU have around half their EU stores outside their home countries, says Verdict.

The internet has added a further dimension to internationalization. While the demise of online clothing retailer boo.com a few years ago was one of the most notorious collapses of the post dot-com era, other online retailers have been working quietly away and are now beginning to reach a degree of maturity. Indeed, pure-play lingerie and ”intimate wear” specialist Figleaves.com has been going so long that its late 1990s-vintage ERP systems will soon need replacing with a much more sophisticated SAP system, says chairman Daniel Nabarro.

Today, the company sells lingerie in 96 countries although it currently only has UK and US websites and DCs; buyers from other countries have beaten a path to its door, despite the language and currency obstacles. However, new country and language-specific websites could follow soon.

As with many supply chains, it’s the long ”tail” of infrequently ordered items that cause the headaches. Care must also be taken with interpreting data, adds Nabarro. ”With some of our harder-to-obtain items, when customers do discover them, they are often so thrilled that they order five of them at once.” That though could send completely the wrong signal to an automated ERP system.

Fashion has moved very quickly from a relatively unsophisticated approach to supply chain to one where IT is used to support decision making. Gone are the days in which systems integration used to take months or even years. One of the proudest boasts of TNT’s Fashion Group is that it can set up an interface with a new customer in a maximum of eight days.

Philip Bracken, TNT Fashion Group’s business development manager explains: ”We have special software that allows us to set up interfaces, usually within days. Because it can map from one system to another, we don’t have to spend time reprogramming, which is what used to take the time.” In fact, with smaller customers with relatively simple needs, the system can be up and running inside a single day, he adds.

Also, given the increasing internationalization of many retailers, along with the shortening lifecycle of many fashion ranges, many retailers are switching stocks between different countries.

The other big trend in fashion has been the movement of large parts of the manufacturing process offshore – usually to the low labor cost countries of Asia. But fashion companies have perhaps focused too much on manufacturing labor costs and not enough on total supply chain costs, says Alain Vix, marketing director at supply chain support specialist, Hughenden. Quite apart from the fact that basic material costs are increasing, many businesses don’t fully appreciate the costs of holding inventory (while 10 per cent of the retail value is often quoted as a yardstick, the true figure could be nearer 40 per cent, he believes) nor do they always seem to appreciate that buying in stock from abroad brings many extra costs as well. Failure to appreciate this fact might explain many leading players” poor financial performance in recent years.

That said, Hughenden’s latest poll suggests that many companies in the sector are having a rethink, spurred on by the recent successf

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EU Agrees on Postal Competition Starting in 2011

European Union governments agreed to start local mail competition in 2011, two years later than Deutsche Post AG, TNT NV and other providers were seeking to expand into new countries.

Countries must open their markets to foreign competitors for delivering standard letters, in the compromise reached today at a meeting of national ministers in Luxembourg. Still, 11 of the 27 EU countries get two extra years, until 2013, to prepare their current providers.

The compromise won over France and other nations that opposed an earlier plan for competition in 2009. The initiative will end monopolies such as that of France’s La Poste in standard letters, which are two-thirds of the region’s 88 billion-euro (USD 125 billion) postal market, according to the EU executive agency.

Deutsche Post will continue to examine postal markets in Europe and elsewhere, Uwe Bensien, a spokesman in Bonn, said by telephone.

Letters up to 50 grams (1.8 ounces) are the final piece of the mail industry being opened, after a decade of phased-in deregulation. That business is more profitability than package or express delivery, according to the European Commission, the EU agency where McCreevy oversees internal market policy.

EU countries that allowed postal competition before the 2011 deadline include the U.K., Finland and Sweden. Germany and the Netherlands plan to follow suit Jan. 1.

Countries eligible for the extra two-year delay include Luxembourg, the country of half a million people whose service would be dwarfed by neighboring rivals, and Greece, with territory spread over hundreds of islands. Nine of the 12 countries that joined the EU since 2004 also gained the extra time. Estonia, Bulgaria and Slovenia will adhere to the 2011 deadline.

Portugal, holder of the EU’s rotating presidency, drafted the compromise in line with a European Parliament vote in July. The initiative still needs final approval by majorities in both the Parliament and the national governments, whose votes are weighted by country population, to become law.

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