Tag: UPS

UPS and Yahoo! offer integrated shipping tools

UPS and Yahoo! Inc. have announced the integration of a suite of online UPS shipping tools into Yahoo! Small Business, a leading provider of services enabling small businesses to be successful online.

The tools, now available to Yahoo! Small Business’ more than 30,000 merchants, provide easy access to UPS services that allow them to process and ship orders in a more efficient and cost-effective manner, while improving customer satisfaction by displaying key shipment information at check out.

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UPS, FedEx rivalry a study in contrasts

Every once in a while, a purple emblazoned truck shows up with a delivery at the home of UPS chief executive Mike Eskew, whose company’s package cars are a familiar brown.

“The FedEx guy shakes his head when he gives it to my wife and says, ‘I don’t know what I’m doing here,” Eskew recalls with a laugh.

The rivalry between UPS and Memphis, Tenn.-based FedEx is not as vocal as those in other industries _ neither likes to utter the other’s name and both insist they are focused on themselves _ but it is equally intense.

Besides the very different colors of their trucks, the two have chosen contrasting operational structures, labor strategies and business opportunities.

“Both of them are being challenged to expand their market share. That puts them in head-to-head competition with each other even if they don’t talk a lot about that,” said John Gnuschke, a University of Memphis economics professor who follows the shipping industry.

Based in Atlanta, UPS has grown since its 1907 founding into the world’s largest shipping carrier with $33.5 billion in annual revenue and 357,000 employees, 60 percent of whom are part of a union. Its average driver earns $55,000 a year. While three-quarters of its business comes from U.S. small-package deliveries, it believes a big part of its future lies in overseas shipments and supply-chain management services, which help companies control the flow of their products and reduce costs.

In a recent interview with The Associated Press, Eskew said it’s a numbers game.

“The small package market in the U.S. is about a $60 billion market. The worldwide supply-chain market is about a $3.2 trillion market,” he said. “It’s everything from the moment something gets made until it gets delivered for final delivery, and then after market, it’s parts replacement.”

He added, “It’s, ‘How do we participate and give our customers solutions beyond the small package?'”

On the other side, FedEx, founded in 1974, has $24 billion in annual revenue and 245,000 employees. Only its 4,000 pilots are unionized and it uses independent contractors as drivers for its U.S. ground deliveries. It won’t say what its average driver earns. FedEx remains focused on its core business and believes supply-chain management is only a small piece of the puzzle.

“People here have been dealing with skeptics and naysayers since Day One, and we have been proving them wrong and will continue to do so,” said FedEx spokesman Bill Margaritis. “Obviously, our model has proven to be successful because we’re taking share and our margins are comparable.”

In the United States, FedEx carries more packages by air than UPS. While UPS has an overwhelming advantage in U.S. ground volume, FedEx has been gaining share in recent quarters. A key strength for UPS, however, has been its international business, especially in China. The U.S. Postal Service and German shipper Deutsche Post AG also are major competitors.

As with labor and future goals, UPS and FedEx also have different operational philosophies.

UPS believes its biggest asset is in its integrated network. Each of its drivers, who work in defined areas, carries and delivers to their final destination items that were initially shipped by ground or air or from overseas.

FedEx uses different drivers to deliver air and ground shipments to their final destination, meaning a business could get a visit from multiple FedEx drivers with different colored trucks in the same day if it is receiving items from different methods of delivery. Yet another driver would deliver a FedEx package to your home.

As for management, UPS gives autonomy to its managers in units across the company, but its leadership is mostly centralized at its headquarters. FedEx has a mostly decentralized management structure, with its air, ground and freight units all based in separate parts of the United States.

UPS spokesman Norm Black said the company believes its strategy brings it closer with cu

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UPS building USD7 million air service center

United Parcel Service Inc. is building a $7 million, 90,000-square-foot air
service center, where the package-delivery giant will track its aircraft all over the world. Construction began last month on the two-story facility located just east of Louisville International Airport. UPS plans to relocate 625 workers from its current air service center in its air park on Grade Lane when the new building is completed in March or April of next year, according to Shawn Crowder, project engineer for the company.

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China UPS’ No. 1 growth spot

David Abney, president of international operations for Atlanta-based United
Parcel Service Inc., has seen tremendous growth in China during the past year. He expects continued growth this year. “China, China, China,” he said. “It’s absolutely essential. I can’t overstate that.” Spurred in recent years by more liberal trade agreements, less centralized control from China’s Communist government, and increasing awareness of the financial benefits of globalization, China during the first quarter became UPS’ fastest-growing market. As a result, Abney said, China also has become UPS’ No. 1 international
priority. UPS’ export volume in China increased 60 percent last quarter, said Chief Financial Officer Scott Davis during a recent analyst call.

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UPS Pushes the Envelope with New Mail Processing Technology

UPS Mail Innovations, the business mail services unit of UPS, has deployed an advanced technology system that represents a significant innovation in the processing of business mail. The system, known as the Automated Processing System (APS), reduces the manual handling of flat business mail, a major advance from current industry practices.

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