Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Class Mail Corp.’s previous company name (Document Command, Inc.) and
referred to the previous brand name for the online postal mail service (Remote
Control Mail). Both the company and its primary service have been changed to
Earth Class Mail Corp. and Earth Class Mail, respectively.
2
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction.....................................................................................................................5
By Ron Wiener
Earth Class Mail: The First True Execution of Online Postal Mail ........................39
By Cameron Powell
The Case for Liberalizing the USPS and Taking it Public .......................................71
By Chris Kwak
Blueprint for a 21st Century Post Office: Combining MegaSorters with Earth Class
Mail.................................................................................................................................95
By Ron Wiener
What if a national post could serve itself up on every desktop computer of its customers,
a bit like Microsoft, and insert itself in the middle of billions of advertising transactions per year,
somewhat like Google? What if, in other words, a post were to exploit the innovative new
technologies we discuss in this very book, putting postal mail online in digitized form and
managing the corresponding paper in building-sized automated storage and retrieval systems that
are to mail sorters what a computer RAM chip is to the outdated computer punch cards of the
1950s? These are just a few of the provocative questions answered, inside, by veterans of both
the mail and the Internet industries – a marriage that, we are quite confident, will ensure mail can
never be the same again.
The ubiquitous postal industry, with its 5.5 million employees and mission critical role in
the economies of some 200 nations, has long been taken for granted. And why shouldn’t it be?
After all, in most countries the postal service is the largest employer, and it boasts the widest
footprint of buildings, transportation fleets, and labor union influence. A country could not
function efficiently without its letter post (businesses could not send bills, customers could not
pay them, vote-by-mail ballots could not be collected, governments would have difficulty
collecting taxes, etc.) and so citizens and businesses therefore assume that the powers-that-be will
make sure that their post will always be around to serve them. Most never give it a second
thought.
But those of us who came to the postal industry from the Internet and other high-
technology fields know the future of the postal industry is not nearly so certain, at least not for
most countries. We are alert to rapidly changing dynamics – such as the cannibalization of
transactional and advertising mail by the Internet – that impact revenue. We are also cognizant of
the ever-rising costs of labor and pension obligations, and we see that even the very latest in
automation equipment may not provide sufficient improvements in productivity to guarantee the
economic survival of any post office for very long – at least not without a lot of changes and the
political will to effect those changes.
Postal patrons – individuals and enterprises – are also rapidly changing their behavior.
On one end of the socio-economic spectrum, citizens of affluent countries spend more time
traveling and less time at home or in the office. On the other end – in developing nations – there
are still billions not served directly by a postal carrier, and who do not have an Internet
connection. Ironically, many are far more likely to see the Internet reach their village before the
postal carrier.
This book paints a vision of the future in which posts not only survive, but once again
become thriving, growing organizations at the center of the communications world. As a segment
of global communications, mail has continued to drop from a once-dominant position to make up
less than 15% of all communications (including cell phone calls, faxes, email, etc.) – and even
that figure is declining due to the rapid proliferation of mobile and high-bandwidth digital
infrastructure. In this book we describe a vision for how posts can catapult forward and tightly
integrate to the Internet infrastructure. Yes, to make them relevant, and central, to
communications in the Internet Age. This means more than just ordering postage or looking up a
postal code online. It means actually receiving your mail through the Internet. On the back end,
it means harnessing the power of the Internet to drastically reduce the cost and improve the
efficiency of mail delivery.
Earth Class Mail™ is the next step in the evolution of an industry that hasn’t seen much
fundamental change since Benjamin Franklin invented the early-American postal service 225
years ago. It is “Earth Class” because it is global, able to deliver mail to addressees no matter
where in the world they are, electronically. And as you’ll see, it is “Earth Class” in its
conservation of the environment.
Posts are typically at or near the top of the list of targets to reduce environmental impacts
in most countries. Indeed, in the United States, the Postal Service is the third-largest consumer of
energy among government agencies, behind only the Department of Defense (DOD) and
Department of Energy (DOE). Posts require more electrified and heated buildings, fuel more
airplanes and trucks, and constitute the largest slice of paper consumption in their nations… and
hence they represent one of the biggest opportunities for radical reduction in the use of non-
renewable resources and greenhouse gas emissions. As the largest or one of the largest
employers in a country, the impact of posts’ employees driving to work each day is also in the
extreme category, emphasizing again the importance to the environment, and not just to the price
of postage, of enabling remote worker productivity.
An inflection point in postal service development was the idea that the sender pay the full
postage, rather than the recipient. In the past, the challenge of delivering a letter across the
countryside or across the world was sufficient to merit a financial incentive for the delivery agent
to complete the trip; it was thus necessary to have the recipient pay some or all of the postage to
ensure (as best as possible) full delivery. Eventually posts became so structured and reliable that
senders could agree to pay the full fare, and eventually businesses began to see the opportunity in
expanding and servicing their customer bases reliably and cost-effectively by using the post and
the pre-paid postage stamp.
Today, disruptive technologies now have a different answer to this seemingly long-settled
question of “who pays for postage?” With millions of consumers and businesses willingly paying
for the convenience of faster and more mobile communications – cell phones, email and instant-
messaging – we already have evidence that many will pay to receive some or all of their postal
mail in electronic form. Electronic postal mail is more convenient when you’re on the road, and
easier and less costly to handle than paper. It is also environmentally more sensible, and in an
age when “cradle to cradle” is the new mantra of physical goods designers (e.g. computers and
furniture are being designed to be nearly 100% recyclable so we don’t overflow our landfills with
toxic trash), consumers with future generations in mind are willing to pay more for something
kinder to the earth, and they demand their providers do more to reduce their environmental
impact. Posts are no exception.
6
Any avid reader of the business press will notice that these days it is jam-packed with
stories of innovative companies disrupting old-line industries with new, “green” technology
solutions. It’s happening in every sector, from plastics to construction. It is ironic, though, that
one of the largest environmentally-impacting sectors of the economy – the Postal Service – rarely
if ever gets any coverage in these publications. Yet the alternative messaging industries –
whether email-based, search engine-based, or one of the other Internet-enabled platforms – get
round-the-clock coverage.
The postal operators seem to be caught in a dilemma. Promoting the environment is a
good thing, but if it means promoting less paper usage and results in less physical delivery, it is
perceived to be bad for the post office (bad for revenue, employment, and profitability). A few
enlightened posts have already begun to shift to the new paradigms (e.g. Canada Post’s “ePost”
service), but even these examples have so far only marginally reduced the environmental impact
of paper mail. These services may be new for the posts introducing them, but they are typically
only mimicking innovations already proven in private industry. They’re not radical enough, and
they don’t leverage enough of the posts’ intrinsic competitive advantages.
We only need to look at the telco industry to see what happens when established
infrastructure players allow newcomers bearing alternative technologies (here, cell phones) to
steal billions of dollars of economic value while the establishment slumbers. Most postal
operators are sitting in a similar hot-seat – whether they have fully realized it or not – and this is
reflected most palpably in the very low multiples of market valuation the stock markets have
assigned to the publicly-traded posts.
Clearly, there is a coming freight train carrying dramatic changes in customer behavior,
technology, and political climate. The posts of the world each have to decide whether they wish
to continue to stand in front of this freight train – come what may – or take the enlightened view,
get on top of the freight train, and help drive the train to a more sustainable model, a model more
sustainable ecologically and economically: that’s what Earth Class Mail is about. This book
outlines one vision for how posts can send the right message and facilitate the twin goals of
economic and ecologic sustainability simultaneously, ensuring the continuance of the most
reliable and secure form of messaging known, and making it even more reliable, more secure, and
more cost-effective than ever before.
This document was authored by several people, each bringing a unique perspective to the
issues above. What brings them together is an association with a single company, Seattle,
Washington-based Earth Class Mail, Inc. As the company has moved from concept to launch of
its popular Earth Class Mail™ service (www.EarthClassMail.com), it has established hard
evidence of market demand and the user behaviors that occur when postal mail recipients are
given a mouse to manage their incoming mail. The results are very exciting and provide
sufficient evidence of viability to certain posts, equipment vendors, major enterprises and
industry associations to lead to the development of a platform that could even be implemented at
a national level by Universal Service Providers (USPs) and other postal operators. This
document details that vision and the practical steps for posts and related parties.
K en Lynn, PhD, was the son of two United States Post Office employees. Mail
was in his blood, so to speak, from a young age. Over a distinguished 25-year
career with the USPS, Ken rose to the rank of Assistant Postmaster General of
Logistics, where he was responsible for the operations of the world’s largest postal
service and some 800,000 employees, a quarter of a million vehicles, and moving
half of the world’s mail volume. He is one of the few in these ranks to have earned a
PhD, and in many other ways was always an overachiever. In his chapter entitled
“The Trillion Dollar Postal Industry: Poised for Growth or Doomed to Extinction?”, Ken shares
his experience as a young buck coming into USPS management with new ideas, and explains why
the half-life of a new idea in a large, staid organization with a vested interest in its own inertia can
be no more than a few minutes or hours before someone points out that change is unlikely to
occur.
Ken also brings us some information from the Universal Postal Union (UPU) and public
market sources about how other posts around the world have successfully made the transition
from government agency to privatized corporation, leading in many cases to exceptional
productivity enhancements, diversification of revenue streams well beyond what was thought
achievable in their monopoly days, and even reduced postage costs and improved delivery times
for postal patrons. Having been a professor at six different colleges, Dr. Lynn has a knack for
getting the message across, and his message to posts is a clear one: “You’d better look at change
as a good thing to be driven by your very own organization – not a bad thing to bar at the gates –
or you will eventually be disintermediated by overwhelming market forces.”
C ameron Powell, as a business entrepreneur and recovering lawyer, has for many
years worked at the intersection of business, law, and public policy. He has deep
experience in issues of intellectual property, monopoly, and best business practices, as
well as in putting businesses online. Cameron – a Harvard Law School graduate,
former adjunct law professor, and US Department of Justice trial lawyer (in, notably,
the Environment and Natural Resources Division) before he began starting up and
operating Internet-based businesses – dives to the very roots of our attachment to
physical paper, and then explores why we nevertheless seem to want almost every
form of communication to go digital.
In a provocative and insightful chapter, he addresses the fundamental question, “Will
Postal Mail Eventually Be Delivered on the Internet?” Cameron discusses surveys of consumer
behavior relating to mail before drawing more well-founded conclusions from statistics of their
actual observable behaviors, taken from Earth Class Mail™ users. Cameron’s first chapter also
has a significant section devoted to the costs and environmental impact of printed mail matter, the
postal organization that delivers it, and the corporate organization that takes it in. In his second
chapter, “Earth Class Mail: The First True Execution of Online Postal Mail,” he briefly
summarizes the workings and benefits of the service at the heart of this book.
N atalee Roan was the youngest faculty member in the University of California,
Berkeley´s Industrial Psychology department where she designed and taught
university classes in statistics, business management, leadership, and organization
design. In her later life in the private sector, Natalee gained the distinction of having
joined, at the pre-revenue startup stage, not just one, but three major wireless carriers
which have become household names: both Sprint and Nextel (now merged), and
8
GTE Wireless (now Verizon). Sprint reached annual operating revenues of over $8 billion in just
4 years, where Natalee´s responsibilities included the creation and execution of marketing, sales,
and distribution programs and training that eventually supported 35,000 sales reps at 13,000
points of distribution in consumer and business-to-business markets.
In her previous marketing roles, Natalee naturally used direct mail promotions as well as
every other available media to create meteoric growth in these legendary companies’ customer
bases. In her section on “Untarget Marketing: The First Dramatic Inflection Point in Direct Mail
Marketing since the 70’s,” Natalee explores two revolutionary concepts in direct response
marketing. First, by delivering postal advertising through an online service like Earth Class Mail,
extensive information can be gathered about what recipients don’t want to receive, and smart
marketers will begin to use this to boost their response rates by suppressing specific names and
general demographic segments that are patently not interested in their offers so that marketing
dollars can be focused on prospects who might be. Second, marketers will soon be able to deliver
their direct response materials, in rich-content digital format such as online videos, directly to
online mailboxes, where they will a) be invited by the recipient, b) not be illegal like unsolicited
email advertising, and c) be able to compress weeks-long sales cycles into moments-long, by
drawing prospects from initial interest to placing orders in a matter of mouse clicks.
M ichael D. Miles, P.E. has spent the past 29 years as a mechanical engineer
working on everything from aerospace brakes to oscilloscopes, but most
relevant to this discussion he designed mail sorters for postal automation giant
Siemens. Big ones that were pushing the envelope on throughput, so to speak,
hundreds of feet long and with hundreds of mail container bins. As the Chief
Technology Officer at Earth Class Mail, Mike got to design mail sorters with
millions of mail containers in a single machine – a building-sized machine –
breaking the mold of prior thinking that tomorrow’s faster, cheaper mail sorter
had to fit in the same general footprint as yesteryear’s. By departing from the classical approach
to postal sortation mechanization Mike was able to invent all-new, patent-pending designs that
reduced labor costs by some 70%... a true breakthrough in a field which endeavors to make only
single digit enhancements in productivity year-to-year.
Miles’ MegaSorter design indeed represents a quantum leap over the first-generation mail
sorter technology which has been around since the 60’s. Instead of pinch bands and horizontal
conveyor belts that can “bubble sort” mail at speeds that max out at 40,000 per hour, you’ll read
about how the MegaSorter can sort multiple mailstreams – letters, flats, priority mail, express
mail and small parcels – all at once. And sort it all in just 90 minutes, regardless of whether it is
handling 200,000 pieces or 20 million pieces at a time. For postal operators, the MegaSorter not
only saves billions in labor and BTUs, but allows their customers to enjoy Earth Class Mail
features from the entry point of the postal stream rather than from the exit point, creating vast
new revenue opportunities while saving vast numbers of labor hours and energy resources.
C hris Kwak went straight to Wall Street after graduating from Harvard, to
practice the craft of covering publicly held enterprise-software companies as
an equity research analyst. Like Dr. Lynn, by a relatively young age Chris had
risen through the ranks to become a senior analyst covering companies such as
Microsoft, Oracle, and Salesforce.com, and industries ranging from software,
security, IT services, Internet, and video games having worked for prominent
investment firms such as Deutsche Bank, Credit Suisse First Boston, Bear
Stearns, Viking Global Investors and Susquehanna International Group.
10
The Trillion Dollar Postal Industry:
Poised for Growth or Doomed to Extinction?
By Dr. Ken Lynn
As I looked around the room, I was struck by the raw authority represented by the
members of the interview team. It was April of 1975, and I was being interviewed for the top
executive distribution position in the United States Postal Service. As a postal clerk, carrier,
supervisor, and postal inspector during the previous eight years, I had seen pictures of some
members the interviewing team in various magazines and publications of the Postal Service and
had periodically read instructions and material they had sent to the field. But today I was actually
in the same room with them and was about to be asked questions that I was afraid I could not
answer.
Among the group, I recognized E.V. “Pete” Dorsey, the Senior Assistant Postmaster
General for Operations. I would later be struck by Pete’s humor, mentoring ability, and political
skills, but today I was only aware of his position and the authority he held. Sitting next to him
was James V. P. Conway, Chief Postal Inspector of the Postal Service. Jim was an outstanding
speaker and had a very long history at the Postal Service. Next to Jim sat Peter Del Grosso,
Director of the Postal Service’s Operating Policies Office, someone who held a considerable
amount of authority and political power in the organization. Pete was a behind-the-scenes guy; I
would learn that nothing got done in the organization without his approval.
I remember how nervous I was, and although Pete Dorsey had counseled me to “pretend
like you’re down at the local tavern having a couple of drinks with friends,” it didn’t help much.
They began with a couple of simple questions that anyone who had been in the service for 8 years
should have been able to answer. And I did. Then came the toughest question of the day, a
hardball from Mr. Dorsey, who had been the president of a professional A-league baseball team.
He asked, “What makes you think that you can do a better job than any of us around this table
have done in increasing the productivity of the postal service?”
I certainly wasn’t very confident about my answer, but I spoke the first thing that came to
my mind. “It seems to me that you guys have gotten all the productivity gains you can get from
the distribution cases that Mr. Franklin made when he was Postmaster General.” Looking back at
my answer, it now seems like something they might have considered “smart-mouthed.” But back
then, it was a fairly accurate assessment of the Postal Service: they had created the best
traditional postal service in the world in spite of limited technology, a great deal of government
regulation, and their own strategic inhibition, which I discuss further below.
One of the members of the interview team, Ed Brower, had been the Assistant Postmaster
General for Bulk Mail Centers. He was still smarting from having built 21 bulk mail centers that
were planned when the Postal Service had over 1.5 billion parcels, but were completed when the
volume had dropped to only 300 million. As the bulk mail centers were being built, UPS was
intervening in the USPS’ rate process to make sure we fully attributed costs to parcel posts. The
result was that our prices had to go up, and as they did, UPS undercut them. It was only downhill
from there because UPS understood their core competency as well as our rate-setting process.
Distribution centers were simply not going to work for the Postal Service. But there was another
reason they wouldn’t work: distribution centers presumed that the exclusively physical delivery
of mail, at very high costs to the USPS, would last forever.
In this chapter, I discuss the strategic inhibition that has prevented the Postal Service
from adopting the technologies and market-based strategies that may hold the key to its survival.
I briefly profile some of the many successful private-sector executives who came into the Postal
Service as Postmasters General only to stop short of transforming the Postal Service, and who
ultimately left after having merely maintained the organization’s traditional trajectory. I detail
the liberalizing forces pushing the postal market domestically and internationally. I describe
12
some of the challenges facing the Postal Service and their need to address competitive forces.
And I conclude by highlighting Earth Class Mail and its transformative potential to redefine the
mission of the Postal Service.
Through the years, those of us inside the Postal Service were long caught in an argument
as to whether we were a communications or a physical distribution business. After we more or
less settled on the fact that the USPS was a physical distribution business, most of the strategic
thinking in the Postal Service became geared almost exclusively toward mechanizing and
automating all of the physical distribution processes. We paid less attention to adopting emerging
technologies and market-based processes that would generate revenue and increase market share.
I believe the commitment to the landmark Postal Reorganization Act of 1970 – the
protection of the postal monopoly and the fear of losing it – not only created an organization that
was completely risk-averse, but one that severely hampered postal management from pursuing
emerging technologies. We were always reminded that it was not in our best interest to attempt
to create new products that would infuriate the business world and invite a review of the postal
monopoly. Rather than look creatively at mail as communications or documents, we looked at it
far more narrowly as a commodity to be delivered through a physical distribution process.
This strategic inhibition would preclude the postal service from participating in important
portions of the communications market: telephone, fax, email, and emerging technologies. As
communications shifted from analog to digital, new products and services started to supplant
physical mail. As can be seen with hindsight, the Postal Service’s failure to adopt new
technologies has had significant repercussions.
Most of the companies that contracted with the postal service to create the path to the
“physical distribution future” fell into the traditional and risk-averse camps. If 240 distribution
pockets were good on a multi-position letter sorter, 1,000 pockets were better.1 For either the
Postal Service Research and Development Group or the Postal Service’s favorite contractors, size
was simply no object. A flat sorting machine that took up an acre and couldn’t fit into most
postal distribution centers and a 10,000-pocket letter distribution machine were but two actual, if
misguided, efforts to mechanize and automate the manual physical distribution processes.
The Postal Service suffered from a strategic inhibition that prevented it from abandoning
the orthodoxy in favor of embracing new technologies with market-based best practices. One
continually discussed strategy for changing the strategic direction of the Postal Service was to
bring an “outsider” into the position of Postmaster General. Surely someone from the private
sector would make the USPS look more like the private sector, right? This idea proved so
compelling that, after the reorganization of 1970, the USPS would embrace it over and over
again. But none of the short-timer outsiders brought into the Postal Service had the strategic
vision or muscle to transform the organization. Therefore, none of them moved the Postal
Service one inch away from a purely physical distribution model.
Elmer Klassen, formerly president of American Can Corporation, was Postmaster
General from 1971 to 1973. Klassen oversaw the seminal, if incomplete, postal reorganization.
1
For information on how such thinking has been changed forever by Earth Class Mail’s MegaSorter™ sortation
system, see Mike Miles’ chapter.
The ideal end-state envisioned by all of these postal managers evidently revolved around
the creation of a system that would automate mail preparation and mail distribution in a
homogeneous delivery order sequence of flats and letters that could be provided to the carrier.
This was a dream based on the strategic design of the postal service being purely and always a
physical distribution system run by an organization that knew what was best for its customers.
This planned-economy omniscience was not isolated to the Postal Service. An ad from the Bell
System placed in a 1948 National Geographic Magazine captured it well: “We are in the unique
position of knowing what is best for our customers.”
The Postal Service did share that opinion. As just one example, I recall a time when I
was a consultant for MasterCard International in 1994, when non-carrier employees in the Postal
Service were removing credit cards from mass mailings intended for customers at residential
addresses. The annualized losses to MasterCard were in the range of $800 million. To combat
14
this misuse of the mail, MasterCard developed a solution that was both truly novel and a win-win,
a combination that may well have held the seeds of the solution’s demise.
MasterCard proposed using their own secure carriers to deliver the cards to their
destination delivery branch. MasterCard was willing to pay the full postal rate, deliver the cards
to the actual destination delivery unit themselves, and receive a signature from the delivery unit
manager at the destination post office. It was an ingenious solution, securely delivering the cards
to the destination post office, because most of the stolen cards were being taken by postal
employees at transshipment points within the Postal Service, large offices, airport postal units,
and other places where entire trays of cards could be re-addressed to fencing centers around the
world.
When we met with Postal Officials in Washington, they were unmoved. They would not
allow MasterCard to use another carrier to deliver the cards to the destination postal unit. They
were not happy about interfacing with another carrier and there were no rules that they felt would
allow them to provide this service—even though they were going to receive the full, rated postage
from a company that was one of their largest customers. In fact, they suggested that the cards
could be sent individually registered to the billion customers worldwide, at many times the cost of
having the customers make a phone call to validate the cards and more than 40 times the present
postage.
Any manager that has ever been successful in a business based on market factors would
instantly recognize the issues at play in the MasterCard case. However, the environment is
quickly changing. The Postal Service can no longer afford to tell its largest customers “No!”
without explanation or even logic of any kind.
Consistent with the mono-focus on distribution, all of the Postal Service’s strategies were
based on the assumption that physical mail communication was and always would be in the best
interests of the consumer. While the Postal Service envisioned some loss of volume to other
technologies, it nevertheless assumed that a considerable combination of business and personal
mail would continue to feed its requirement for volume. It is unclear if the organization ever
considered a migration of bulk business mail and standard mail to other technologies, or their
elimination, on grounds that such mail consumed significant natural resources and had an
enormous negative impact on the environment.
As Cameron Powell points out in “Will Postal Mail Eventually Give Way to the
Internet?”, the Postal Service’s customers are asking for something entirely different from what
the Postal Service is giving them. As the Bell System and others have found to their chagrin, this
tension has historically been resolved by the disintermediating forces of deregulation or highly
disruptive technologies. This is another way of saying that if the Postal Service doesn’t answer
market demand, the market may provide its own answer, one in which the Postal Service’s role
will be a shadow of what it has been.
The Postal Service’s physical distribution strategy has meant that mail was one type of
communication and one type of document in the business stream. We gave very little
consideration to the life cycle of that mail document once it entered a business and the real
revenue opportunities presented to us in document management.
In the 40 years since the Postal Service began to mechanize and then automate the
mailstream, it has demonstrated a strong commitment to both service and cost control. Its
successful movement of mail to higher automated productivity rates is quite significant,
Is Competition Healthy?
How open was the Postal Service to competition? I remember being with Postmaster
General Ben Bailar after he’d watched one of the first Federal Express ads on national television.
The ad showed a person waiting in line at a post office with the clock nearing 5:00p.m. The ad
was playing on a widespread public perception about postal customer service, so the window
curtain was pulled down at 5:00 in the face of the waiting customer. The voice-over then uttered
the now famous line, “When it absolutely, positively, has to be there overnight.” While the ad
was very well done, the Postmaster General was quite angry. “Fred Smith has obviously not seen
this”, he said, saying less about Fred Smith than about his innermost feelings about the sanctity of
the Postal Service and the evils of competition.
He reached over and called Fred Smith’s personal line. I didn’t hear Fred’s side of the
conversation, but it became clear to me that Fred had seen the ad and thought the perceptions
contained therein were right on target. Fred Smith was a recognized risk taker – his trip to Las
Vegas, where he bet the one-half of his Federal Express payroll he did have in the bank in order
to win the other half, became the stuff of legend – and his perception of his competitor as slow,
cumbersome, and out of tune with the customer fueled his market-based strategy to provide better
service to his customers. He listened to the customer telling him it did matter how long
something took to get delivered, heard they’d pay more for fast, sure service – and took away the
lion’s share of the overnight service market.
Meanwhile, still in our own world at USPS, we continued to decide on behalf of the
regulators what information the regulators needed in order to regulate us. And so of course we
tended to generate precisely that data that supported our position in the rate cases. I was
sometimes in the thick of it. As a rate case witness in 77-1, I built a hypothetical postal service
model to develop the service-related costs that were attributable to each class of mail and then
tried to use postal data systems to support my position. Unfortunately, this data was a product of
systems that were designed to support the strategic initiatives of postal management – not
necessarily to generate strategic modeling for best practice and technology innovations.
Former Postal Rate Commission Chairman Clyde S. DuPont expressed his frustration
with the difficulty the Commission was having getting particular types of data: “Although our
discovery powers are generally sufficient to permit us to test and clarify evidence presented in our
proceedings, the [postal] service has treated the actual collection of data as its exclusive domain.
It reserves the design of its statistical systems and the data to be released as a matter of unilateral
16
discretion. Thus the commission and the parties to our proceedings have been tied to the data the
Postal Service is willing and able to make available.”
In the final analysis, Federal Express, United Parcel Service, and all of the other major
postal competitors did drive significant changes in the way the Postal Service managed itself. If
FedEx could get it there the next day, then we began to believe we could too. But we wouldn’t
have believed we could do it if we hadn’t seen it happen, just as Roger Bannister’s shattering of
the four-minute mile barrier led dozens of runners to break it in just the next few years. This is
what competition does best. UPS also affected us strongly. Although UPS grew bigger and
bigger and we began to talk about them having service problems like we did, most postal
managers recognized that UPS was providing better service than we were and that fact served as a
motivation for us to do a better job. In other words, competition did make us better, in spite of
our denials that competition had any role in what we were doing.
There were a lot of reasons the Postal Service did not view competition very positively ,
not to mention that we didn’t want any competition in the First Class letter stream, and that hiding
behind the monopoly was a convenient way to leave the subject alone. We always argued that the
monopoly was necessary to fulfill our mission and to provide an economically sound postal
system that could afford to deliver letters between any two points in the country—no matter how
remote. (Recent data, to say nothing of current technology, undermines this argument, as Rick
Geddes and, in later chapter, Chris Kwak, both explain). Unfortunately for us and the consumer,
our head-in-the-sand strategy also inhibited the Postal Service from seeking out innovation,
moving into new and profitable markets, and planning for the substitution of other technologies
for physical mail.
The USPS stands at an historic intersection. Geddes believes the postal service has
achieved a number of the goals of postal reorganization, including improvements in productivity,
elimination of direct subsidies, diminishment of direct congressional control, and mail users
paying more of the costs. On the negative side, the Postal Service has not protected the
taxpayer’s initial equity, maintained wages comparable to private industry, nor eliminated
political influence over the service. In his 2003 summation, Geddes states, “Further reform of the
U.S. Postal Service is timely. The Postal Service is losing substantial amounts of money, while
rates are rising rapidly.”
The nature of any reform, how quickly they take place, and the strategic modeling that
accompanies them will be the challenge that identifies whether there is a window of opportunity
currently available to the U.S. Postal Service. Geddes says that “once those critical institutional
reforms are in place, the Postal Rate Commission can gradually reduce the scope of the Postal
Service’s monopoly by contracting the size of the reserved area. The contraction would allow
competition to be introduced steadily but slowly and thus build confidence in the market’s ability
to provide delivery of letter mail.”
While I can appreciate Geddes’ cautious optimism, I can also appreciate that the world is
changing quickly enough that time is not favoring the USPS. In fact, if the substitution of email
for physical mail continues at the estimated rates, and the USPS fails to reinvent itself to take
advantage of advances in digital-imaging and Internet technologies, its challenges will continue
to be more in the nature of challenges than opportunities. And if the USPS does not fully grasp
the demands of mail recipients to receive, in electronic form, even mail that began as paper (of
which more is discussed in the section entitled “Will Postal Mail Eventually Give Way to the
Internet?”), it will only fall farther behind.
It is always interesting to take a look outside the United States and see what other
countries’ posts are doing in response to changing dynamics. For example, we increasingly see
some of the trendsetting posts using vertical and horizontal integration strategies to allow them to
own and manage the external physical distribution services as well as to connect to electronic
document management systems within organizations. Without strategic inhibition to limit them,
they are creating a supplier network that manages all of the communications needs of customers.
Their strategies require them to add to their offerings both traditionally mail-aligned services,
such as mail pre-sorting and international 3rd-party logistics management, plus non-traditional
services such as document scanning, storing and destruction services, remittance processing, and
print management. Some of these foreign posts are eyeing a market in the United States, where
the USPS has done little to shape the future by developing strategic initiatives that blend
technology with their traditional physical distribution product.
18
Around the world we also see examples of posts that are struggling to keep up with new
economic growth. Some countries in the Arab World, for example, do not have mail delivery to
households and businesses. Their citizens are required to travel to their local post office to pick
up their mail (even in the U.S., 15% of households use a PO Box). Saudi Post and Microsoft
recently announced an undertaking in which Microsoft will build the new web presence for Saudi
Post, and one of the features under consideration is an email notification service to let citizens
know when mail has arrived for them, so they can know that it’s time to go to the post office and
pick up their mail.
Vietnam is another example of a country – among several in Asia – with a rapidly
growing economy and a post office that is struggling to maintain its investment in automation in
order to meet its postal volume. As new businesses launch and existing businesses grow, mail
volume naturally increases. Countries like Vietnam are faced with two options. One is to invest
in the same generation of technology that the industrialized countries have been using for the past
four decades. The other is to make the leap to a more scalable and cost effective next-generation
infrastructure, such as Michael Miles describes in his chapter on MegaSorters, and enjoy
substantially better worker productivity much sooner than the industrialized countries could get
there. They can do this because they have the opportunity to take a fresh mindset to their
automation needs. Other posts, having picked their automation platforms already, tend to stick
with them because they have gained institutional comfort with the operation and maintenance of
the equipment, not to mention long-term contracts and relationships with suppliers.
In general, smaller countries and those in northern latitudes are the most attuned to
automation advantages, and, because they do not enjoy the scale economics of a La Poste or a
Deutsche Post, they are always seeking to make every possible improvement to their productivity.
Yet they must remain competitive in a much more open market. Northern countries like Sweden
and Estonia have the additional concern that sending out their carriers in the middle of brutal
winter snow and ice storms is a lot more costly (and riskier to employees) than during the
summer months, and so anything that can be shifted to an electronic delivery would be a blessing.
Even something as simple as having a convenient electronic means of letting the carrier know
that a family is on vacation and therefore their house can be skipped over would incrementally
reduce their costs of operations. These countries have been more aggressive in adopting
electronic services than countries to their south, where the weather is less to prone to tax their
productivity figures.
The transformations that are taking place in the world of posts are illustrating how simple
physical distribution of the mail is being replaced by new technologies. The connectivity of
traditional mail to document management and enterprise content management technologies will
drive significant markets in the future world of posts. Those organizations that have taken
advantage of market opportunities will be far more likely to succeed in a competitive world than
those that have maintained traditional government regulation and safety.
It is of critical importance to the remaining non-liberalized posts like the USPS to
reinvent themselves now, while they can still leverage their national “trust brand” to extend their
offerings into the enterprise and into the homes of their customer base through the power of the
Internet. Failure to do so will most certainly result in loss of monopoly, loss of market share, and
loss of opportunity to take advantage of the changes in business processes as well as changes in
the communications markets. In the following chapters my co-authors will further address the
need for, and inevitability of, such a reinvention.
In 2005, the USPS had operating revenues of $69 billion dollars, assets of $25 billion
dollars, and 803,000 employees; 1 in every 188 people employed in the United States works for
the USPS. In 2004, the Postal Service processed mail weighing 12.9 million tons or 15% of the
paper produced in the United States.
Each day the USPS delivers over 680 million pieces of mail….to 143 million addresses.
It delivers more than twice as much mail as it did two decades ago, but with the same number of
employees. To put that number in international perspective, the Universal Postal Union reports
that 1.2 billion pieces of mail are delivered worldwide each day, putting the USPS at over 50% of
that volume.
The USPS is the third-largest employer in the United States (after the United States
Department of Defense and Wal-Mart) and operates the largest civilian fleet in the world, with an
estimated 214,000 vehicles. In an interview on NPR, a USPS official stated that for every penny
increase in the national average price of gasoline, the USPS spends an extra $8,000,000 a year to
fuel their fleet. This implies that the fleet requires some 800,000,000 gallons of fuel per year, and
an estimated fuel budget of $2 billion dollars.
Among the industrialized countries, the United States of America has the highest level of
domestic letter-post traffic in the world, with 199 billion items a year. Meanwhile, Japan
generates some 25 billion items, while Germany and Great Britain generate about 21 billion items
each.
Among the developing countries, the Peoples Republic of China generates the most
letter-post items, more than 23 billion, followed by Brazil with 8.6 billion and India with 7.3
billion.”
The UPU classifies industrial countries as, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada,
Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan,
Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Monaco, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, San Marino,
Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Vatican City, and the USA.
Other size statistics from the UPU: “Postal services employ close to 5.5 million people,
making the Post one of the largest employers in the world. The industrialized countries employ
almost half of all postal employees. The United States of America, with 803,000 employees, and
China with 688,000, have the largest numbers of postal employees in the world. More than
665,000 permanent post offices world-wide make the Post one of the most extensive networks on
the planet. Globally, India has the largest number of permanent offices (155,516).”
It is clear that the posts are generally one of the largest employers in the country where
they exist. Internationally they employ almost 6 million people and have a clearly vested interest
in the reduction in first class letter volumes and the rise of other communication technologies.
How they see themselves individually, and as a group, separates the trend setters from the trend
followers.
20
Appendix B - Selected References
UPU The worldwide postal network in figures
IDS Postal Wire Newsletter, What’s the latest on other Foreign Postals, 2003.
The Global Fight on Postal Markets, Postal Sector Meeting on Multinationals, May 2001.
Tappi (http://www.livingtreepaper.com/about_faq.html)
Cohen, Ferguson, Waller, and Xenakis, Universal Service Without a Monopoly?, Office of Rates, Analysis
and Planning, U.S. Postal Rate Commission, November 1999.
Cohen, Robinson, Heehy, Waller and Xenakis, Postal Regulation and Worksharing in the U.S., December
2004.
Cohen, Jonsson, Robinson, Selander, Waller and Xenakis, “The Impact of Competitive Entry into the
Swedish Postal Market.”
Rick Geddes. “Opportunities for Anticompetitive Behavior in Postal Services,” American Enterprise Institute
AEI Online (http://aie.org) (2003)
Rick Geddes, Saving the Mail How to Solve the Problems of the U.S. Postal Service. 2003.
Milton and Rose D. Friedman, Capitalism and Freedom, University of Chicago Press, 1982, P. 29.
Robert Cohen, Matthew Robinson, John Walker & Spyros Xenakis, “The Cost of Universal Service in the
U.S. and its impact on Competition,” 2002. Published in the Proceedings of Wissenschaftliches Institut fur
Kommunikationsdienste GmbH (WIK).
William J. Henderson, “End of the Route: I Ran the Postal Service; It Should be Privatized,” Washington
Post
By Cameron Powell
Forty years ago, the U.S. Congress passed a law that allowed mail recipients the modest
right to request that the Postal Service remove them from mailing lists that were sources of
offensive sexual content. The statute was challenged by “publishers, distributors, owners, and
operators of mail order houses, mailing list brokers, and owners and operators of mail service
organizations,” 2 whom we’ll call the Mail Partisans, as an unconstitutional infringement on their
rights to free speech. Four decades later, in light of the overwhelming popularity of the CAN-
SPAM Act against email spam, the Do Not Call Registry, and Internet content filters, the Mail
Partisans’ insistence on advertisers’ untrammeled right to force advertising communications on
every citizen may strike us as quaint, even mule-headed:
The freedom to communicate orally and by the written word and, indeed, in every
manner whatsoever, is imperative to a free and sane society.3
The Supreme Court, after noting that mail in general was “an indispensable adjunct of every
civilized society . . . imperative to a healthy social order,” went on to explain why your right to be
left alone must trump the right of others to communicate with you:
a sufficient measure of individual autonomy must survive to permit every householder to
exercise control over unwanted mail . . . Today's merchandising methods, the plethora of
mass mailings subsidized by low postal rates, and the growth of the sale of large mailing
lists as an industry, in itself, have changed the mailman from a carrier of primarily
private communications, as he was in a more leisurely day, and have made him an
adjunct of the mass mailer who sends unsolicited and often unwanted mail into every
home . . . [W]hether measured by pieces or pounds, Everyman's mail today is made up
overwhelmingly of material he did not seek from persons he does not know. And, all too
often, it is matter he finds offensive.
***
We therefore categorically reject the argument that a vendor has a right, under the
Constitution or otherwise, to send unwanted material into the home of another. If this
prohibition operates to impede the flow of even valid ideas, the answer is that no one has
a right to press even "good" ideas on an unwilling recipient. That we are often
"captives" outside the sanctuary of the home and subject to objectionable speech and
other sound does not mean we must be captives everywhere.4
Addressing the National Postal Forum convention in March 2007, USPS Postmaster
General Jack Potter described the mounting protest against unsolicited mail at the state level,
saying, “Not all of the legislation that can affect our industry comes out of Washington. ‘Do Not
Mail’ legislation has popped up in over a dozen states. The Postal Service, obviously, opposes
these legislative efforts.”
2
Rowan v. United States Post Office Department, 397 US 728 (1970).
3
Id.
4
Id. (emphases added).
24
Nevertheless, Congress has turned a blind eye to giving mail recipients the same control
over their own physical mailboxes that they’ve granted to us as receivers of unwanted email and
phone calls. But technology is now able to bypass postal delivery entirely, and with it,
legislatures. We no longer have to wait for laws to change: we can use technology to help
individual receivers of mail take control on their own. Once citizens are able to have mail
digitized and placed online, once they can employ automatic rules to pre-screen mail, once they
can remove themselves from mailing lists with a simple click, they won’t need congresses and
parliaments anymore. All the Mail Partisans’ lobbyists and all the Mail Partisans’ men won’t be
able to put the Humpty-Dumpty of paper mail back together again.
In this chapter, I present economic arguments for and against receiving paper mail. I
examine the true and avoidably high costs of handling physical mail: direct, lost productivity,
and environmental. I then discuss the benefits of converting paper mail to digital form as early in
paper’s life cycle as possible: in the mailroom upon delivery (the MegaSorter™ sortation system
discussed by Mike Miles below, however, would allow conversion, recycling or redirection at the
post office of origin). In the next chapter, I detail the workings of the first system applicable to
all mail, Earth Class Mail™ online postal mail. In both chapters, I discuss the availability,
today, of technology that should change forever the way every mailer and post thinks about mail.
In later chapters we discuss what mailers and posts can do to prepare for a digital future. This
future is coming faster now, and Mail Partisans need to, as a soldier of my acquaintance often
puts it, “move or get hit.”
Distaste for paper and its costs – to businesses and individuals, to the environment, and to
productivity – has increased in recent decades, and much of those costs are now preventable by
advances in technology.
The future of most mail, in fact, is digital, and delivered on the Internet. Is this another
way of harping on the familiar refrain that email will replace letter mail? Not at all. To be clear,
this majority of mail will still begin as paper and be mailed. But its delivery to Internet-enabled
residences and enterprises will be digital, so mail reception and processing will be more like
email and voice mail. Electronically delivered postal mail is not, like email, a substitute for mail;
it is a partial substitute for currently labor-intensive and costly mail delivery. By reducing the
cost of receiving paper mail, and eliminating associated downstream costs of handling paper,
mail-related companies can actually make substitution by email or fax less attractive.
The Universal Postal Union (UPU) has affirmed that “[t]he postal industry and market
are about to change decisively and more rapidly than ever before. Global forces are at work:
globalization, liberalization, deregulation, competition and technology; and they are bringing
dramatic changes to the way we work, learn, communicate and live.”5 These forces, the UPU
warns, “are unstoppable.” This chapter is primarily concerned with elaborating on one of these
forces, technology, which will change the paper-based-mail business in ways the UPU has not
discussed publicly.
5
Universal Postal Union, “The Post – Emerging Issues and Trends,” 2002, p. 5.
So said the emcee who introduced Earth Class Mail at a recent venture capital
conference, and he was right; predictions of a “paperless society” have not come true. There’s a
lot to love about paper, and that’s true even for those of us who work on reducing the costs of
paper. As I write this in a coffee shop where a high-tech friend sits across the table from me, I
am left cold by his Sony Reader. I have no interest in storing several hundred books on an
electronic device, even if I can take a single item, the Reader, on a trip, rather than the four books
and three magazines I might otherwise take with me. Electronic media has no historical or
emotional resonance for me. It does not remind me of happy days reading as a young boy, or of
days I soaked up the sun with a book at an outdoor café. These memories are deeply engraved,
and closely associated with books made of paper.
The Mail Partisans will patiently explain to you that people like me just like the feel of
paper and don’t like sitting in front of a computer 16 hours a day. Small children, the elderly, and
the poor deal better with paper – at least for now.6 Still, although people claim not to like what
Mail Partisans call “Direct” or unsolicited mail, their responses to it remain profitable for the
mailers.
Pitney Bowes’ recent study, “Mail Preference Study Shows Consumers Clearly Prefer
Mail”, reported the findings of a consumer survey commissioned from International
Communications Research (ICR): “even in today's electronic world, the majority of consumers
(66%) prefer regular mail for documents, letters and messages, up from 62% in 2001.” Regular
mail, Pitney Bowes, said, “continues to be the essential tool in communicating with the consumer.
It is universal, convenient, descriptive and perceived as secured,” as well as “more persuasive”
than email. Pitney Bowes also reported that consumers “overwhelmingly” claimed they “would
rather receive new product and service offerings via regular mail vs. e-mail, whether or not they
have done business with the company sending.7 Consumers are also more likely to discard
unopened e-mail (three out of four) than unopened regular mail.”
More statistics support the Mail Partisans’ side of the argument: according to the USPS’
Household Diary 2005, mail volume is growing at 3% per year. First Class mail has declined by
20% since 1998, but annual volume goes up by several billion pieces of advertising mail per year.
The growth in mail volume consistently outpaces population growth and the rate of household
formation: there are 145 million delivery points, and 1.8 million new delivery points are added
each year. However, some of the Mail Partisans’ claims – that Internet advertising growth “has
slowed”, while direct mail “is growing”8 – are sleight of hand made in the hopes that the audience
will not note that a rate of growth (the Internet’s) is being compared to absolute growth (direct
mail’s). If Google’s Internet advertising is growing at 30% per year (however slowed that may
be) and direct mail at 2% per year, any 8th-grader can tell you where and when the lines on the
chart will cross.
6
As digital display improves and those weaned on the Internet grow older, the ranks of web-reading elderly may yet
grow. Indeed, already, so-called silver surfers are on the rise, “something that can’t have escaped the online direct
marketing community.” A recent survey by Axa revealed that “41 per cent of retired people preferred surfing the
internet to other more traditional hobbies such as gardening and DIY." Equimedia 3/30/2007
(http://www.equimedia.co.uk/Advertisers-going-for-online-direct-marketing-2007-03-30.htm). "Falling volumes
despite a continued consumer engagement with direct mail could be attributed to a shift to online direct marketing. The
Royal Mail study revealed a rise in direct mail targeting the 55- to 64-year-old age group - traditionally a less web-
savvy demographic.”
7
This is perhaps an artfully diplomatic reference meaning “whether solicited or not”.
8
Luis Jimenez, “Allied Forces,” Postal Technology International, September 2005.
26
The USPS Household Diary 2005 says 96% of all mail is generated by businesses, 80%
of which is received at home, and 4% is generated by households. Mail has become by, of, and
for the corporation; it just so happens that much of that mail is mailed by that corporation to
individuals. Here is our first hint of what may be delicately called the lack of alignment of the
interests of the corporate mailers and the residential mail recipients.
The High Costs of Hard Spam: Unsolicited Mail and the Waning “Mail Moment”
In March 2000, the Postmaster General was moved to proclaim “a New Golden Age of
Mail” and to report that he had “delivered” on his promise to “keep the mail relevant.”9 Only a
few months later, he reported the “sobering trends” that First Class mail was not growing at
historical rates, that consolidation of multiple mail pieces into one envelope was becoming
common, and that electronic banking and payments were growing.10 His dual and dueling
opinions well represent the ambivalence and uncertainty our society is feeling about paper-based
mail.
The first counter-argument to the Mail Partisans concerns unsolicited mail – known as
“hard spam” and “junk mail.” I’ll then discuss the costs of delivering other unwanted mail (not
necessarily unsolicited, but not wanted as paper or at all at the moment of receipt) and even
wanted mail, particularly in the enterprise context.
Studies show that the so-called Mail Moment, the degree of delight that a mail recipient
experiences upon reaching into her mailbox, has been declining for decades and is at an all-time
low. For more households every year, mailboxes are bereft of personal First Class mail and
stuffed with bills and unwelcome Standard Mail. How can this be consistent with the Mail
Partisans’ data?
Pitney Bowes’ consumer survey, like studies of the Mail Moment, all suffer from the
same defect: they ask consumers for their opinions and self-reports about their mail behavior,
which are far less accurate and reliable than actual observations of their behavior. Indeed, when
we observe actual behavior, the statistics are less comforting: consumers simply do not respond
to over 99% of all prospecting advertising mail, and we have no idea why. (By contrast, the
tracking capability of the Internet permits Earth Class Mail Corp. to discover what people do with
their mail if that mail is received online, and users can be asked questions about why they are
shredding or recycling pieces unopened. See Natalee Roan’s chapter in this book). Response
rates to direct mail prospecting campaigns have sunk well below 1%. In some studies, response
rates to email spam were actually higher.
The environmental and direct costs of receiving unsolicited mail in paper form are
arguably far higher than the costs of dealing with spam. Paper disposal costs time and money.
While estimates of the cost of email to corporations vary widely, Nucleus Research
reported in June 2004 that electronic spam, at that time,11 cost companies $1934 per employee per
9
The Post Office, Annual Report, 1999-2000, HMSO London, Chairman’s Review.
10
William J. Henderson, “USPS Faces Sobering Trends”, statement to the Fall 2000 National Postal Forum, at
Anaheim, CA, reported in dmnews.com, Sept. 12, 2000.
11
Spam had doubled in the two years between the June 2004 study and study only two years earlier, and the amount of
spam has only continued to increase since 2004.
12
Nucleus claimed the figure was “conservative” because it did not include “the dollar expense of IT personnel,
software, CPU hardware, and bandwidth hogged by spam.” However, the study also estimated that each of the 29
spam emails per day (in 2003) took away an unexplained 30 seconds of employee productivity. This number is perhaps
supportable if it is attempting to take into account the fully-burdened costs of all employee time devoted to email, from
IT SWAT teams to administrative assistants.
13
Aside from costing $5, the DMA opt-out lasts for five years and follows only the address submitted (if you move,
you start over). And worst of all, it presents a false choice, given the capabilities of technology, of receiving all direct
mail or none, with nothing in between. Because most consumers do want some direct mail, all or nothing is no
improvement on all, and that’s no choice at all.
28
sender is read by optical character recognition, an automatic rule or the pointing and clicking of a
recipient are all it takes to place the recipient on a suppression file. In “The Next Inflection Point
in Direct Marketing”, Natalee Roan will explain how direct mailers can actually use technology
and the express preferences of recipients to mail more profitably and effectively, with less
dissatisfaction from recipients. But next, some of the hard costs of receiving mail in paper form.
A great deal of mail is not technically unsolicited, but it is unwanted. Think of the email
you get: how many subscriptions do you have to emails that you guiltily delete as soon as they
arrive? Mail has similar tendencies. We wanted it once, but we don’t want it right now. For
example, we may like getting our favorite rock-climbing catalogs, but in Seattle we don’t climb
much in January. Similarly, a person may like buying gifts for his wife from Victoria’s Secret,
but will only want the catalogs to arrive before birthdays or our anniversaries -- even the most
stalwart pleasure-seeker may not want (much less order from) the catalog every week. Unwanted
mail is thus a larger category that includes unsolicited mail.
Even wanted mail may not be wanted in physical form – we may desire the information,
but not the paper. We might call the entire category Physically Unwanted Mail. How much of all
mail is physically unwanted, and any delivery of it (or in the typical “digital mail” context,
opening it, scanning it, performing optical character recognition and manual OCR correction on
it) wasted? Below are the choices made by our customers14 when presented with mere images of
the outside of their mail:
What customer behavior has shown is that if you allow users choice, they will prevent
you from delivering, and facilitate the ecologically responsible recycling of, a whopping 52% of
their mail without even opening it. They’ll ask that:
14
A quick note about the customer base reflected in this graph: these users span 80 countries, but all have a mail
reception address in the United States. Users range from residential households and major corporations to military
personnel, expatriates and foreign-based businesses, and Baby Boomer consumers who live in an RV full time or have
multiple homes. To be sure, these are segments that for the most part are highly targeted by direct mailers – they are
well educated, travel frequently, earn high incomes, and have a lot of disposable income. Since most of these users
have only signed up for service in recent months (our service was launched only in the summer of 2006) many of them
have not given mailers the opportunity to catch up with their new address. Most of the mail received at their Earth
Class Mail accounts arrived with a yellow USPS forwarding sticker, or came from a sender they’ve contacted directly
to inform of their new mailing address.
Of the 44% of mail pieces whose contents are scanned, there is still a physical piece to
deal with after the scan. Here’s what users do next:
In other words, only 7% of all pieces are ever delivered in physical form, while 93% of
all mail pieces are merely shredded, recycled, or scanned – that is, 93% are unwanted in paper
form at all. (The 7% consist largely of checks, for which Earth Class Mail will soon be offering
electronic deposit.) With those figures in mind, let’s look at what most organizations spend
unnecessarily today.
Delivering mail physically is expensive. According to two studies, one by IDC and one
by the accounting firm Coopers & Lybrand, the cost of delivering an envelope to an enterprise is
between $.35 and $1.00. But if 93% of all mail delivered to named employees is not wanted in
physical form, you need only multiply the number of pieces of mail that your named employees
receive by 93% and then again by a conservative $.50 per piece to get a sense of the daily waste
incurred by your company in delivery alone of employee mail that’s unwanted in paper form.
Enterprises also receive workflow mail – e.g. invoices, contracts, and checks – which can
be handled the same way every time. We call this Automatic Rules Mail. The Association for
Information and Image Management (AIIM) never tires of reminding people how expensive paper
is. For example, the lifecycle cost of pushing paper is over $20 per document (something that
was once a piece of mail). Coopers & Lybrand estimated this cost at $50 per document – with
paper filing efforts costing $20, looking for lost paper documents costing $120, and reproducing
lost paper documents costing $220.
We can identify the following hard costs of mail, some applicable to personal mail but
most incurred by any organization that receives mail:
• Taking delivery
• Housing all organization-based recipients at their own permanent desks with filing
cabinets – including housing recipients who could be fully virtual if only they had a way
of timely and reliably receiving their mail
30
• Hand-sorting mail to the mail stop (or, in certain cases, machine sorting using costly
equipment)
• Carting mail around an office
• Loading mail into trucks or vans
• Truck mail across a corporate campus
• Paying fees under the Private Express Statute (so called USPS “monopoly tax”)for
crossing a public street while trucking mail across a corporate campus
• Hand-casing paper mail at mail stop
• Filing opened mail away
• Locating again, or losing and trying to locate paper documents that were once mail
• Retrieving paper documents
• Copying paper documents
• Faxing paper documents
• Opening the mail for someone who is traveling and reading by phone, copying, or faxing
the contents elsewhere
• Sharing the mail’s contents with others (by courier, fax, copy, scanning and emailing,
etc.)
• Storing with filing systems or at expensive off-site archives
• Paying to haul away as trash (including by households)
• Destroying mail
• Transporting mail between almost every step
Less quantifiable, but no less real, are the lost-productivity and opportunity costs exacted
from an organization when only two of the three major communications media can be checked
and managed either automatically or remotely – anywhere, anytime. A surprising number of
enterprise mail recipients have no idea of the costs to employee productivity to receive, deliver,
and manage mail and the paper documents inside. They also believe, understandably, that the
cost doesn’t much matter because it can’t be prevented. Thus fortified by a combination of
ignorance and resignation, the status quo prevails. From delivery to destruction, paper mail
unnecessarily touches many non-mailroom employees: receptionists, administrative assistants,
secretaries, paralegals, janitors, colleagues. The complexity of the waste is illustrated in the
following example.
Let’s say a legal executive, Evelyn La Post, attends a week-long international postal
convention. While walking the floor of the exhibits and in the hallways between seminars with
titles like “The Future of Mail,” she is able to stay current with two of the three major streams of
communications in business today: she can receive phone calls, voice mails, and text messages
on her cell phone, and she can receive email and efaxes by computer or phone. The result? She
can also answer and return phone calls and emails, and business continues to get done.
But anything sent and delivered via paper-based mail is consigned to one of two less
desirable fates: The first fate is that the messages in the mail are not acted upon for at least a
week, because the pile of mail at the office will not be diminished immediately upon her return,
but rather will take several days or more. In a 48-week working year, then, profitability, growth,
and productivity via physical mail are all slowed by over 2% for each week out of the office, and
countless opportunities and good will are lost as the request for RFP is missed, the phone call
from a potential client or customer seeking information is belatedly responded to, and so on.
Nucleus Research’s estimate that email spam costs a 3.1% drop in employee productivity is a
useful comparable.
The other possible fate of the mail that arrives only physically at the office is that the
messages in them are conveyed to the executive in a manner little improved from that employed
by Ben Franklin’s secretary during his tenure as Ambassador to France. First, several employees
sort, cart, and hand-deliver the mail. Then a well-paid executive assistant with a burdened cost of
between $100 and $200 an hour attempts to ascertain for himself which mail is important to
Evelyn and which is not, then opens and reads the mail. He then calls Evelyn to leave messages
or has conversations in which he conveys to Evelyn the contents of the mail and receives any
decisions of what to do with it next. Perhaps he then takes the time to deliver it to yet another
employee, and so on.
For the rest of their lives, each of the pieces of mail that Evelyn did not order to be
thrown away will be moved around, lost, searched for, copied, trucked away, stored, retrieved,
stored again, and finally destroyed, all at far higher cost – again, $20-50 per document – than if
the pieces of mail had been scanned immediately upon arrival.
It is therefore decidedly not ‘free’ to receive mail in paper form; it costs, in fact, far more
to receive and later process mail than to send it. Yet most organizations do not track the high
costs of handling incoming paper mail in the same way they set budgets for outgoing mail. That
means most organizations have very little idea what they are spending, and as any business
process expert can tell you, if you can’t track it, you can’t improve it.
The environmental costs of paper mail delivery have become increasingly difficult, and
politically risky, to dismiss out of hand. Mail’s cost in paper, trees, fuel, and carbon emissions --
each related to the biggest story of the early 21st century, global warming – is breathtaking. A
company whose business model consists entirely of responding to the demand to stop unsolicited
mail begins its own pitch with the trees:
“Unbelievably, we chop down 100,000,000 trees and waste 28 billion gallons of water
every year producing this stuff. Most of this goes straight to the trash or recycling
bin.”15
The paper industry as a whole is the third-largest source of pollution, just behind the
chemical and steel industries.16 Each year, America alone17 dumps into landfills 22 billion
pounds of mail. Of the 212 billion pieces of mail sent each year, something less than 16% are
recycled, meaning more than 168 billion pieces become waste, filling up and leaching toxic
chemicals into landfills.18
15
See the Green Dimes website at http://www.greendimes.com/more_info
16
“An Eco-System of One’s Own,” Vanity Fair, May 2007, at 205.
17
America’s mail constitutes a little over half the mail volume of the world, so the global impact is roughly double
these figures.
18
Six billion of those pieces were delivered to addresses that were no longer valid and returned to sender –
unnecessarily, under existing technology. Of all the materials we recycle in America, the paper of which mail is
composed is the least recovered. Paper as a whole is recycled at a rate of over 50% in most municipalities.
32
With 10 million cases of identity theft a year, and new regulations requiring that all sorts
of documents be shredded after use, shredding has become an enormous industry in America,
with annual expenditures of $6 billion. But some means of shredding paper also destroy its
ability to be recycled into new office paper. Even the fiber in paper that is recycled can only be
remade into new paper 3 or 4 times before the fibers break down too much.
So each year, Americans finance the felling of enough trees to make another 168 billion
pieces of mail that will never be recycled. For every ton of paper we do not recycle, we increase
the air pollution produced by new paper production by 74%, and water pollution by 35%. We
also put more toxic ink, formaldehyde and other chemicals in landfills. For every ton of paper we
do not recycle, we lose 204 trees and consume 8,190 gallons of oil.
The cost of mail, in trees, oil and gas, landfills, and carbon emissions19 is becoming a
matter of immediate urgency. As awareness of global warming increases, and the evidence
mounts, more and more companies will feel consumer pressure to respond – how long will
unnecessary postal and inter-office mail deliveries and employee commuting resist such pressure?
In March 2007, the U.S. Supreme Court issued one of its most important environmental decisions
in years, rebuking a disingenuous Bush Administration argument to hold that the Environmental
Protection Agency not only did have the authority to regulate heat-trapping gases in automobile
emissions, but that it could not evade that authority without providing a scientific basis for its
refusal.20 What that means in practical terms is that the EPA will now face a deluge of lawsuits
attempting to force it to more closely regulate contributors to global warming. Indeed, within
weeks of the decision, California was already threatening suit if the EPA refused to exercise the
authority made clear by the Supreme Court. In a reversal of the tragedy of the commons that
once necessitated federal-level environmental laws in the first place, California and eleven other
states all intend to enact emissions standards that are more stringent than federal standards.
American companies will, so to speak, soon begin to feel the heat.
Like the political will that preceded the U.S.’s seminal environmental statutes of the early
1970s, societal interest in the environment is once again back on the radar. From Al Gore to
Prince Charles and beyond, efforts to indicate the “carbon footprint” of all human activities could
easily result in products and services bearing the equivalent of the nutrition and caloric
information affixed to food, by law, several decades ago. Corporations, universities, and
government agencies at all levels are introducing a dizzying array of serious green initiatives.
One of the Universal Postal Union’s five prime objectives is environmental sustainability, and in
a recent report the UPU noted some leading industry efforts in that direction:
The postal sector may also be influenced by public policy in such areas as ‘sustainable
development’ [regarding] such issues as energy conservation, recycling, or other socially
responsible activities. United Parcel Service (UPS), a leading global integrated non-
postal operator, provides an annual report on its contributions to the environment, and in
the United States the major delivery services (the Postal Service, UPS, and FedEx) are all
operating alternative fuel vehicles.”21
19
Every gallon of gas burned puts 20 pounds of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Vanity Fair at 206. Posts often
have the largest transportation fleets in their respective countries.
20
See Massachusetts v. EPA (S.Ct. April 2, 2007).
21
Universal Postal Union, “The Future of The Postal Sector in a Changing Global Environment – 2012,” First Draft
Report, April 2006, p. 8. These efforts are restricted to land-based vehicles. There is no similar movement afoot to
reduce posts’ usage of jet fuel, which adds 600 million tons of CO2 per year, or 3.5% of man-made totals.
22
“U.S. Government Energy Consumption by Agency and Source, Fiscal Years 1995 and 2005,”
http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/aer/txt/ptb0113.html.
23
Rachael King, “Working from Home: It’s in the Details,” Business Week (2/12/2007),
(http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/feb2007/tc20070212_457307.htm); telephone conversation with
Mark Monroe, Sun’s Director of Sustainable Computing, March 6, 2007.
24
Michael Cieply, “On Screens Soon, an Abused Earth Gets Its Revenge,” New York Times, March 12, 2007.
25
John M. Broder and Marjorie Connelly, “Public Remains Split on Response to Warming,” The New York Times
(April 27, 2007). In addition, “Four percent cited the coming end of the world or biblical prophecy, and 2 percent
blamed space junk.”
26
New York Times Editorial, “A Glacial Pace on Warming,” April 28, 2007.
34
Saving Trees, One Letter at a Time
Just as recycling saves oil, fewer last-mile and last-cubicle deliveries mean lower fuel
usage and reduced carbon emissions that contribute to climate change. And if we were to recycle
100% of our mail (a task made easier by receiving, digitizing, and destroying it in locations both
centralized and secure), we'd save over 200 million trees and 8.2 billion gallons of oil per year.
We'd reduce our landfill consumption rate by 5%. Whereas mail on average is recycled at a rate
of under 16%, customers of Earth Class Mail™ online postal mail recycle on the order of 93% --
an increase of over 500%.
What physical mail delivery will survive? Packages, of course, as well as high-quality,
high-value, personalized printed matter, such as catalogs, greeting cards, invitations, magazines,
and any item with sentiment attached to it. People just do not prefer to receive their sentiment
electronically. DVDs and CDs will continue to be delivered, until the improvement of streaming
and storage technologies, respectively (Netflix is now the second largest mailer in the United
States). The UPU has defined six markets “in terms of the tasks that customers are attempting to
accomplish.”27 I list the four not relating to packages or business and public services below,
along with an assessment of the degree to which physical delivery will survive.
Most observers believe non-Standard Letter Mail will continue its steady decline. The
UPU itself says “technological substitution, at some unforeseeable future stage, is likely to
threaten letter growth.”28 While there are spots around the world where letter volume is still
growing due to surging economies (e.g. Vietnam), for most modern countries letter volume has
been shrinking 1.5% to 4% per year for the past five or more years.
People of all ages, but particularly the younger generations, have long ceased sending
personal messages through First-Class Mail. The humorist Dave Barry’s description of his son’s
labors with postal mail is only partly tongue-in-cheek:
A few years back, when my son was in college, he had to mail a letter. I don’t remember
the specific reason, but I do remember having a conversation with him in which he
complained bitterly about the amount of work involved — finding a place where he could
27
Universal Postal Union, “The Future of The Postal Sector in a Changing Global Environment – 2012,” First Draft
Report, April 2006, p. 17.
28
Universal Postal Union, “The Post – Emerging Issues and Trends,” 2002, p. 5.
30
UPU April 2006 at 19.
31
UPU, April 2006, 18.
36
available in a region, a postal operator would have far less incentive to establish letter-delivery
infrastructures in that region. An example of this is Mongolia, where due to the nomadic nature
of native tribes, the post office is very progressively seeking electronic means of keeping up with
their customer population.
Conclusion
It is very expensive to receive, in paper form, even mail whose message the recipient
wants. The costs to the recipient’s time, the receiving organization, and the environment are
significant – far greater than the cost of spam, which is both illegal and motivated a $5 billion
anti-spam software industry. But the vast majority of mail is not wanted physically. Given a
choice, most organizations and recipients would rather receive their mail electronically, where its
cost, ease of handling, and convenience are more similar to email. And if enterprises, posts, and
mailers are to prosper, they must move to give recipients just such a choice. In the next chapter, I
discuss how.
By Cameron Powell
Choose one or more addresses where you’ll want to receive your mail
Customers can have their mail enter the Earth Class Mail system one of two ways:
• Use one of our “Remote Addresses,” available now in 20 cities (more to come
shortly)32 just like they would use a PO Box address, or
• Place their mail on “firm holdout” with the USPS and assign us as their agent to pick
up and process their mail daily (typically this would be for enterprise customers).
Mail sent directly to a Remote Address will be securely handled by Earth Class Mail
Corp. or a participating presort bureau in its contracted production network. Enterprise customers
can have it both ways – they can have some mail continue to come to their existing addresses and
some come to Remote Addresses. For example, they may wish to arrange to have the mail of
certain departments, remote workers, or any standardized, transactional mail sent to a Remote
Address. The advantages of using a Remote Address include a lower cost for back-end mail
processing, reduced costs of any final storage (at our National Archival Center), and elimination
of both any need to purchase or maintain mail sortation or scanning equipment or to train
employees in mail handling and scanning. The security and confidentiality assurance systems
employed at Remote Addresses are also state of the art.
Users of Remote Addresses will need to complete a USPS Form 1583 – this is the USPS’
means of having you authorize Earth Class Mail Corp. as your Commercial Mail Receiving
Agency. The form itself will not redirect your mail, however; you must do that by notifying
mailers, as discussed in more detail below.
Enterprises have the additional choice of having their mail continue to arrive at their
current operational addresses. Some enterprise users of Earth Class Mail may choose to use their
own addresses in order to maintain full on-site control over their documents; some enterprise
departments may be extra-sensitive about the security of certain documents and wish them to be
handled only onsite, and perhaps even exclusively by their own employees. In any case, mail
sent to an enterprise or its post office may be handled by the enterprise’s own employees, by
32
Earth Class Mail Corp. currently has remote addresses available in Atlanta, Baltimore, Beaverton (OR),
Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Houston, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Miami, New York City, Newark, Philadelphia,
Phoenix, Portland, Richmond, San Francisco, Seattle, St. Louis, Washington, D.C, and Chicago. More
addresses are being added continually.
40
outsourced mailroom organizations such as Pitney Bowes, Oce’, or Xerox, or again, by any of the
participating presort mailers in our contract production network that may be found in the largest
cities in the United States.
Whether you send your mail directly to a Remote Address or to an address of your own,
you are now ready to exercise full control over who uses that address and when.
Use of Earth Class Mail does not preclude use of your existing addresses. Instead, you
now have the power to choose which address to give out, and for what purpose. You might place
the new address on a reply card, in the return area of an envelope, or in an email signature. You
might write a letter or tell someone on the phone, “I know you usually use our standard street
address for mail, but for purposes of sending X and Y types of mail, please use the following
address . . .” The address will look like a regular address, but for a pound sign (#) and number,
which we call the Earth Class Mail number:
Joe Postale
#2215
14525 SW Millikan Way
Beaverton, OR 97005-2343
This number, when read using optical character recognition (OCR) together with your
name or company name, will tell our software which online account to place your envelope image
into, as well as where the physical piece should be cached while awaiting your command.
Separate numbers may be established in order to segregate mail by department, for example, to
reduce workflow later.
Let Your Mail Be Uploaded to the Internet While You Sleep, Travel, or Work
Discretionary Mail – mail that is addressed to a named recipient and that requires some
discretion over how to handle it – always goes through the same process: the image of the sealed
envelope is presented online to await the recipient’s disposition. Most mail sent to employees is
Discretionary Mail.
On the other hand, Automatic Rules Mail – standardized or workflow process mail that
is handled the same way every time – usually takes a pre-defined or automatic route. Without
any need for a request from the recipient, it may, upon arrival, be instantly opened and scanned
and the scanned contents uploaded to the Internet for review, or piped directly into an electronic
records system of some sort. A typical large organization may have one or two hundred different
“ECM” (Enterprise Content Management) systems, and each can have its flow of paper records
auto-routed as captured images, straight from the mailroom, when coded with a specific Earth
Class Mail number or department name that OCR can translate.
If you are a personal or small business user or enterprise employee to whom mail is
specifically addressed by name, you will soon get an email that alerts you to new Discretionary
Mail in your account. As for Automatic Rules Mail, an employee in, say, accounting may simply
have that department’s account open all day, checking regularly for new already-scanned invoices
• The images of the envelopes you have received. Most of the time, the sender is visible
in the view above, but clicking on the envelope will magnify the image, and clicking
again brings it to life-size.
• The sender, in text form (see the “From” column).
• A description of the piece and estimated pages and weight.
• A history of all actions taken on the piece, by you or anyone who may have transferred
it to you.
42
• Approve, for instant deposit at the bank of your choice, a check
For individuals, online postal mail promises greater freedom, security, and convenience.
Online postal mail is a critical means of staying connected for road warriors, leisure travelers and
RVers, retirees, multiple-home owners, expatriates, and more. It's a solution for P.O. Box seekers
who can’t get a P.O. Box at all because their post office has no more real estate. It’s a substitute
for those who want the features of a P.O. Box but don’t want to have to drive to check a post
office box that's empty or full of only unwanted mail, if they’re even in town to check it. Users
can stop worrying about missing important mail. They can greatly reduce late payments,
associated fees and credit problems, and identity theft.
If you allow the user real choices, including scanning, closer to the source of mail, you
slash these costs. What is the source of mail? The mailroom. Leave the mail in the mailroom
until a decision, or automatic rule, tells you what to do with it. Most will be shredded or
recycled. Then, on the smaller amount of mail left over, process it according to those decisions
and rules. The results are the converse of the costs that were discussed in more detail in the last
chapter:
Why deliver, hand-case, sort, and cart for delivery the 93% of Discretionary Mail not
needed in paper form at all?
Why pay someone to pick up and transport for destruction this same mail when it could
have been destroyed in the same building in which it arrived?
Why pay people to open and debate how to process mail when automatic rules can be set
to recognize the sender and address and do the right thing every time?
A digital image is weightless – and waitless. In addition to being easily searched for, and
difficult to lose, it can be instantly retrieved. It can be instantly shared with others, without need
for additional copying, and without charge. Why scan mail at the end of its workflow, too late to
garner the benefits of digitization? As Cisco’s white paper, Connected Workspace, puts it:
And why on earth cash checks the old-fashioned way? Congress’ Checking for the
Twenty-first Century Act (“Check 21”) makes digital checks quickly and cheaply cashable. Your
cash goes to work faster. Recovery rates are higher (you get faster notification of bounces), and
security is greater (fewer hands handle checks).
Slash real estate, construction, and leasing costs while reducing time wasted in commuting
The impossibility of reading or managing paper mail from remote locations makes mail
the last barrier to complete telecommuting and total corporate exploitation of “hoteling” or flex
centers. Mail is thus on a collision course with, simultaneously, business cost-cutting, efforts to
increase productivity, rising gas prices, and, last but not least, commuting times that have grown
like the cancer that is urban sprawl. One quarter of Americans commute more than 45 minutes
each way. “Extreme commuters,” those who commute 90 or more minutes each way, now
number 3.5 million – almost double the number in 1990. (The muffler company Midas, in honor
of its 50th anniversary, recently gave an award for the longest commute to an engineer at Cisco
who commutes 372 miles, or 7 hours, each way, from California’s Sierra foothills to San Jose.)33
In cities like Atlanta, traffic has reached epidemic proportions.
As a result of cost-cutting efforts in business, the office has left the building. More and
more employees work away from their mail stop: they’re mobile, telecommuting, or employed
by outsource vendors. Even “office workers” are spending more time working from home and on
the road than ever before. Remote workers (those working remotely at least 8 hours a week) in
the U.S. are expected to increase to 51 million and 27% of the US workforce by 2008. 17% of
workers will work remotely at least 16 hours a week by 2009. “The global mobile worker
population will increase 7% a year between 2004 and 2008 to 850 million people.” 34
Business Week picked up on the trend in February 2007: “Benefits of letting employees
work from outside the office include keeping cars off the road, helping a company to bolster its
green bona fides. But the practice can also foster employee retention, boost worker productivity,
and slash real estate costs.”35
How does it work? Companies like Capital One are showing the way: “’Nearly 1,200
100% mobile people are assigned to a space that's built for just over 600,’ says Dan Mortensen,
SVP, Corporate Real Estate, Capital One. One way to save on office space is to encourage
employees to work at home, or in the field. When they do come in . . . mobile associates take
whatever space is available.”36
33
Nick Paumgarten, “There and Back Again,” The New Yorker, April 16, 2007 at 58. Nine out of 10 Americans takes
a car to work; 88% travel alone. Americans have exchanged the two hours of leisure time they gained from the
establishment of the 8-hour workday for two hours of time spent in their cars. The social costs are too often
overlooked: commuting is a very robust predictor of social isolation. “Every ten minutes of commuting results in ten
percent fewer social connections,” says Harvard political scientist Robert Putnam. “Commuting is connected to social
isolation, which causes unhappiness.” Id. at 64. Is this really sustainable?
34
Goldman Sachs analyst report on Regus Corporation, October 2006; Teleworking: The Quiet Revolution – 2005;
IDC Worldwide Mobile Worker Population 2005-2009.
35
Business Week, February 12, 2007
(http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/feb2007/tc20070212_457307.htm?chan=technology_ceo+guide+to
+technology_online+video).
36
As quoted on NPR (http://marketplace.publicradio.org/shows/2007/02/13/PM200702139.html)
44
The savings from virtual work programs have been phenomenal. IBM’s 42% remote
worker rate saves $100 million in real-estate-related expense a year. Sun’s Open Work Group
has saved Sun $300-500 million over five years, including annual savings of $70 million in real
estate, construction, and leasing.37
But their innovation and cost-cutting are stymied in exactly one respect: how to get
postal mail to employees who are now playing musical chairs? Online postal mail is the answer.
Online mail also facilitates employees’ storage of documents they bring in from the field, when
they have no permanent office or file cabinets. They can mail those documents to themselves
(via interoffice mail), receive their envelope remotely, and order the contents scanned into
electronic images than can easily store in databases.
Employees’ productivity is boosted both while they’re in the office, and when away from
it. There are many commonplace workforce considerations that online postal mail anticipates and
addresses efficiently and cost-efficiently. For example, remote, telecommuting, or “hoteling”
employees can access their mail without the expenses of real estate, desks, and file cabinets. And
when employees can access mail remotely, as they do phone calls and email, their productivity
increases and opportunity costs decrease. Personnel costs fall too, as the ultimate recipient
handles his/her own mail instead of depending upon a support team to open, read, and fax or file
or respond to it.
And once mail is digitized, offshore or remote resources can be productive with it. For
example, an outsource accounting firm can use CPAs in India, on the opposite time zone, to
process new incoming documents and remittances in less than 24 hours. A catalog company can
have its mail orders processed same-day by telecommuters or outsourced employees, and ship
those orders the same day or the next day instead of a week or more later.
Disaster recovery and business continuity
Get Green
Both businesses and consumers can begin to recycle over 500% more of their mail – 85-
100% as compared to the 16% of mail recycled today. They can also reduce miles driven, gas
used, and carbon emissions – saving money, trees, and the environment.
For all the above reasons, Earth Class Mail is the future of much mail’s delivery. In later
chapters, you’ll also read how the online postal mail process can begin much sooner – at the point
of mailing itself.
37
Business Week, 2/12/07.
By Natalee Roan
Based on what you have learned about new mail technology so far, how long will this
statement be correct?
A Brief History of Inflection Points in Direct Mail Marketing Since the 1970’s
Over the past forty years there have been four major inflection points in direct mail
marketing – times when the evolution and growth rate of the industry experienced a fundamental
shift. The most significant – the tipping point, so to speak – was in the mid 1970’s. Ever since
then there have been inflection points caused by external events like Congressional acts or
terrorist acts, but there hasn’t been a truly sweeping effect on the industry since the 70’s. That is,
at least not until now, with the development of “Untarget Marketing,” discussed later in this
chapter. Let’s begin at the beginning.
38
“Allied Forces,” Postal Technology International, September 2005.
48
environment), but our job as marketers was to grow the business, and grow it we did.
Commercial printers, ad agencies and list rental industries all thrived, and the Postal Service road
the coattails of this new economic boom.
39
www.upu.int/news_centre/2005/en/paper_2005-10-11_pitney-bowes-dmab_en.pdf
50
And, then, we reached the next inflection point…
There were even some contrarians in the marketing world who believed that the ultimate
opportunity was to leverage both Internet and direct mail marketing in so-called “integrated
campaigns.” As it turns out, they were the visionaries; they were able to get returns on
investment as much as two times better by combining both mediums simultaneously.
So is everything hunky dory again? Absolutely not! Appearances can be very deceiving,
so I’ll understand if you think that graphs don’t lie and the trends are solidly in favor of DM
continuing to beat the Internet at the direct response game. But as Chris Kwak points out in his
chapter, growth in Internet advertising spending is skyrocketing while growth in print DM is
growing at relatively modest rates – rates that we believe will be unsustainable given either
consumer distaste for direct mail or technological empowerment against it, much less both at
once. And DM may soon be facing even greater headwinds from the environmental movement,
52
another postal rate increase, and most importantly, more attractive new options for Internet-based
marketing than ever before, just around the corner.
40
Title 39 of the United States Code, § 3001
Method #1: Get priceless feedback on why prospects destroy your mail.
The power of a database of mail-recipient behaviors is going to be a game-changer for
mailers of all types, but especially for direct mail advertisers. Why?
Let’s start with the demographics of online postal mail users: on the B2C side, they are
typically top-of-the-pyramid targets: affluent, well educated, high-bandwidth Internet users who
travel frequently and generally get a lot of mail. While their numbers are just starting to grow,
they represent the crème de la crème of DM prospects. On the B2B side, they work for some of
the most progressive companies in the world. As happened during the introduction of the fax
machine and cell phone – which started at the workplace – enterprise employees will start by
experiencing online postal mail at work but will soon bring it home as well, as they key into the
benefits of paperless postal mail.
Exactly what is in an online postal mail database? When a user requests that a mail piece
be shredded or recycled, she is given the opportunity to provide one-click feedback as to why she
doesn’t want it. They can be asked to make a one-click selection on why she is doing so and
asked her permission to forward her feedback to the sender of the mail piece. The selection could
include such reasons as:
¾ This person doesn’t live here anymore
¾ My address has changed, please update it
¾ We get duplicate copies every time
¾ I like this category, but not this company/offer
¾ I don’t like this category at all
¾ I like this company/offer but I only want it during specific times of the year
We will take this information, along with an image of the mail piece (which we already
had in our system) and forward it to the mailer, as a free service to our customers. And it’s even
free to participating mailers. Why provide it for free to mailers when these names, once added to
your house suppression files, will result in a profitability boost for your campaigns in the future?
Simply to encourage you to put the UnMailMe button on your website to further increase your
Untarget Marketing potential.
We will also offer this list of specific unsubscribe requests as a suppression file that can
be rented by marketers through their service bureaus. It will impact not only mailers’ prospecting
campaigns when selecting their next mailing list, but even their house files, as described below.
54
Note in particular the last selection above: “I like this company/offer but I only want it
during specific times of the year.” Online postal mail offers the first-ever means of collecting
temporal, including seasonal, preferences from customers. For example, if you live in Seattle and
love golf, golf catalogs sent, at significant expense, during the winter months may nevertheless be
entirely wasted on you. With UnMailMe, you could tell the mailer to send the catalog only
between April and October. Many people only make donations to non-profits at the end of the
year. With UnMailMe, they’ll be able to tell Doctors Without Borders that they only want to
receive solicitations in November or December and be able to tell them that anything else would
be a waste of precious funds for the organization. Since most mailing list management software
has no provision for temporal preferences, Earth Class Mail will offer its data to mailers as a
suppression file so they can even filter their own house file before mailing, once again improving
their overall response rates.
Method #2: Find out the demographics of who is reading vs. destroying your mail pieces.
Wouldn’t you love to know the demographics of people who are generally not interested
in your offers, and be able to suppress those segments when you rent prospecting files?
Sure, we have state-of-the-art demographic profiling services that can take your house
file – comprised of the less-than-1% who responded to your prospect mailings – and tell you what
they look like… but what about the other 99% who didn’t respond? There’s gold in that
information, if only there were a way to get it! Well, the good news is that now there is.
Earth Class Mail has developed pattern recognition software that can compare your
outgoing mail piece to every envelope image we capture in our system. That means we can
identify which customers received your mailings and give you click-stream intelligence on who
opened it or had it forwarded, and who destroyed it without opening. For the first time ever,
you’ll know not just who, specifically, to deselect from future mailings (assuming they clicked on
the UnMailMe request and gave us their express permission) but you’ll also be able to know the
anonymous demographic data of the people who did not respond. You can take those
demographics – say, specific age groups or genders in specific zip codes, for example – and use
them to narrow down prospects on the lists you rent for your next prospecting campaigns. Voila,
instant boost in response rates.
Method #3: Learn which mail pieces have the best “read” rates faster, cheaper, and more
accurately.
Every Internet marketer can know instantly what people are reading on a website, where
they are clicking, and when they leave. She can know which copy or banners created action and
which left them cold. And she can conduct A/B split tests of copy or imagery to see which works
best, select the winner, and then test it against another contender, all the while watching response
rates and click-through rates inch up to their natural ceiling.
A traditional direct mailer has much less visibility to this behavior, and none of the data
we are able to gather via DM testing arrives instantly so that feedback can be immediately placed
into action. But a direct mailer whose mail is received online can, of course, know exactly as
much as the data-filled Internet marketer: which envelope size worked best in getting the
recipient to open the piece without immediately shredding or recycling it, which logo, which copy
on the front, and so on. With each new piece of data, the pieces can be improved, and the
response rates will go up. Internet marketers do it all the time, and already are unable to imagine
doing business any other way.
To be clear, this is not an illegal email solicitation, but a fully invited reception of your
direct marketing offer through the user’s own secure online mailbox. “Invited” because users
will have to opt-in to receive these direct response offers through their Earth Class Mail
accounts. And why would they do that? Because you’re going to design compelling graphics
and incentives for them to learn more about offers they’ve already told you they’d be interested in
seeing.
Direct marketers have experimented with many schemes to offer micropayments to DM
recipients, and they’ve all failed. Remember when marketers used to glue a quarter into the offer
letter, shown through a glassine window, to entice people to open the envelope? Of course there
have been plenty of attempted online solutions to the question of how to “micro bribe” prospects
to read advertisements, which have pretty much all failed because complicated systems were
needed to track “points” or other means of accumulating dollars and making payments to the
prospects. Most of these systems got gamed and hit with massive fraud before finally shutting
down.
56
Online postal mail users, on the other hand, are distinct from the general audiences
targeted by these other schemes in two significant ways. First, they pay significant money for
their service. Second, because they pay for their account with a credit card, we are able to keep a
credit balance for them in our system – which means if a marketer wants to offer a target prospect
$0.20 to read their offer, we can easily transfer such micropayments to their wallets. That is
impossible anywhere else in the mail world.
As the system evolves, we will offer marketers more robust “rich content” options that
will track how many screens the customer has clicked through, and other means of capturing what
caught their interest, or even capturing their specific information to forward back to the marketer.
The result? Marketers will be able to pay extremely small amounts to solicit interest from these
top-tier prospects, and will therefore be able to pay more to those willing to sit through a more
detailed presentation, such as an actual video of the new car that is being promoted – or even to
request a showroom appointment.
Compare this to the method we use today where each prospect costs the same amount to
reach, even though there may be a tiny percentage we really want to reach with more information,
and who want more information, on the spot. The sales cycle shortens, the marketing budget
goes much further, the targeting profile is robust, and best of all, the campaigns are relatively
instant because you don’t have to wait until the post office delivers your printed advertisements
sent by Standard Mail.
Why consumers will love this:
Simple. We know we love to see “new stuff” that we’re actually interested in. To
receive special incentives (e.g. limited-time discounts, free upgrades) for investing our time to
view an advertisement demonstrates the advertisers respect for the consumer, and creates real
motivation to “open the envelope.”
Why marketers will love this:
Earth Class Mail’s electronic rich-media advertising feature gives marketers the potential
to “mail” out instant campaigns to finely targeted prospects and pay for results, not for
experiments, without the delivery risks (e.g., Hurricane Katrina is still fresh in our minds) and
costs of mail campaigns. And you get complete feedback on who responded, who didn’t – and
for those who responded, just how much interest they exhibited.
Why posts will love this:
In other chapters in this book, posts can learn about how to deploy Earth Class Mail and
UnMailMe to all their customers. One inherent benefit is the drastic reduction in undeliverable,
forwarded and return-to-sender mail. But the overriding attraction for posts should be the
unprecedented opportunity to compete with other Internet marketing media. Direct delivery of
electronic advertising to a consumer’s known address of record – regardless of where in the
world they may be traveling or working – is highly competitive with search engine keywords,
banner ads, email campaigns, and other Internet advertising methods.
With the increased penetration of broadband Internet, online videos are becoming a much
more popular advertising medium. eMarketer reports that video ads have seven times the click-
through rate of static visuals. AOL’s Advertising.com surveyed consumers aged 18 and over and
learned that 66% viewed streaming videos at least once a week. And online ads were preferred
over television commercials. Why? They’re shorter (15-second ads are watched in full 20%
more than 30-second ads) and the viewer can find out more information with a single click.
eMarketer predicts that by 2010, 10% of all Internet advertising expenditures will be devoted to
video ads. How many of these kinds of ads will posts serve up?
58
The Next Generation of Postal Automation:
The MegaSorter™
By Michael Miles, PE
The beating heart of any postal operation, whether a postal processing (sortation) facility,
a presort bureau, or the mailroom of a substantial company, is a machine called a mail sorter.
The sorter is the automated mail handling device that in the 1960s first enabled quick and
accurate processing of mail without the labor-intensive burden of large numbers of workers
fingering and examining each piece. Popular suppliers of sorters include Lockheed Martin,
BÖWE BELL + HOWELL, Siemens (formerly known as Electro-Com), Northrop Grumman,
OPEX, National Presort, and the like. Visit any postal processing facility and you will walk past
dozens of different sorters, collectively processing letters, flats, and parcels of varying size.
For those not familiar with sorters, a brief description is in order. The sorter receives
postal material (in this example, letters), scans an image of the envelope face, determines the
addressee information using optical character recognition (OCR) software, determines the
destination zip code, prints a barcode on the mail piece corresponding to the delivery point, and
places the piece into one of its many pockets or bins – all in one motion, at a pace of up to 10
pieces per second.
Getting dozens of sorters to make many passes of mail through the sorters is a substantial
logistical feat, and that the USPS accomplishes it day in and day out, on thousands of machines in
hundreds of facilities across the US, is impressive. But like a Rube Goldberg machine, it is
needlessly impressive. The USPS sorting process in the 21st century is still based on the
complicated, truly laborious radix sort method as defined by Harold Seward, of MIT, in 1954.
This technique was used for sorting computer punch-cards (Hollerith or IBM cards) in the 1950’s
and 1960’s. Computers, fortunately, have moved on, but mail sortation has not. The radix sort
for mail is based on the Most Significant Digits (MSD) system. As the sorter separates mail
based on the left-most digits of the zip code, each separation is then sorted again based on the
next digit to the right. This exhausting process continues until all digits for each separation have
been put in sequence, or the resolution of the sort is sufficient for the delivery task.
In order to sort each piece of mail into a pocket corresponding to its zip code, carrier
route, and even the walking sequence the carrier will take, the mail piece must be run through the
sorter a number of times that invariably surprises the layperson: it takes as many as 12 sortation
passes to get each letter into its final carrier-route sequence. Each sort-pass takes time, and for a
USPS facility handling millions of pieces daily, they must run dozens of sorters to make all the
passes for all the mail to complete the total sort in a timely manner. This is why the USPS spends
roughly $41 million per day on what its annual report calls “mill processing” (i.e., mostly
sortation).
In addition, the sorters themselves are very old. In the postal infrastructure today, it is
commonplace to find very dated equipment, some of it 20-to-40-years-old – or older. As the fleet
of sorting machines in the world’s post offices continues to age, the system is experiencing more
and more hiccups and glitches. The likelihood of a major system breakdown is low, but as any
owner of a decades-old motorcar can tell you, the frequency of problems and the cost to repair
them are both increasing, and confidence in the system’s reliability is diminishing. At the same
time, sorter owners are increasingly demanding improved machine performance, including a
better “match rate” of the OCR, real-time correction of changed addresses, and reduced overall
processing times, a reduced jam rate, and the ability to handle increasing mail volumes.
For decades, the USPS’ preferred solution was to simply buy more and newer machines
to process mail over and over again, using a paradigm not changed since the mid-50s. But more
60
machines require more square footage, more personnel, more properties, more transportation and
logistics equipment, and so forth.
The Unfulfilled Promise of Delivery Point Packaging and a Flats Sequencing System
In 2003 the USPS itself recognized the need for a wholesale upgrade of its aging sorter
infrastructure, but while its stated intent was ambitious, it ultimately settled for far less. The
USPS initiated supplier development on two ambitious projects. The first, Delivery Point
Packaging (DPP), sought technology to merge the flow of letters and flats into a single
automation stream. The second, Flats Sequencing System (FSS), aimed for a technology that
would sort flats into carrier-route sequencing (the vast majority of flats are hand-sorted today).
Because the sortation paradigm had remained unchanged for decades, it is not surprising that
previous attempts to revise sortation and processing seemed always to lead to a proposal to make
a bigger version of the same equipment – if a 250-pocket sorter isn’t doing the job, perhaps a
1,000-pocket sorter will.
A real solution would break new ground in how mail was processed, and that’s what the
Postal Service said it wanted. Indeed, the USPS made an unusually explicit charge to the DPP
vendors to “think outside the box” on novel approaches to sorting and mail processing as well as
on combining dissimilar mail types into a convenient bundle for final delivery. Attracted by the
lure of multi-billion-dollar contracts, the heavyweights began to line up.
The four companies invited to propose solutions for the DPP project were BÖWE BELL
+ HOWELL, Elsag SPA, FKI Logistex, and Siemens Dematic. Phase I of the FSS program was
awarded to Lockheed Martin and Northrup Grumman. Only Northrup made it to Phase II, and it
eventually won the bid.41 Even the USPS has a finite budget, and it chose to expend some of that
budget on FSS while allowing the DPP program to go quietly away.42 The FSS represents a
significant step forward in sortation of flats, but neither the FSS nor the DPP programs have
advanced the USPS process of letter sortation and merging of mail streams. Proposals for both,
and the winning bid for the FSS, continued to rely on the 1950s radix technology coupled with a
sorter with an ever-larger number of pockets. The 250-pocket sorter appears destined to continue
to be the standard in the postal industry into the foreseeable future. Unfortunately, a much bigger
machine using outdated technology is still a bigger and more expensive implementation of
outdated technology.
The second disappointment was the sheer cost of the FSS sorters. On March 1, 2007, the
USPS awarded a second phase purchase of $875M for Northrop’s proposed flat sorters, which
apparently cost millions of dollars per machine – dramatically more than estimated. At such an
unexpectedly high cost, the USPS simply cannot afford to purchase enough of these units to
machine sort all of the flats it must process. Moreover, the program has years to go before
deployment is even completed.
Finally, a major drawback of both the FSS and DPP programs is that both, from the start,
expressed the very modest ambition of working only with mail pieces already barcoded to an 11-
41
There is no public information on the nature of the DPP solutions proposed, but the USPS suspended the DPP
program shortly after February 2005. There may be several explanations for this, not the least of which was that the
FSS program was showing promise while the DPP solutions were not showing a sufficient performance improvement
over current technology to warrant a multi-billion-dollar upgrade. For the complete public record on these two
programs see http://ribbs.usps.gov/flatstrategy/ .
42
The rumor among various suppliers for the failure of the DPP project was that the proposals made to the USPS did
not suggest a sufficiently compelling new technology platform for combining letters and flats. One key issue was that
the vendors could not figure out a good way to bundle letters and flats that didn’t use plastic bags, a strap, or some
other means that wasn’t either harmful to the environment or unappealing to the public.
When Thinking Outside the Box Means Redefining the Box Itself
In developing the Earth Class Mail™ system, we were fortunate to be able to approach
the problem from an entirely different direction: initially we were looking for a mail caching
solution, not a mail sortation solution. And that has made all the difference.
The End of Conventional Pockets
Our goal was to develop a system that would capture enough information about the mail
piece (an image and physical metrics) to allow digital processing later, when more computing
horsepower would be available, to mark the piece in such a way that it could be easily identified
at a later time, and to put the piece into a dynamic cache in such a way that it could be retrieved
quickly. Our unusual goal led to a far-reaching and revolutionary solution: we eliminated the
pockets.
We needed to be able to store every piece of mail in a single, known location. We
needed to be able to access any piece of mail at any time, using equipment that was purpose-built
to discretely store and retrieve individual pieces in an array of millions. In fact, we wanted to be
able to retrieve a single piece of mail out of an inventory of millions and have its contents
scanned within 5 to 10 minutes of the customer’s mouse-click command over the Internet.
Pockets? For our purposes as well as for purposes of
up-to-date technology, pointless.
An Automated Storage and Retrieval
System for Mail
On the surface this might have seemed a
ludicrous engineering endeavor. The resulting
machine would quite literally be a building (or the
building would be a very new kind of machine,
depending on your viewpoint). However, such
systems already exist in other industries. They’re
referred to as Automated Storage and Retrieval Systems (AS/RS). These systems are commonly
found in large university libraries, for example, where the storage and retrieval of books permits a
controlled environment for storage yet rapid access to the materials on demand. These systems
typically require a large, rigid container to hold the materials being put away – containers that
could be as large as shipping containers. In the example to the left, this parking garage in
Germany puts away and retrieves entire vehicles, so long as their wheelbase and overall
dimensions fit the mechanical limits of the robot.
A traditional robotic AS/RS is constructed using a single traveling “mast” (or “crane”)
that zooms up and down an aisle, accessing various storage locations on either side of the aisle,
and transporting the items between the storage location and a centralized handling station at the
end of the aisle. With multiple aisles operating independently, the throughput of the system
increases, along with the storage capacity. Before setting off to design our own AS/RS
specifically to store and manipulate mail, we contacted some 30 existing manufacturers of AS/RS
62
systems. One by one, their sales engineers
demurred at the notion that something as “floppy”
and inconsistent in size, shape, and weight as a
piece of mail could ever be handled in an AS/RS.
All of these vendors wanted us to put a lot of mail
into a single bin and then store/retrieve the bin
(referred to as a ‘mini-load AS/RS’) – which
wouldn’t suit our design purpose at all. None
could handle the delicate nature of mail pieces,
their variations in size, and especially the
throughput that would be required of the entire system.43
43
Curiously, one of the companies involved in the previously mentioned DPP program specializes in the design and
construction of AS/RS (FKI Logistics), but apparently there was no cross-fertilization between their mail sorter
designers and their AS/RS designers.
44
Traditional considerations for AS/RS design would immediately reject such a design because of the cost of installing
so many masts. But to do so would be again to constrain the solution to the traditional use of the equipment rather than
focusing on the performance goals and applying the equipment to match the performance.
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How the Earth Class Mail AS/RS Caching System Became a MegaSorter Sortation
System
Compete with Couriers and Express Mail for Overnight Delivery – At the Price of
Today’s Stamp
Ever since the launch of Federal Express, and the later introduction of overnight delivery
by UPS, USPS Express Mail, Airborne/DHL and other express couriers, more and more of the
material that would have gone through First Class Mail instead goes through the more costly (at
30 times the price of a stamp), but more timely, express alternative. One reason senders choose
overnight delivery is its traceability, so that even if a package does not arrive “absolutely,
positively by 10:30 AM,” the receiver and the sender can both verify that the package is on its
way.
But what if the sortation and distribution network for First Class Mail became so efficient
that letters could be delivered within a very predictable timeframe, depending only on the
distance between the cities of origin and destination, with online traceability – and for just the
cost of a First Class Mail stamp? That capability would be fairly disruptive to the industry, and,
if it were employed by the USPS to enhance service and operational efficiencies, it would turn the
tables on the express carriers.
How can overnight delivery at standard stamp rates be achieved? By deploying Internet-
networked MegaSorters where traditional sortation centers stand today, the USPS would see three
arresting changes to its capabilities. First, with perfect information about the location (and even
size and weight) of every mail piece in the system, the USPS could then push and redirect items
within the postal network to route around choke points, route toward facilities with excess
capacity, and optimize the nationwide network of staffing resources. Second, because mail would
require only 1-2 passes in a sorter rather than 10-12, back-ups of mail at processing centers would
be far less likely. Finally, because so much less mail would be delivered in physical form, postal
facilities that are often at or beyond their operational capacities could change from choke points
to optimized processing hubs. Whether through use of “Intelligent Mail” bar-coding schemes or
through tight integration with Earth Class Mail, postal customers, too, could be given even more
power to direct their incoming mail than anything they have ever experienced before.
Real DPP and FSS and Then Some: Consolidating All Mailstreams into Two
45
In the case of USPS. Other posts may have slightly different configurations but most rely on the same available
equipment solutions made by a finite number of automation vendors.
66
which is currently handled manually, all of these mailstreams are automated or semi-automated
today. Within each postal facility, most of those mail steams must be put into their own totes for
the carrier to deliver. Worse, Express Mail has to travel in separate trucks in order to meet the
10:30 AM delivery time requirements. During delivery to mailboxes on a truck route, then, the
driver has to finger through several totes that might each contain some items for the recipient.
There’s a better way to do this.
The MegaSorter’s prime advantage is its ability to extract mail from its system in carrier
delivery sequence. Not only is the material in the proper sequence but multiple types of mail can
be combined simultaneously and bundled for delivery. The MegaSorter can merge 5 of the 6
mailstreams into one bundle per address. That means that everything except large parcels can be
bundled together for a given recipient and placed in the outbound totes in the delivery sequence
desired and in the shortest possible timeframe.
When all the pieces are stored in the storage array, the master computer can retrieve any
pieces required according to any sequence that is required. Want walk sequence? Done. It’s a
computer sort, not a mechanical sort. Just as it should be.
When the computer system begins to organize the bundles of mail in the walk sequence
desired, each piece associated with a particular delivery point is retrieved from the storage array
in order of size – large pieces such as flats and Express or Priority envelopes are pulled together
and the smaller material (such as letters) is pulled immediately before or after the flats. The result
is a simplification of the way the pieces can be contained or bound together into a bundle. For
mail that goes to organizations with a specific internal delivery sequence such as mail stops, the
bundles can also be organized into sub-sequences such as mail-stops or room numbers based on
supplemental address information, which reduces the need for a recipient’s mailroom staff to
process the mail in additional passes.
Combining the mailstreams means that the carrier need only deal with a single tote at any
given time and that the full intent of DPP (mail bundled together for delivery) is realized.
There’s still more good news. The large installed base of mail sorters (MLOCRs) need
not be disposed of or scrapped but repurposed to process the incoming mail for the MegaSorter.
The MegaSorter architecture does nothing to change the fundamental requirement of capturing
the image of a mail piece and applying a barcode to it. The MLOCRs in use today can still
accomplish this task; they can be altered to become the entry point of the MegaSorter. The
pocket section of the MLOCR is not necessary, but the transport section can also continue to be
used, thereby recovering a substantial asset in the existing system.
The main difference is that it is no longer necessary to perform the address match against
an address database before the barcode is printed. Once the piece has the image captured, and a
unique barcode applied, the electronic database of the two (image and barcode) is synchronized
and the processing of the address for OCR can occur while the mail piece is being conveyed to an
arbitrary storage location in the MegaSorter storage array. As long as the system knows where
the piece was placed in the system, the piece can be retrieved at a later time. It is no longer
necessary to identify the addressee before a piece leaves the transport section and to identify a
pocket assignment for it.
As described to this point the MegaSorter takes a completely different approach to the
problem of processing mail, but its principal advantages lie in handling each piece the fewest
possible number of times (only once if the mail is destined within the same sortation center’s
region, and twice if it is destined to any other sortation center), and fully utilizing the power of
computers for OCR functions and sequencing of material. In addition to USPS sortation tasks,
there are other applications of the MegaSorter that can take advantage of its features on a smaller
scale.
The presort industry has followed the USPS and equipment suppliers in adopting the
traditional radix-MSD sort that uses multiple-pocket sorters, and presorters have been very
successful at it. But they have a hard time blending mail from multiple customers to the same zip
code sorts in order to achieve the maximum discounts. Typically they run only one customer’s
mail at a time. If they used a smaller-scale installation of a MegaSorter with as little as 200,000
storage locations they would be able to handle a large customer’s entire outbound mailstream in a
single pass. Presorters with several smaller customers could combine many customers’ mail in
the storage array simultaneously, enabling them to get higher counts of outbound mail for each of
the zip codes they would sort to, potentially enabling deeper discounts.
Express courier companies such as FedEx, UPS, and DHL can realize a similar benefit in
timely processing items and bundling pieces to the same recipient. They already have vast
material handling systems to process items serially on large parallel conveyor arrays. However,
in their installed systems the options for combining items to a single recipient are not very
straightforward. They process everything serially, so they make little or no distinction for actual
size and cannot bundle items by like-size for efficiency in transport or handling. The MegaSorter
would significantly alter the way they processed their material, and it would reduce the re-
sortation that occurs at their outlying distribution hubs because recipient bundling would occur at
the earliest possible moment in the sortation process.
What if Post Offices Don’t Bite… Will Presorters or UPS Do It First and Reduce
Post Offices to Mere Trucking Networks?
68
(efficiency) despite initial capital cost? We think so. A highly parallel processing system has far
more potential in capacity and performance than simply running the material back through the
same equipment repeatedly.
Afterthoughts
46
In reality, at least a handful of facilities could also be constructed in order to minimize transportation costs and create
network redundancy.
By Chris Kwak
The USPS has been a government monopoly since 1775. In the colonial period, the
United States government was in the midst of immense economic growth and geographic
expansion in the face of political turmoil. The framers of the country deemed the safeguarding of
communications a necessity in the time of war. In the 19th century, westward expansion again
demanded the continuity of state management of the post office. The prevailing values dictated
that postal service to the outer regions of the expanding country was not only a public good but a
necessity that powered the engine of commerce.
Despite attempts by the private sector to open the USPS to competition, the United States
government has steadfastly argued for a monopoly on letters. The arguments presented by
partisans of the monopoly have become axiomatic: Rural delivery would suffer without universal
service, because rural delivery – regarded as more costly – would be underserved by private mail
companies who, it is generally feared, would be more interested in cream-skimming the more
lucrative city routes. Therefore, as a public good, the post office requires its monopoly status in
order to service all addresses in the union. There are several problems with this claim.
72
In Saving The Mail, Rick Geddes of American Enterprise Institute cites a PRC study
from 1992:
The average time per day per possible delivery is 1.04 minutes for city delivery and 1.07
minutes for rural delivery.47
The report goes on to argue that while the per-minute cost per piece in rural delivery was
8% higher than in cities, the per-minute cost per delivery point in rural areas was 7% lower than
in cities:
Full-time rural carriers' compensation is slightly lower than full-time city carriers. They
incur less overtime and the rural carrier work force has a higher proportion of casual
employees. As a result, rural carrier labor cost to the Postal Service in 1989 averaged
$20.60 per work hour, or 34.3¢ per minute. In contrast, in 1989 city carrier labor cost the
Postal Service $24.49 per work hour, or 40.8¢ per minute.48
While the time per day per possible delivery is slightly higher in rural delivery, the cost
per work hour is materially lower in rural. Rural delivery has become practically as cost effective
as city delivery as a result of 1) the clustered structure of P.O. Boxes in rural areas, and 2) the use
of an army of contract delivery personnel different from those official USPS employees who
carry mail in dense urban areas. Of the 20 million USPS P.O. Boxes, a significant percentage are
provided free of charge or at reduced rates to rural customers that the USPS would rather not
deliver to. Rural delivery contractors are generally cheaper than city delivery employees. Even
adjusting for higher vehicle costs, according to the study there is greater parity in the rural and
city delivery than conventional wisdom suggests.
Technology advances (mobile and Internet) are also bringing into relief numerous USPS
claims about rural delivery and raising questions about the very definition of mail as a physically
transported material (vs. digitally communicated correspondence). The breadth, cost, and
accessibility of modern communications demand a revaluation of the reasons the Universal
Service Obligation (USO) was established nearly 150 years ago in cities (1863) 49 and at the turn
of the 19th century for rural free delivery (RFD). Technology today, one could argue, weakens
the premise of the USO.
While the post office has evolved in the 200 years since inception, this evolution has been
marked by periods of punctuated evolution in synchrony with technologic advances. The carriage
gave way to the train which gave way to the automobile which gave way to the airplane, and
likewise manual sortation to automation. Despite these bursts of technology that tore at the fabric
of the post office, the USPS has remained a physical delivery infrastructure that has availed itself
of technology to increase the speed of sorting and delivering mail.
Various factors are responsible for the rise in direct mail volume in the 1970s, including
changing demographics of women entering the workforce in greater number, the advent of
47
Cohen, Ferguson, and Xenakis of the Postal Rate Commission titled, “Rural Delivery and the Universal Service
Obligation” (written 1992, published 1993 in Published in Regulation and the Nature of Postal and Delivery Services,
Ed. Michael A. Crew and Paul R. Kleindorfer, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1993.)
48
Ibid., section 2.2.
49
History of the United States Postal Service 1775-1993. http://www.usps.com/history/his2.htm
Source: PRC
Growth in the volume of advertising mail has had a powerful effect on the post office’s
identity. In attempting to mitigate ever-rising capital expenditures at the USPS, Congress
championed worksharing agreements in the 1970s. It had the desired effect. According to Robert
H. Cohen of the Postal Rate Commission, “Advertising mail accounts for nearly sixty percent of
50
The Impact of Using Worksharing to Liberalize a Postal Market. Robert H. Cohen, William W. Ferguson, John D.
Waller, Spyros S. Xenakis. Office of Rates, Analysis and Planning. U.S. Postal Rate Commission. Published in the
Proceedings of the Wissenschaftliches Institut für Kommunikationsdienste GmbH 6th Köenigswinter Seminar on
Postal Economics. “Liberalization of Postal Markets”. February 19-21, 2001.
51
Postal Regulatory Commission, United States. www.prc.gov
52
Bureau of the Census, United States. www.census.gov
74
the total cost savings for all presorted and barcoded mail.”53 In trying to alleviate the burden of
capital expenditures at the USPS, Congress in effect put into play the very competitive forces that
are shaping the postal landscape even today.
Today a little over half of USPS mail volume is Standard Mail. This Standard Mail
generates 27.3% of total mail revenue ($19.9 billion in FY06), or nearly a third (31.6%) of the
revenue between First-Class (average 37.9¢ per piece), Standard (19.4¢), Priority ($5.46), and
Express ($16.41) in FY06. About 18% of advertising mail is sent by First-Class (10.5 billion
pieces of standalone advertising, plus 7.5 billion pieces of transactional mail that includes a “bill
stuffer”)54. More advertisers are shifting to First-Class mail in order to enjoy higher response
rates, given that many mail recipients dispose of anything bearing recognizable standard mail
indicia. Advertising inserted into transactional First-Class mail also enjoys the highest extraction
rate; 42% of these envelopes are opened by recipients. And because getting a recipient to open
the envelope is the most difficult challenge of a direct marketer, wherever the opportunity exists
to insert advertising with statements or bills, advertisers will take it. Still, even the mild growth
of advertising mail delivered by the USPS will not hold market forces at bay.
The EU has been driving toward postal liberalization for the past decade. Most every EU
post has reached a significant stage of privatization; many have gone public; many have been sold
to private equity investors.
What has driven and continues to drive this march toward deregulation? The prime
mover has been the EU and its vision of a political-economic organization – unified by shared
laws, currency, and open borders – capable of more frictionless commerce. As with the USPS,
European posts were staggering in the 1980s and 1990s. In the face of strong worldwide
economic growth, the EU member states had been saddled by a legal and regulatory legacy –
including unique currencies and country-specific legal codes – that made cross-border commerce
increasingly more cumbersome. Against this macro-economic backdrop, and in the face of
slowing growth, heavy overhead and rigid labor practices, increasing competition from private
providers, and the emergence of technology for alternative communications (fax, mobile phone,
Internet), national posts (along with the Euro) formed a locus of opportunity for cross-border
integration.
In tight geographic quarters with national borders fading under the EU umbrella, member
states saw nimble private corporations drive wedges into post offices. To navigate freely in this
sea of competition, the EU began to urge postal liberalization. Not only were post offices
competing against private providers, they were going to have to compete against each other.
In the face of declining mail volume and revenue, TNT and Deutsche Post opened up to
the public markets through initial public offerings. The executives at the helm had to balance
intransigent unions with profitability and growth. The first few years were difficult for these
monolithic companies. (It did not help that both TNT and Deutsche Post held their initial public
offering within a couple of years of the global stock market collapse around the year 2000.)
53
Testimony before the President’s Commission on the Postal Service, Robert H. Cohen, Director, Office of Rates,
Analysis and Planning, Postal Rate Commission, February 20, 2003.
54
Source: USPS 2006 Annual Report and USPS 2005 Household Diary Report
Note: FedEx fiscal year ends May 31. We assume calendar year ends November.
The U.S. service providers are not the only ones tapping the international markets for
growth. For both Deutsche Post and TNT, international growth is outpacing domestic. This
should not be surprising given the predominant Mail revenue.
76
Exhibit. TNT and Deutsche Post Look to International
2005 2006 2007 2008
TNT
Mail € 3,984 € 4,072 € 4,158 € 4,250
Mail Netherlands 2,647 2,598 2,550 2,443
European Networks 597 747 933 1,130
Data & Document Mgmt 225 195 143 145
Cross Border 515 532 532 532
Express € 5,334 € 6,011 € 7,076 € 8,002
Express Europe 4,349 4,904 5,452 6,061
International Express 985 1,108 1,624 1,941
Growth % Yr-Yr
TNT
Mail 2.4% 2.2% 2.1% 2.2%
Mail Netherlands (0.2%) (1.9%) (1.8%) (4.2%)
European Networks 23.3% 25.1% 24.9% 21.1%
Data & Document Mgmt 9.8% (13.3%) (26.7%) 1.4%
Cross Border (6.5%) 3.3% 0.0% 0.0%
Express 8.3% 12.7% 17.7% 13.1%
Express Europe 7.6% 12.8% 11.2% 11.2%
International Express 11.7% 12.4% 46.6% 19.5%
Deutsche Post
Mail € 12,165 € 12,448 € 15,036 € 14,905
Letter Products 6,442 6,141 5,457 5,041
Direct Marketing 2,820 2,750 2,725 2,668
Press Distribution 805 819 836 844
Parcels 2,610 2,689
Solutions & Internationa 2,098 2,738 3,408 3,663
DHL Express € 17,775 € 16,805 € 13,850 € 15,014
Total Europe 11,746 10,002 6,027 6,328
of which DHL Freight 3,300 1,775 - -
of which DHL Express 8,446 8,227 6,027 6,328
Americas 4,578 4,517 4,833 5,287
Asia-Pac 2,424 2,532 2,760 3,105
Emerging Markets 873 970 1,098 1,235
Reconciliation (1,846) (1,216) (868) (941)
Growth % Yr-Yr
Mail 0.6% 2.3% 20.8% (0.9%)
Letter Products (4.9%) (4.7%) (11.1%) (7.6%)
Direct Marketing 0.4% (2.5%) (0.9%) (2.1%)
Press Distribution 1.0% 1.7% 2.1% 1.0%
Parcels 3.0%
Solutions & Internationa 22.3% 30.5% 24.5% 7.5%
DHL Express 2.2% (5.5%) (17.6%) 8.4%
Total Europe 0.1% (14.8%) (39.7%) 5.0%
of which DHL Freight (46.2%)
of which DHL Express (2.6%) (26.7%) 5.0%
Americas 5.8% (1.3%) 7.0% 9.4%
Asia-Pac 23.2% 4.5% 9.0% 12.5%
Emerging Markets 13.5% 11.1% 13.2% 12.5%
TNT NV has also had a voracious appetite, announcing over 20 acquisitions since 2000.
78
Exhibit. TNT: M&A, Path to Growth
Acquisitions, joint ventures and strategic alliancesDescription Year Country Division
TNT acquires Mercúrio, the express market leader in Brazil 2007 Brazil Express
TNT signs final agreement to acquire Hoau Group 2006 China Express
TNT acquires Speedage 2006 India Express
TNT to acquire Spanish domestic express distribution company TG+ 2005 Spain Express
TNT acquires print and mailing house Euro Mail 2005 Netherlands Mail
TNT Express acquires 'Door-to-Door' 2005 Slovenia Express
TPG acquires global freight forwarder Wilson 2004 Sweden Logistics
TPG acquires 60% majority share in Prime Vision B.V. 2003 Netherlands Mail
TPG acquires Italian print & mail company Full Service 2003 Italy Mail
TPG acquires DocVision, a leading document management company 2003 Netherlands Mail
TPG acquires German unaddressed mail distributor blitzpunkt 2003 Germany Mail
TPG acquires 60% stake in the DIMAR Group 2002 Czech Republic Mail
TPG acquires a leading Italian pre-mail handling company Cerilly 2002 Italy Mail
TPG acquires French logistics group Transports Nicolas 2002 France Logistics
TPG acquires fashion distributor Bleckmann Group 2001 Netherlands Express
TNT Lojistik acquires Turkish logistics company 2001 Turkey Logistics
TPG to acquire leading Domestic Express company of Thailand 2001 Thailand Express
TPG acquires Italian Logistics and Transport company ALS 2001 Italy Logistics
TPG acquires 90% stake in CD Marketing Services Group Ltd 2001 United Kingdom Mail
TPG to acquire Lason UK 2001 United Kingdom Mail
TPG acquires 51% stake in Barlatier S.A. 2000 France Logistics
TPG acquires German based Schrader Group 2000 Germany Logistics
TNT Post Group N.V. acquires 60% stake in Mendy Développement S.A. 2000 France Logistics
TNT Post Group N.V. acquires Jet Services S.A. 1998 France Express
European posts like TNT (Netherlands) and La Poste (France) have been actively
acquiring dozens of document outsourcing and management companies through their Cendris and
Dynapost divisions, respectively. This has been a strategic change to diversify their revenue
streams. These organizations already scan, archive and destroy hundreds of millions of mail-
borne documents each year, and they compete against private corporations in the remittance
processing (lockbox) industry and even the corporate managed mailroom business.
Acquisitions have served not only to fuel growth but also to diversify revenue streams.
Pre-IPO, these post offices generated the bulk of revenue from letters and parcels. Post-IPO,
having surrendered monopoly status to win independence and flexibility, these posts acquired
revenue diversification. Now they are generating revenue less from letters and parcels and more
from new business lines.
% of Revenue
Mail 76.8% 52.2% 35.9% 35.1% 30.9% 31.2% 29.5% 27.3% 20.7%
Express 26.0% 21.4% 18.4% 19.2% 37.3% 38.2% 41.2% 39.9% 28.0%
Logistics 0.0% 19.9% 25.3% 27.4% 14.8% 14.7% 15.7% 17.5% 36.0%
Financial Services 0.6% 12.8% 24.4% 26.6% 22.1% 19.1% 17.0% 14.9% 15.1%
Exhibit: Deutsche Post: Bill of Health (Balance Sheet and Cash Flows)
1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Revenue 14,669 22,363 32,708 33,379 39,255 40,017 43,168 44,594 60,078
EBIT 827 851 2,235 2,376 2,520 2,656 2,977 3,755 3,840
EBIT Margin % 5.6% 3.8% 6.8% 7.1% 6.4% 6.6% 6.9% 8.4% 6.4%
Net profit for the period 925 1,029 1,527 1,587 1,590 1,342 1,725 2,235 1,956
Net Margin % 6.3% 4.6% 4.7% 4.8% 4.1% 3.4% 4.0% 5.0% 3.3%
Cash flow from operating activities (397) 4,514 2,216 3,059 2,967 3,006 2,336 3,339 3,509
Cash Flow Margin % -2.7% 20.2% 6.8% 9.2% 7.6% 7.5% 5.4% 7.5% 5.8%
Noncurrent assets 9,485 9,791 11,081 12,304 14,536 15,957 16,028 24,471 24,396
Current Assets (incl. def'd tax assets) 5,635 65,225 139,199 144,397 148,111 138,976 137,329 136,213 180,064
Total assets 15,120 75,016 150,280 156,701 162,647 154,933 153,357 171,893 220,090
Shareholders' Equity 1,765 2,564 4,001 5,353 5,095 6,106 7,217 10,707 14,553
Darwin’s Turn, or How Inertial Forces May Drive USPS to Self-Select Itself out of
Existence
On its current path, the USPS could face challenges. Even after Congress in 2006
relieved the USPS of its large, off-balance-sheet military retiree liability, the USPS still
maintains, on its balance sheet, a significant deferred liability. In order to fund this deferred
liability, the USPS will have to sustain profitability for years to come. Under the current model,
sustaining profitability could prove daunting.
There are many reasons to be pessimistic about the USPS’s financial performance in the
years to come. First, competitive forces are intensifying, not abating. Competition from
domestic parcel providers persists. In time, market forces from private vendors in the EU will
only add to pricing pressures and deepen market share losses.
Like Moore’s Law in semiconductors, improvements in sorting and delivery speed have
begun to reach diminishing marginal returns. Physical delivery of letters is giving way to digital
communications media. While some in the industry had feared the fax machine, now email and
file sharing via the Internet are shining a spotlight on the future of letters. As more of the
mailstream moves online (bills and personal correspondence), what will be left?
Given the multi-decade trend, the answer is advertising mail. An ever-increasing
percentage of the mailstream will be advertising mail. In a matter of decades, the USPS has
become the largest advertising distribution network in the world, channeling billions of marketing
letters, brochures, and offers from corporations to residences. (In revenue terms, the USPS is
nearly seven times larger than the largest Internet advertising network, Google, though USPS
80
boasts margins far less favorable than the online giants that the USPS and other posts could, by
putting postal mail online, come to emulate.)
In time, Direct Mail too could become vulnerable. Historically, Direct Mail was the
method of choice for marketers who wanted to measure advertising ROI. The mailing list rental
industry’s protection of its lists, however, makes Direct Mail an imperfect medium for ROI
tracking. And even with Direct Mail, advertisers typically have only small samples of data from
which to extrapolate response results, and they have zero data on non-responders (usually over
99% of a campaign’s targets fall into the latter category). As Natalee Roan details in her chapter,
digitization of mail gives us essentially 100% statistical capture of who is doing what when,
including non-responders, so that future campaigns can perform even better.
Internet and Direct Mail can have shared interests, as Dell can attest. Companies using
both Internet and Direct Mail are getting higher response rates and higher order size. But going
forward, this may not be good enough. The Internet is getting better faster. And unlike Direct
Mail, the Internet can measure what consumers are doing today. As the Internet attracts a larger
percentage of total advertising spend, corporations will move away from less effective media.
Specifically, marketing departments will demand ROI and campaign-effectiveness, and business-
intelligence reports. And here, the physical mail system today is at a distinct disadvantage. In
time, the Internet will become a larger advertising platform, and advertising mail, at least in the
form of delivered paper, will likely be the biggest loser of market share.
We note that the Internet is not the only medium that is a quantum leap from Direct Mail.
Today, millions of users of Tivo and DVRs, connected video game consoles and PC game
systems, satellite radio sets, and mobile devices are consuming and even purchasing digital
content. The move to digital is a necessary step for each of these mediums. Direct Mail, alas,
cannot make this leap without a paradigmatic shift. As we detail below, Earth Class Mail can
effectively energize the Direct Mail industry to leapfrog over many of these advertising mediums.
Unless the USPS recognizes these manifold trends and moves to action, the U.S.
government may once again have to bail out, reform, and reorganize the USPS. As post offices
across the globe turn to public markets for self-sufficiency, it may become difficult for the USPS
(outside of itself) to find a compassionate ear, especially if consumers see a string of annual rate
increases. How many times will the American public tolerate the price of stamps going up? Each
time the cost of a stamp rises is a fresh opportunity for progressive companies to re-energize
paperless initiatives. In an era marked by environmental consciousness, corporations have all-
the-more reason to consider digital solutions.
Nothing clarifies how massive is the structure of the USPS better than its financial
statements and operating metrics. Based on CY06 revenue, USPS ($72.8 billion) is 1.5x larger
than UPS ($47.5 billion) and 5.5x larger than TNT. However, in 2006 USPS generated $966
million in operating profit while UPS generated $6.6 billion and TNT generated $1.6 billion, with
426,000 employees (as of December 2006) and 140,000 employees, respectively. The USPS has
796,000 employees. These figures should be qualified somewhat: Unlike the liberalized
corporations, USPS’ profit margins are governed by the Postal Rate Commission. Until the
Postal Reform Act of 2006, the USPS had a forced breakeven target; since the Act the USPS has
been given a little more liberty to create its own profitability targets but postage rate increases
have been capped to the rate of inflation in return. It will be interesting to see how the future
unfolds financially for USPS. Will they start performing more in line with some of their
international peers?
Note: Financials have been updated for restatements when possible. Adjustments made for both Deutsche
Post and TNT when appropriate. Specifically, Deutsche Post figures exclude revenue and full-time employees
associated with the Financial Services division.
82
Graphically, the five look like this:
Exhibit: Selected Per Employee Metrics: Deutsche Post, TNT, USPS, UPS, FedEx
$160,000 $18,000
$140,000 $16,000
$14,000
$120,000
$12,000
Revenue per Employee
$100,000
$60,000
$6,000
$40,000
$4,000
$20,000 $2,000
$0 $0
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
No matter how one slices it, USPS is far less effective at capital deployment,
productivity, and profitability. The depth of the USPS’s inefficiency compared to its private
competitors is noticeable, even if the USPS today resembles many of the posts pre-privatization.
While these privatized post offices have had their share of turmoil, they have been
successful cases of privatization. Their success as publicly traded companies is reflected in their
stocks.
Source: Bloomberg
As we illustrate above, TNT and Deutsche Post stocks have performed in line with that of
their U.S. counterparts (UPS and FedEx). The publicly traded posts boast stronger-than-ever
balance sheets. Focused on revenue growth and profitability, these posts are now capable of
moving more nimbly and generally have unfettered freedom to make acquisitions and to
introduce new products and services. Most importantly, their financial health is tied to the public
markets. There is accountability and responsibility to shareholders. As with all public
companies, with this responsibility comes reward, as these posts can now fund their operations
easily and grow quickly.
We pause here to note that by reaping the efficiencies of becoming a publicly traded
company, these posts have been able to reward executives more handsomely. While senior
managers at the USPS may make somewhere in the range of $100,000 to $200,000 per year in
total compensation, executives at the two publicly traded posts, Deutsche Post and TNT, make
multiples of this.
84
Exhibit: Executive Compensation at Deutsche Post and TNT in 2005
Deutsche Post Management Base Bonus Subtotal USD
Dr. Klaus Zumwinkel € 1,360,144 € 1,337,021 € 2,697,165 $3,357,401
Dr. Frank Appel 71,500 702,845 774,345 963,896
John Mullen 860,000 845,380 1,705,380 2,122,838
Prof. Dr. Edgar Ernst 863,583 848,902 1,712,485 2,131,682
Dr. Peter Druse 860,000 845,380 1,705,380 2,122,838
Dr. Hans-Dieter Petram 906,763 891,348 1,798,111 2,238,269
Walter Scheurle 715,000 702,845 1,417,845 1,764,918
Prof. Dr. Wulf von Schimmelmann 860,000 853,120 1,713,120 2,132,473
These subtotals do not include stock options and various incentives not captured by
salary and end-of-year bonus. Because these companies are publicly held and shareholders are
ultimately setting (by approving) management compensation, their executives are compensated
for their performance in generating shareholder value.
For private national posts that are at the cutting edge of liberalization but lack publicly
traded stocks, we need other metrics. For example, New Zealand is a model of a privately held
post that has pushed forward with deregulation. The New Zealand post was so successful at
managing costs after casting off the yoke of political influence that it was able to lower postage
rates in consecutive years, an unheard-of feat.
The USPS at Risk
The USPS is one of the largest employers in the world. If it were a private company, the
USPS would be in the top 20 of the Fortune 500.
Operating Expenses
Compensation and benefits 49,532 51,351 51,557 50,428 52,134 53,932 56,281
Transportation 4,709 5,056 5,132 4,989 4,969 5,437 6,045
Other 8,751
_______ 9,233
_______ 8,545
_______ 9,363
_______ 8,748
_______ 8,914
_______ 9,358
_______
Total Operating Expenses 62,992 65,640 65,234 63,902 65,851 68,283 71,684
* Postal Service volume, free matter for the blind and Mailgrams included in "Other"
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The most profitable classes of mail (First Class, Priority, Express, and International) have
been slow growers. The lower-margin Standard Mail has been the most consistent grower of
revenue. This mix of revenue shows no sign of changing direction.
USPS’s profitability derives from the price of First-Class Mail. Per piece, First-Class
Mail is twice as expensive as Standard Mail. Historically, there was justification for this price
difference. First-Class Mail includes features such as return-to-sender, encoding of handwritten
envelopes, and immediate delivery that Standard does not. While the USPS may not be able to
lower return-to-sender costs significantly, given the post’s current architecture in which mail is
delivered to an address (some six billion pieces per year, with another six billion pieces shredded
as undeliverable) – rather than delivering to a person as, say, DHL does –the argument that
encoding costs explain part of the higher First-Class rate is questionable.
As they have been doing with Standard Mail for thirty years, presorters are now handling
a large portion of advertising mail in First-Class. As we have noted, advertisers know that First-
Class has a significantly higher open rate than Standard. Having recognized this, some large
advertisers – in particular, credit card companies – have progressively channeled a growing
percentage of their advertising volume through First-Class. Some advertisers use First-Class so
heavily that they have been able to negotiate newly authorized National Service Agreements
(NSA) with the USPS (e.g. Capital One mails over a billion offers a year by First Class under its
new NSA).
The NSA has brought the definition of Standard Mail to the surface. As the NSA has
highlighted, Standard (and its lower rate) is merely a class of mail discounted for volume and
automation. As a result, under an NSA, an advertiser consumes First-Class Mail yet pays a
discounted rate still higher than the Standard Mail rate, but sufficiently lower than the usual First
Class rates to allow them to justify increasing their mailing volumes by hundreds of millions of
pieces. In time, as NSAs help marketers direct a larger percentage of advertising to First-Class
Mail, we expect the average per-piece rate of First-Class Mail – the segment that generates the
majority of operating profits – will fall from its current 38¢. This should concern the USPS.
Given these trends, there is a risk that the Postal Service will be unable to keep volumes
growing while also generating positive cash flows to fund working capital requirements and
deferred liabilities. As old as the USPS is, it should come as no surprise that its deferred
liabilities are enormous.
Equity
Capital Contributions of US Gov't 3,034 3,034
Retained Earnings since Reorg 2,342
_____ 3,242
_____
Total Equity 5,376 6,276
We note that the USPS FY06 Annual Report has not been updated to reflect Congress’
lifting, at the end of 2006, of an estimated $27 billion55 in military retiree obligations from the
USPS’s off-balance sheet. The off-balance sheet liability was removed only with the U.S.
government’s intervention. Without this deus ex machina rescue, the USPS’s financial
insolvency would not be in doubt; it would be a certainty. That is, another postal rate increase
would have been unavoidable. In the future, the USPS will be called upon to fund itself. As
other posts become more self-sufficient, it is going to become more difficult to argue that U.S.
taxpayers or postal ratepayers should bail out the USPS again. The USPS’s balance sheet of
deferred liabilities suggests the volatility in annual cash flow generation may test the
organization’s financial stability. In particular, the accumulated long-term liabilities beg for a
stronger cashflow generation.
55
The Wall Street Journal, December 26, 2006.
88
Exhibit: USPS Cash Flow
Cash flows from operating activities 2004 2005 2006
Net income 3,065 1,445 900
Adjustments to reconcile net income
Depreciation and Amortization 2,145 2,089 2,149
(Gain) loss on disposal of property and equipment 71 5 -40
(Increase) decrease in approp's receiv. revenue foregone 4 (15) (18)
Increase in workers' compensation liability 343 (58) 342
Increase in employees accumulated leave 74 10 100
Increase in non-current deferred appropriations revenue 288 (99) (61)
(Decrease) in other non-current liabilities (76) (12) (66)
Changes in current assets and liabilities (85) 365 462
Net cash provided by operating activities 5,829 3,730 3,768
While operating cashflow may appear reasonable (although declining recently), the
USPS’s free cashflow (operating cashflow less capital expenditures) – the true measure of value
creation and sustainability – is most unimpressive (as intended by the Postal Rate Commission).
The volatility in free cashflow is related to rate increases, as the first year of a rate increase boosts
revenue and cashflow meaningfully. However, with the new regulation capping rate increases at
the rate of inflation, we will get a clearer sense of how cash generative the USPS is on a more
normalized rate-change basis.
The USPS must outline a clear strategy for growth and margin expansion, and invest in
the future to stay competitive. Over the next decade, competition for parcels will only intensify.
It is very possible for the volume of every class of mail to shrink, as most classes have over the
past five years. It is also very possible for operating margins to stagnate, as they have over the
past five years. These trajectories – of revenue stagnating and operating margins falling – are
unsustainable. The USPS will have to change its operational DNA or face significant financial
risk. Given the lifting of the military retiree obligation, the USPS now faces the challenge of
financially sustaining itself for the long-term. This will demand operational discipline and
Growth % Yr-Yr
Direct Mail 0.3% 3.0% 5.0% 8.0% 9.5%
Business Papers -9.1% -11.0% 0.7% 2.2% 3.9%
Out of Home -0.8% 0.8% 5.2% 6.4% 5.0%
Newspapers -9.8% -0.5% 1.8% 4.7% 5.7%
Broadcast/Syndicated TV -13.2% 8.2% -0.3% 9.7% 1.4%
Cable TV (+ Spot) 1.8% 3.6% 15.4% 12.0% 7.1%
Radio -7.4% 5.7% 1.2% 3.6% 6.1%
Magazines -10.3% -0.9% 4.0% 6.0% 7.3%
Yellow Pages 2.8% 1.4% 0.9% 1.0% 3.3%
Internet -11.8% -15.8% 20.9% 32.5% 30.3%
90
The advertising mediums best positioned to gain share are those in which effectiveness
can be measured. Digital is on its way in, and analog is exiting left. Here, digital mediums will
surpass Direct Mail in their ability to measure marketing campaigns in real-time. While Direct
Mail may continue to grow year-over-year in the single digits, the Internet is expected to grow in
the 15%-20% range for years to come. The evolving Internet will only continue to demonstrate
how vulnerable the USPS is to changes in the demand for and delivery of Direct Mail and how
undiversified its revenue streams are.
The rest of the advertising mediums are able to locate and target their campaigns (every
digital device has an Internet Protocol (IP) address). With Tivo, for example, marketers can tell
who’s watching what, when, for how long, and who’s fast-forwarding commercials or watching
them (and when they bailed out, and thus why). The spheres of influence are overlapping in the
digital world, with telecommunications (and its vision of unifying telephone, TV, and Internet
access), Internet, and television beginning to interconnect seamlessly via digital ID’s. In this
world, an enterprise dependent on physical assets can be at a real disadvantage. If it doesn’t have
a browser or a login and password, it will have one hand tied behind its back.
While one may find comfort in believing that direct mail can co-exist symbiotically with
digital mediums, the reality is probably harsher. Direct Mail may look good for now, but digital
is clearly the future. Its brethren – newspapers, periodicals, classifieds and yellow pages – have
witnessed significant erosion in their advertising revenue market shares. Initially, many believed
their online presence would bolster their offline presence. What they realized, however, was that
in the physical distribution world, the erosion of even small portions of the customer base can
make a physical point-of-presence unprofitable and unfit to operate. Likewise, even if only small
percentage points of marketing dollars shift to digital mediums, the negative impact on physical
mediums may be dramatic. This is the flipside of the economies-of-scale coin.
These “what-if” scenarios are upon us, and the secular trend toward digitization is
intensifying globally. The USPS and other post offices have had no workable options to address
this trend, until now.
92
Universal Service Obligation. The USPS can maintain its USO with Earth Class Mail.
Ubiquity: Earth Class Mail can serve virtually every address in the union. Uniformity: Earth
Class Mail does not alter postal rates. Uniformity of service quality: Today, the USPS offers
P.O. Boxes to every consumer who agrees to come to the post office to pick up the mail rather
than having a USPS employee deliver the mail to the consumer’s home or work address. Because
many consumers and businesses prefer Earth Class Mail to the traditional USPS delivery, Earth
Class Mail could begin as a similar opt-in program. Witness Earth Class Mail Corp.’s growing
customer base and millions who use private services such as MailBoxes Etc. and mail forwarding
services. In time, many Earth Class Mail users will prefer this over the traditional delivery
method.
Labor. The biggest concern about liberalization to the USPS workforce is fear of major
layoffs that may accompany the adoption of technologies. Earth Class Mail will automate
significant parts of the mailstream. And the tasks that many at the USPS do today will become
unnecessary and many positions will become obsolete. However, Earth Class Mail will help
create a new and, more importantly, a sustainable ecosystem that requires skilled laborers to
provision these new services. With training, the USPS workforce will metamorphose from
principally a manual labor force specializing in delivery to one focused on digital asset creation
and management. There is little doubt the USPS workforce is becoming leaner. This will
continue in the coming years. With Earth Class Mail, the workforce will at last have a framework
for modernization.
Conclusion
The mail industry is going through changes. Digital communications and private service
providers continue to invent services and define higher levels of service quality. The impact of
these changes is visible in USPS’s financial statements. While many traditional, hard-line
mediums are growing at GDP rates, digital mediums (particularly the Internet) are taking market
share rapidly. As the Internet continues to take a larger share of the advertising market, physical
mediums such as newspapers and direct mail will necessarily lose out. Advertisers are
increasingly demanding a measurable return on their investment, and Direct Mail will be left
behind.
The USPS is witnessing two vectors crossing on the page: Mail volume growth is
anemic and should be retarded by a growing Internet-savvy consumer base and the marketers who
are growing more comfortable with the Internet, and with the backdrop of inflation-level rate
increases, there is a growing cost infrastructure levered to transportation and delivery. Add to
this the intensifying competition from domestic private service providers and growth-hungry
European posts liberalizing today, and it becomes clear the USPS has to look at itself in the
mirror and ask: What will become of us if we allow inertia to be the stronger force? Fifty years
from now, will we look back on the USPS and say that it failed to adapt to the digital world?
At its current trajectory, the USPS will be unable to generate enough cash to fund its
future liabilities or to invest in technologies to hold off the marching armies of private service
providers who are more nimble and better armed. The question is no longer if the USPS should
or will reform to become more competitive, but when the USPS will bite the bullet and concede
that competitive market forces may be intensifying and could bring the issue of the organization’s
financial solvency to the fore.
The USPS enjoys Government monopoly status which both staves off competition and
restricts the organization from freely offering new services, entering new industries, and
acquiring companies. And the monopoly status certainly blinds the organization to the possibility
94
A Blueprint for the 21st Century Post Office
By Ron Wiener
In the previous chapters you’ve now read all about Earth Class Mail – an evolution
unfolding before our eyes in how consumer and enterprise users are vastly preferring to save
time, money and the planet, by receiving their postal mail in electronic form.
You’ve also read about Mike Miles’ revolutionary MegaSorter – the next generation of
mail sorting and bundling automation equipment following four decades of sameness – that will
dramatically improve the performance of mail delivery while reducing labor costs and saving
billions of BTUs of energy consumption.
When these two concepts are married at the national post level, some amazing things
happen:
• Earth Class Mail can be provided to every citizen and every enterprise mail
recipient as an almost-free by-product of the MegaSorter implementation.
• Rather than begin where a letter exits the mailstream, as Earth Class Mail
does today, when a postal operator implements Earth Class Mail, the remote
control capabilities begin when the mail enters the mailstream.
• Billions of BTUs of energy and millions of tons of greenhouse gases,
millions of hours of labor, and millions of tons of paper and chemicals can
be saved, and carbon emissions prevented, because users will be given the
choice to have their mail-borne documents scanned, checks deposited, and
unwanted mail disposed of, in the city and even post office of origin rather
than after all the expense of cross-country delivery, final mile delivery, and
eventual refuse hauling.
• Vast new “inside the envelope” revenue opportunities are created for the
postal operator – such as confidential document imaging, archival,
confidential destruction, check remittance, forward-shipping, etc. – which
also creates much more interesting and remunerative work for the employees
displaced by more efficient automation.
• Postal operators will be able to service customers wherever they are, around
the globe, at any time, not just when they are in their home, office, or
standing at the branch retail counter.
• The paradigm for mail sortation inside the post will fundamentally shift from
the present “address-level delivery” to “recipient or department-level
delivery.” Imagine corporations receiving all their mail from the post office
already sorted into mail-stop order.
• Postal customers will be able to view the progress of their mail online (just
like they see express packages today), and re-direct it at any time to be
scanned, shipped elsewhere, destroyed, transferred electronically, or
archived. They will begin to view their postal mail as something just as
versatile and convenient as their e-mail and cell phone.
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• What is currently a PO Box business constrained by limited real estate can
be extended to many more households and enterprises.
• For already-liberalized posts that own document management companies of
various sorts, this new infrastructure will allow them to tightly integrate
these assets with their postal divisions for greater competitive advantage and
lower overall cost structure. Earth Class Mail integration is the “killer app”
for these posts.
Posts today fall into two types: those that have a robust advertising mail operation and
are growing their volumes, and those that do not have the infrastructure to support an advertising-
mail industry in their countries and whose volumes are declining.
Developing countries and those whose posts are in the latter category can ill afford to
wait for inevitable crushing hand of declining First Class mail volumes. As volumes decrease
and fixed costs increase, they will either have to increase postage and pass the pain to ratepayers
(whose tolerance of such increases has its limits), or get government subsidies to make up the
operating capital shortfall.
Earth Class Mail infrastructure – Earth Class Mail coupled with the modular MegaSorter
system – costs far less to operate than conventional “bubble sort” automation equipment and will
allow these countries to leapfrog directly into the lower cost structure and higher revenue
potential of this next-generation platform.
For more mature posts, Earth Class Mail will give them the ability to effectively
compete for advertising dollars with Google, e-mail and other Internet marketing
methods
When mature posts – those currently enjoying a robust bulk advertising mail business and
whose volumes are continuing to grow – look to the USPS for trends, they can see that they are
probably heading for a future where the bulk of the mail they handle will fall into the
classification of advertising.
You’ve read Chris Kwak’s analysis that shows the annual growth rate of Internet-based
advertising is many times greater than the growth rate of Direct Mail (DM), even in the U.S.,
where we get more mail per household than anywhere else in the world. With companies like
Google ($10B revenue) and Yahoo! ($6B revenue) grabbing large chunks of the advertising
dollar pie, posts must think strategically about how they can participate in electronic advertising
revenues. Today most posts continue to remain startlingly optimistic about the future of print-
mail advertising. But they are standing on a shifting sand bar – not to varnish the brutal truth of
it, some have their heads firmly planted in that sand – hoping that the trend lines deviate from
their inevitable paths. This is wishful thinking.
The greatest asset that any post has is its good will, its brand of trust. No new Internet
high-flyer can yet match the public perception of the Universal Service Provider in its country.
But if posts do not evolve, the next generation will grow up believing that Google is a safer and
better brand than their postal operator because they’ve had far less interaction with the post in
their online world. These teenagers who rarely buy a postage stamp will eventually graduate
As you’ve read in Natalee Roan’s chapter, the means for posts to grab an unprecedented
piece of the electronic advertising pie will be instantly at their disposal if they implement the
Earth Class Mail vision. I’ve just received an email this morning from the Economist magazine,
which offered me the opportunity to read some premium content on their website – for FREE –
but only if I agreed to watch an advertisement first. This is the future of advertising mail: it is
online, it offers something of value to the recipient in exchange for their attention to the message,
and it is invited into their mailbox through a trusted channel. It is also far less expensive than
print-mail advertising, instant to launch, can be tracked and tested and improved, collects its
revenue potential in days, not weeks or months, and is becoming more scalable every day.
When a post moves its customers’ activities online, it also dramatically reduces the cost
of Undeliverable As Addressed (UAA) mail and of mail forwarding, which ding the USPS for
several billion dollars per year. Since the customer who receives his postal mail online also
perfectly maintains his current address with the post and with the mailers who send them things,
address hygiene is as easy as a mouse click with Earth Class Mail. The proponents of so-called
“Intelligent Mail” and mailing list hygiene will quickly recognize the value of assigning each
customer a unique account number (what our customers know as an “Earth Class Mail Number”)
that they print on their business cards as part of their address. Many of us already have accounts
on usps.com, for example, for buying postage online. If mailers added a field into their databases
for our permanent account numbers, the billions spent on “video encoding” (human interaction
required to read the destination address on a piece of mail that failed OCR) would be dramatically
reduced.
Most importantly, the opportunity for posts is the chance to be the single most-used and
most-trusted portal for both advertising and non-advertising messages delivered to their customer
bases. A post can also transform itself to a model for sustainability and growth well into the
future, significantly reducing its footprint on the environment, which in this age of consciousness
about global warming, shortage of clean water, and other cataclysmic consequences of our
modern excesses, is more top-of-mind for consumers and politicians with each passing day. Posts
do not want to be left behind as consumers and businesses shift their advertising dollars, and their
non-advertising messaging, to online channels that are more friendly to the planet and cost less.
With Earth Class Mail, posts can enjoy all the benefits of higher efficiency and profitability, new
revenue streams, and even stronger relevance to their customers, while simultaneously reducing
their impact on the environment in ways even the automotive industry would view with envy.
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In Conclusion
Earth Class Mail was devised with every major postal community constituency in mind,
and we believe that all stakeholders in this community have much to gain from its
implementation:
We hope that you have enjoyed reading this book and have learned something worth taking back
to your workplace and discuss with your colleagues. Please check in frequently with our
www.earthclassmail.com website (registration is free, and it’s the best way to stay on top of new
information). In the future we will be adding more authors and content to this industry-
collaborative work, including a blog, a regular newsletter, and possible conferences for postal
technology executives. We look forward to your feedback and participation!