Slide Show | September 2011
5 Ways Your Postal Service Is Changing
By Neema P. Roshania
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This year, USPS is expected to lose an additional $10 billion.
Click the navigation arrow below to see five ways your service will change. 5 Ways Your Postal Service Is Changing
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5 Ways Your Postal Service Is Changing
Fewer Post Offices, More Kiosks
AP Photo/Orlin Wagner
The postal service plans to replace shuttered offices with kiosks in nearby grocery stores, shopping centers and other high-traffic locations. Post Office counters, for example, can already be found in almost all of Office Depot’s approximately 1,000 stores nationwide.
Though closings are inevitable, they will be lamented. “Any extensive closing of small, rural post offices and the associated withdrawal from serving rural America fosters an image of an organization in retreat from its mission,” notes Mark Strong, president of the National League of Postmasters. “Despite its ‘quick fix’ appeal, it paves the path for both the postal service and the communities that lose their post offices to slowly dry up and fade away,” he says. Fewer Post Offices, More Kiosks
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5 Ways Your Postal Service Is Changing
Goodbye to Your Saturday Mail Delivery
Retailers that depend on direct mail advertising can expect to take the biggest hit with the loss of weekend delivery, since they’ll no longer be able to rely on flyers landing in consumers’ mailboxes on Saturday mornings. The move is sure to drive even more businesses that rely heavily on direct mail to shift to online promotions. Goodbye to Your Saturday Mail Delivery
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5 Ways Your Postal Service Is Changing
The First-Class Stamp Stays at 44 cents
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5 Ways Your Postal Service Is Changing
Partnering With Competitors
AP Photo/Don Ryan
UPS representatives will pick up the packages from post offices and return them to senders using UPS resources. The program expands UPS’ reach and makes greater use of the postal service facilities.
A partnership with eBay over the next five years will boost the postal service’s role in delivering packages for the online sales company. USPS already does about $700 million in business with eBay and the new arrangement is expected to double that. The postal service will also offer direct mail marketing programs for small businesses that sell through eBay. Partnering With Competitors
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5 Ways Your Postal Service Is Changing
More Autonomy. More Flexibility?
One reason the agency has lost ground to private-sector competition in recent years — UPS, FedEx and DHL — is because it doesn't have the same flexibility to alter its business plan. USPS must receive congressional approval to increase prices, make changes to its delivery schedule or close a post office simply because it is not producing a profit.
“The postal service is consistently inhibited, if not outright prevented, in any attempt to systematically reduce the number of post offices…to reflect the realities of today’s mail volumes,” says Arthur Sackler of the Coalition for a 21st Century Postal Service. “We have an urgent financial situation which much be addressed; one way is to loosen the USPS’ ability to adapt, while still taking into account the concerns of its customers — both commercial and the mailing public.” More Autonomy. More Flexibility?






