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This is the mailpiece design tutorial for Manual Bulk Mail using Oversized Envelopes. This presentation will aid you in the preparation and sorting for this specific type of mailpiece. For all other mailpieces, please visit the WSU Campus Post Office website at www.wichita.edu/mailings for additional tutorials. If you have downloaded this presentation to keep on your computer, please be sure to contact us at postal.services@wichita.edu so that if mailing requirements change we can contact you with updates.postal.services@wichita.edu By using this tutorial to design your mailpiece, you agree to use all information here completely and correctly. Failing to do so may cause your mailing to be unusable.
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Oversized mailpieces include envelopes which are too large to fit the standard-sizing First-Class mail template and which do not exceed a maximum weight of 13 ounces. The maximum size of envelope which may be used is 12 inches high by 15 inches long. Manual bulk mailings are prepared and addressed by your department before the Campus Post Office processes the mailing. The first step in designing an oversized mailpiece is the layout of the envelope. After we discuss the layout of your envelope we will explain the method to properly sort your mailing. The front of each envelope in your mailing must have an identical layout which must show at least three essential elements: the recipient's address, the sender’s address, and the type of postage used. The recipient’s address should be shown clearly, without smudging or smearing, in the center of the front of the envelope. It may not be handwritten. The address may be printed directly on the envelope or printed on a self-adhesive label and attached to the envelope. Do not use tape to attach the address or tape over the address to “protect” it once the address is on the envelope. The recipient’s address should consist of no less than three lines of text. The final line at the bottom of the address should contain only the city, state, and Zip Code of the destination address. No punctuation should be used anywhere in the address unless the Zip Code uses a Plus-Four in addition to the regular five digits found in a Zip Code. For example:
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Wichita KS 67207 This shows the correct format for the final line of an address here in Wichita. However, if there was a Plus-Four on the Zip Code, it might look like this: Wichita KS 67207-4140 Plus-Four codes are used by the U.S. Post Office as a way to place the mailing in a delivery route order. Plus-Four codes are not required on any piece of mail. You may use Plus-Four codes if you wish, and using Plus-Four codes on some envelopes in your mailing does not obligate you to use them on your entire mailing. Later, when we sort our mailing after it is addressed, we will use the destination Zip Code as information for our sort. If you use any Plus-Four codes in your addresses, you do not need to consider them when instructed to sort the mailing based on Zip Codes. The second-to-last line of the address (called the Address Line) should show either the number and street (with additional information) or PO Box and number of the address. This line tells the U.S. Post Office where to deliver the envelope inside the city, state, and Zip Code shown on the bottom line. No other information should be on this line. For example: 1157 S Webb RD.
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This Address Line shows a number, directional (N, E, S, or W), and street name giving a physical location inside the Zip Code of 67207. For a street address, this would be the minimum amount of information for this address for the U.S. Post Office to deliver this envelope. However, more information would help: 1157 S Webb RD Apt 1701 This address actually matches an apartment community here in East Wichita. Without the specific apartment at that address, the envelope may not be delivered. While the U.S. Post Office would normally attempt to locate the correct apartment if the envelope was sent using First-Class mail, many classes of Bulk mail would not receive that service and simply be disposed of. This would hold true if your address required a Suite, Floor, or any other additional information. What if your Address Line read like this? 1157 S Webb RD PO Box 1701 This is a special case where, in a sense, too much information is provided. When using “PO Box” in an address, what you are telling the U.S. Post Office is that this address corresponds to a rented post office box located in a U.S. Post Office station. Using it to substitute for “Apt,” “Suite,” “Box,” or any other additional information in the address may cause the envelope to be discarded, because technically there are two addresses shown, one which is a street address location, and one which is a rented box location.
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Above the Address Line you may place additional information or the addressee’s name. Additional lines may be used. Organization names, “Attn” lines, Job Titles, or other information may be placed above the Address Line. John Smith 1157 S Webb Rd Apt 1701 Wichita KS 67207 Williams Ace Hardware Attn Purchaser 6230 E Central Wichita KS 67208 Human Resource Manager Spirit Aerosystems PO Box 78000 Wichita KS 67278
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It is your responsibility to accurately maintain your mailing list and correctly address each envelope when you prepare a manual Bulk mailing. The Campus Post Office is able to offer advice concerning addressing standards, but when we do not address your mailing we are unable to directly assist you. However, one tool which may be of great use to you is the Zip Code search tool located on the official U.S. Post Office website. Entering an address will allow the system to search for it, confirm its validity, and display it in the correct U.S. Post Office format. If the address is not found or more information is needed (such as an apartment or suite number) it will advise you. The Zip Code search tool is located at: http://zip4.usps.com/zip4/welcome.jsp Next, we will discuss the return address on your envelope. Return addresses are required in sending mail from WSU. Each piece of your bulk mailing, even if the sender is a student group on campus, will require an acceptable return address. Often, large envelopes provided by WSU Printing Services already have the correct return address pre-printed. However, if you are working with envelopes that do not have your correct return address already on the envelope, you must add it.
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The correct form for a return address at WSU is as follows: Your Department Name 1845 Fairmount Box ___ Wichita KS 67260-0___ The format shown here is the official WSU return address. The “___” shown denotes the location for your campus box number (if you do not know your correct campus box number, please contact the Campus Post Office). The second “___” shown in the Plus-Four area of the Zip Code should also reflect your campus box number. As with the destination address, you may add additional information to the return address above the bottom two lines showing WSU’s address, such as job titles or individual names. Your return address should be both to the left and above of the destination address, preferably in the upper left hand corner of the envelope. The final item which is required on the front of the envelope is the method of postage. This tells the U.S. Post Office how the mailing is being paid for and by whom. Postage may be in the form of a meter imprint (which the Campus Post Office would apply during processing) or by using a mailing permit. Mailing permits appear on a piece of mail where you would normally expect to find postage or a stamp. Instead of a stamp, you find a small box outlined with the class of mail (Nonprofit, STD, First Class, etc), the city and state where the permit is registered with the U.S. Post Office, and the permit number.
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WSU maintains several mailing permits for use on different classes of mass mailings. The WSU Campus Post Office is responsible for maintaining the University permits, and also is responsible for their use. If your mailing uses a permit that WSU holds, regardless of the source of the mailing or who is paying for it, we must approve its use. When we give our approval, we will advise you which permit is applicable for your mailing. For Bulk mailings, WSU has two mailing permits, each for its own specific class of mail. These are Standard rate and Non-Profit rate. One of the requirements to use a mailing permit is to follow the format set by the U.S. Post Office exactly. Not following the format correctly may cause your mailing to fail inspection and be unmailable. In order to illustrate the correct format, a page on the Campus Post Office website shows the correct permits to use. See “Permits” on the left navigation of our “Mass Mailings” section for more information. Whether we place a meter imprint on your envelope or you use a mailing permit, the method of postage should be in the upper right hand corner of each envelope. Now that we have discussed the required items that each envelope must display, we have a sample envelope to show:
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Much of what we have covered so far may seem overly detailed and very basic in nature, and so not of great importance. However, because Bulk mail does not receive the same service as First-Class mail, Bulk mail requires additional care in its preparation in order for it to reach the addressees on your mailing list. The U.S. Post Office will make every effort to accurately deliver First-Class mail (or to return it to sender if it is found to be undeliverable) but Bulk mail can be easily misrouted or even discarded if any problems arise in its processing or delivery. Uncounted millions of pieces of Bulk mail are not delivered by the U.S. Post Office every month, resulting in a waste of time spent in preparation and money spent on postage. Because you are the only one who will be preparing the envelopes in your mailing, only you will be able to ensure that a majority of the mailing is delivered accurately.
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Besides looking at the front of each envelope, you will need to fill each envelope with the contents. The contents of each envelope must be identical is size, weight, and printing. Sealing the envelopes may be done one of several ways. If you wish, you may seal each envelope yourself, however, if you do so, please do not use tape or additional glue to secure the flap. Tape may melt when the envelopes pass through sorting machines used by the U.S. Post Office, and may also damage those machines. Additional glue may cause the envelopes to adhere to each other. Please use only the glue already present on the flap of the envelope to seal it.
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In many cases, the Campus Post Office can use a machine to seal your envelopes for you when we process the mailing. However, not all envelopes are able to be machine sealed. We are able to seal envelopes which have the open flap along the long edge of the envelope, but not the short edge. For example: This envelope is machine sealable. We can seal this for you. This envelope is not machine sealable. You must seal these envelopes before we get your mailing.
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In addition to the fields for sender, addressee, and postage or permit on your envelope, you may also add an Ancillary Service Endorsement. These are instructions for the U.S. Post Office on the outside of the envelope in case the envelope is not able to be delivered as addressed. You may have seen phrases on envelopes such as “Address Service Requested” or “Return Service Requested.” The example below shows the four locations where an Ancillary Service Endorsement may be located on your envelope. In any of the four locations, a Service Endorsement must be separated from any other printing by a minimum of 1/8 of an inch on all sides.
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For Bulk Mail, there are additional charges for using Service Endorsements. The additional charge for using these services is shown on the table below. The Ancillary Service Endorsements are as follows: Address Service Requested –for Forwarding and Return of Mail Mnths 1 – 12: mailpiece forwarded Months 12 – 18: mailpiece returned with new address attached After 18 months or if undeliverable: mailpiece returned with reason for nondelivery attached Forwarded at no charge Weighted fee charged Return Service Requested-for Return of Mail only, No Forwarding At any time: mailpiece returned with new address or reason for nondelivery attached First-Class or Priority Postage charged (by weight) Change Service Requested-No Forwarding or Return, but new address provided Separate notice of new address or reason for nondelivery provided, mailpiece disposed of by USPS Manual Notice provided at $0.75 each Forwarding Service Requested-For Forwarding or Return. New address provided only with Return Service Months 1 – 12: mailpiece forwarded Months 13 - 18: mailpiece returned with new address attached After 18 months or if undeliverable: mailpiece returned with reason for nondelivery attached Forwarded at no charge Weighted fee charged Temp-Return Service Requested-For Return Mailpiece returned with reason for nondelivery attached (unless temporary change of address, then mailpiece forwarded with no notice to mailer) N/A
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In addition to properly preparing the envelopes for your mailing, you are responsible for filling the envelopes in your mailing and sorting them into the correct order. When filling the envelopes, every piece of mail must be identical in both weight and content. The U.S. Post Office uses calibrated scales to check the quantity of your mailing after we deliver it to them. If all envelopes are not of an identical weight, the calibration will not function properly and your mailing may be rejected. To repeat: all envelopes must be of identical weight. For your mailing to qualify as a Bulk mailing, it must also be of identical content. This means that in addition to having the same weight, each envelope must contain the same information. The only information which can be personalized for your recipient is the name/salutation (Dear Don Beggs, Dear Ron Kopita, etc) and the address where the envelope is sent. Should any further difference be found in the contents of the envelope by either the U.S. Post Office or the Campus Post Office will result in the mailing being ineligible for Bulk mail rates.
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Sealing the envelopes may be done one of several ways. If you wish, you may seal each envelope yourself, however, if you do so, please do not use tape or additional glue to secure the flap. Tape may melt when the envelopes pass through sorting machines used by the U.S. Post Office, and may also damage those machines. Additional glue may cause the envelopes to adhere to each other. Please use only the glue already present on the flap of the envelope to seal it. In many cases, the Campus Post Office can use a machine to seal your envelopes for you when we process the mailing. However, not all oversized envelopes are able to be machine sealed. We are able to seal envelopes which have the open flap along the long edge of the envelope, but not the short edge. This envelope is machine sealable. We can seal this for you. This envelope is not machine sealable. You must seal these envelopes before we get your mailing.
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Now that your envelopes are ready, you will have to manually sort them before the Campus Post Office will process your mailing. This is a simple process which has been misunderstood at times. There are basically four steps: 1.Create 5-Digit Packages 2.Create 3-Digit Packages 3.Create AADC Packages 4.Create Mixed Packages The first step in sorting is to place all envelopes in a single order using the Zip Code in the destination address. In other words, use the five digit Zip Code as a numerical order, starting with the lowest (04101 in Maine, for example) and moving through to the highest (99500 in Alaska). This may be done gradually as the entire mailing is completed and addressed, but until the entire mailing is addressed and placed in Zip Code order moving on to subsequent steps is difficult if not useless. To create your 5-Digit bundles, begin counting through your mailing in the order you have put it in. Start with the first piece, and look at the five-digit destination Zip Code. With the mailing in order, any other pieces with that same Zip Code should be next in line. Begin counting the total number of pieces which have that identical Zip Code. If you find 10 or more, you will remove all pieces with that Zip Code and bundle them using rubber bands (available at no charge from the Campus Post Office). When you find a Zip Code which has 10 or more pieces, this is a 5-Digit bundle.
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If you have too many pieces to make only one bundle, make as many as needed. You may have as many 5-Digit bundles with the same Zip Code as needed as long as each has 10 pieces or more. If you find a total of fewer than 10 pieces with the same Zip Code, leave them in numerical order and continue making 5-Digit bundles until you reach the end of your mailing. When you have finished making 5-Digit bundles you have counted through your mailing once. You will count through the mailing in order in this same manner for the next two steps. For the next step, creating 3-Digit bundles, you will repeat the steps described above exactly except that you will look only at the first three digits of the Zip Code on the front of each piece. When you find 10 or more with the same first three digits, remove them, bundle with rubber bands, and continue. For AADC bundles, you will again be looking at the first three digits of the Zip Code. However, in this step you will be making bundles based on a list of groups of the first three digits of Zip Codes shown on the following pages. This is called an AADC bundle, and once again only when you find that a group shown on the list has 10 or more pieces should you remove them from the numerically sorted stack to make a bundle. The final step in sorting your mailing is the mixed bundles. This is simply the envelopes remaining in the numerical sort. Because this is the final bundle, this is also the only bundle which may have less than 10 pieces. Bundle with rubber bands.
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AADC Manual Bulk Mail Sort List-each “/” begins a new AADC Group 090-099 & 340 / 005 & 117-119 / 006-009 / 010-013 / 014-017 / 018 & 019 & 055 / 021 & 022 & 024 / 020 & 023 / 025-029 / 030-034 & 038 & 039 / 040-049 / 035-037 & 050-054 & 056-059 / 060-062 / 063-067 / 068 & 069 / 070-073 / 074-076 / 077 & 087 / 078 & 079 / 080- 084 / 085 & 086 / 090-099 & 340 / 100-102 & 104 /
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AADC Manual Bulk Mail Sort List-each “/” begins a new AADC Group 103 & 112 & 116 / 105-109 / 110 & 111 & 113 & 114 / 115 / 120-123 & 128 & 129 / 124-127 / 130-139 / 140-143 & 147 / 144-146 & 148-149 / 150-168 & 260 / 169-172 & 177-178 / 173-176 / 180-188/ 179 & 189 & 193-196 / 190-192 / 197-199 / 200 / 202-205 / 201 & 226-227 / 206 & 207 / 208 & 209 / 210-211 & 214 / 212 & 216 & 218 & 219 / 215 & 217 & 254 & 267 /
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AADC Manual Bulk Mail Sort List-each “/” begins a new AADC Group 220-223 / 224-225 & 228-232 & 238-239 & 244 / 233-237 / 240-243 & 245 / 246-253 & 255-259 & 261-266 & 268 / 270-274 & 285 / 275-279 / 280-282 & 286-289 & 297 / 283-284 / 290-292 & 295 / 294 / 293 & 296 / 300-301 / 302-303 & 311 & 399 / 305-306 / 298 & 308-309 / 307 & 373-374 / 310 & 312 & 316-319 & 398 / 299 & 304 & 313-315 & 320-323 & 326 & 344 / 324-325 & 365-366 / 327 / 328-329 & 347 / 330 /
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AADC Manual Bulk Mail Sort List-each “/” begins a new AADC Group 331-332 / 333 / 334 & 337 / 335-338 & 342 & 346 / 339 & 341 / 350-352 & 354-359 & 362 / 360-361 & 363-364 & 367-368 / 369 & 390-393 & 396-397 / 370-372 & 384-385 / 376-379 / 375 & 380-383 & 386-389 & 723 / 394-395 & 700-701 & 703-704 / 400-402 & 420-424 & 427 & 471 & 476-477 / 403-409 & 411-418 & 425-426 / 430-433 & 437-438 & 456-457 / 434-436 / 439-441 & 444-445 / 442-443 & 446-449 / 410 & 450-452 & 459 & 470 / 460-462 / 463-464 & 606-608 / 480 & 483-485 / 481-482 /
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AADC Manual Bulk Mail Sort List-each “/” begins a new AADC Group 486-489 & 492 / 490-491 & 493-497 / 500-503 & 505 & 508 & 509 & 525 / 504 & 506-507 & 520-524 / 526-528 & 612 / 530-532 & 534 & 549 / 535 & 537-539 & 544-545 / 498-499 & 541-543 / 540 & 546-548 & 550-551 & 556-559 / 553-555 & 560-564 & 566 / 570-577 / 565 & 567 & 580-588 / 590-599 & 821 / 600 & 602 & 610-611 / 601 & 603 / 604 / 605 / 609 & 613-619 / 620 & 622-631 & 633-639 / 640-641 & 644-658 & 660-662 & 664-668 / 669-679 & 739 / 510-516 & 680-681 & 683-693 / 705-708 /
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AADC Manual Bulk Mail Sort List-each “/” begins a new AADC Group 710-714 / 716-722 & 724-729 / 730-731 & 734-738 & 748 / 740-741 & 743-747 & 749 / 750 & 754 / 751-753 / 755-759 / 760-764 & 768-769 & 790-797 / 770-772 / 773-778 / 780-782 & 788 / 779 & 783-785 / 733 & 765-767 & 786-787 & 789 / 798-799 & 880 & 885 / 800-807 & 814-816 / 808-813 / 820 & 822-831 / 832-834 & 836-837 & 979 / 835 & 838 & 990-994 / 840-847 & 898 / 850 & 852-853 & 855 & 859-860 & 863 / 856-857 / 864 & 889-891 & 893 /
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AADC Manual Bulk Mail Sort List-each “/” begins a new AADC Group 865 & 870-875 & 877-879 & 881-884 / 894-895 & 897 & 961 / 900-901 / 902-904 / 905-908 / 910-912 / 913-916 / 917-918 / 919-921 / 922-925 / 926-928 / 930-935 / 936-939 & 950-951 / 940-941 & 943-944 & 949 & 954 & 955 / 942 & 952-953 & 956-960 / 945-948 & 969 / 962-966 / 967-968 / 970-978 & 986 / 980-982 & 988-989 & 998-999 / 983-985 / 995-997 /
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This concludes our tutorial for Manual Bulk Mail using Oversized Envelopes. Please remember to use all the information contained here correctly. If you have mailings which cannot be sent using the qualifications shown here, please browse our other tutorials or consult our staff to see if there is another class of mailing that better suits your needs. Also, please remember to schedule your mailings in advance using our website and to provide us with advance notice if you would like us to retrieve your mailing from you when it is complete. Typically 24 hours notice is enough time for us to collect your mailing from your office. If you wish to deliver your mailing to us when complete, please call first. We may not be able to accept mailings during certain hours of operation. If you have any additional questions, please feel free to contact us. Our campus phone is 978-3550, our email address is postal.services@wichita.edu and we are located on the first floor of Morrison Hall on WSU’s main campus. Our office hours are 7:30am through 4:30pm Monday through Friday except for all holidays observed by the University. postal.services@wichita.edu
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