Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byBlaise Luke Daniels Modified over 9 years ago
1
Postage Technology Management AIMED -- August 2002
2
The sanctity of the U. S. Mail for 226 years Fundamental component of the national infrastructure Nearly 700 million pieces delivered each day Annual Revenue of approximately $70 billion Delivery to 145 million business, government, and residential addresses The largest non-military vehicle fleet in the world Revenue from mail-related commerce generates approximately 8% of the nation’s gross national product Significance of the Mail POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT
3
Slowing Growth Rate in First-Class Mail (from 4.8% in ‘80s to 0.1% in 2001) Changing of the Mix of Mail (trend from higher margin First Class to lower margin Standard A) Increasing Number of Household Deliveries (1.7 million per year) Declining Average Piece Per Household (need $1.92 in revenue per delivery per day) Restrictions on Closing Unprofitable Post Offices Mandated Shift to Electronic Billing and Payment by Federal Government Agencies Slowing Growth Rate in First-Class Mail (from 4.8% in ‘80s to 0.1% in 2001) Changing of the Mix of Mail (trend from higher margin First Class to lower margin Standard A) Increasing Number of Household Deliveries (1.7 million per year) Declining Average Piece Per Household (need $1.92 in revenue per delivery per day) Restrictions on Closing Unprofitable Post Offices Mandated Shift to Electronic Billing and Payment by Federal Government Agencies Corporate Update -- Challenges POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT
4
New Rate Case - 8.7%, $6.1 Billion Negotiated settlement achieved June 30, 2002 Implementation Product Redesign Rate Summit for new rate making strategies Rate rationalization and pricing strategies to match customer needs Simpler requirements and preparation rules Corporate Update -- Revenue Programs POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT
5
Postal Reform / Transformation Plan Security Of The Mail, Privacy Enhanced Screening / Scanning USPS / Industry Partnership Opportunities Core Business Revenue Security Expense Reductions - Shared Services Value Added Services Self-Service Vending Postal Reform / Transformation Plan Security Of The Mail, Privacy Enhanced Screening / Scanning USPS / Industry Partnership Opportunities Core Business Revenue Security Expense Reductions - Shared Services Value Added Services Self-Service Vending Corporate Update -- Hot Buttons POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT
6
Where Does It Come From? REVENUE First Class Standard A Periodicals Standard B Other Source - USPS Annual Report - 2001 (*First Class figure includes Priority and Express Mail revenue) 63.5 cents 23.9 cents 3.3¢3.0¢ 6.3 ¢ Corporate Update -- Financial Highlights POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT
7
Where Does It Go? COST Personnel Expense Source - USPS Annual Report - 2001 75.8 cents7.5¢4.8¢9¢.5¢ 2.4¢ Supplies/Services Other Interest Expense Interest on Deferred Retirement Liabilities Transportation Corporate Update -- Financial Highlights POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT
8
Corporate Update -- 2002 3rd Quarter Report POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT Net Income: Quarter III net loss of $281M, $80M less than planned net loss of $361M. Revenue for quarter $796M below plan but expenses under plan by $876M resulting in smaller net loss than planned for quarter. Revenue: Revenue of $15.3B 4.9% ($796M) below plan and 2.0% ($322M) below Qtr III last year. Planned revenue growth for Qtr III was 3.1% Volume: Total mail volume of 47.1B pieces 3.5% below plan. Mail volume declined 2.5% during Qtr III against anticipated growth of 1.0%. Volume for all mail categories declined during Qtr III. Expense: Operating expenses of $15.1B were $871M or 5.2% under plan. Personnel costs $524M under plan, transportation expense $80M under plan, and other non-personnel expense were $435M under plan for quarter. Operating expenses were reduced by 0.8% from Qtr III last year.
9
Corporate Update -- 2002 3rd Quarter Report POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT Performance better than plan –Net loss of $281M –$80M less than planned –Total operating expenses cut $116M below last year and $871M below plan Volume down 2.5% from last year –47.1B pieces compared to 48.3B last year Revenues $322M below last year and $796M below planned revenue –Revenue loss from volume decline offset by expense reductions
10
Corporate Update -- 2002 3rd Quarter Report POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT Total factor productivity and output per work hour gains –Employee and work hour reductions –Career complement reduced 13,750 employees –16.1M work hours reduced in Qtr III –54.6M YTD work hour reductions Volume trends expected to continue through FY end –3 - 4% reduction anticipated for quarter Estimated Net Loss for Year $1-$1.5B
11
Corporate Update -- 2002 3rd Quarter Report POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT
12
Corporate Update-- 2002 3rd Quarter Report POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT Cumulative Work Hour Reduction For FY 2002 (60) (50) (40) (30) (20) (10) 0 Accounting Period 01030507091113
13
Recent Regulation Changes -- Open for Comment POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT Inspections of Manufacturers’ Facilities Outside Continental US (FRN Published 5/9/2 Comments Due 6/10/2) Meter Withdrawal And Handling Faulty Meters (FRN Published 5/2/2 Comments Due 6/3/2) Inventory Control and Protection and Control of Internal and Security Components (FRN Published 4/24/2 Comments Due 5/24/2)
14
Recent Regulation Changes -- Final Rules POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT Release of Information (FRN Published 7/15/2) –No changes from proposed rule Secure Destruction of Meters (FRN Published 11/1/1) –Added new regulation for secure destruction of meters and PSDs Demo Meters and Loaner Meters (FRN Published 4/25/1) –Demo Meters must be tracked, print only specimen indicia, not used for live mail and remain under direct control –Loaner Meters carry specific dealer responsibility and conditions
15
Recent Changes -- Privacy Disclosure Statements POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT Developing enterprise wide privacy policy Applies to all business practices and data collection Enterprise includes meter manufacturers, PC Postage providers and dealer network
16
Phase III - – Letterpress – No Timeout feature –12/31/01 - Notify customers of schedule –12/31/02 - Stop placement –12/31/06 - Off market completely Phase III - – Letterpress – No Timeout feature –12/31/01 - Notify customers of schedule –12/31/02 - Stop placement –12/31/06 - Off market completely Meter Migration Plan POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT
17
Phase IV – – Letterpress with Timeout –6/30/03 - Notify customer of schedule –06/30/04 - Stop placement (this moved from 12/31/03) –12/31/08 - Off market complete Phase IV – – Letterpress with Timeout –6/30/03 - Notify customer of schedule –06/30/04 - Stop placement (this moved from 12/31/03) –12/31/08 - Off market complete Meter Migration Plan POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT
18
1,772,616 1,590,915 199519981997200120001999199419961993 Population Revenue 1,412,599 1,497,154 1,548,474 1,607,919 1,658,225 1,604,978 1,462,692 Customer Meters $20.7 Billion PVI Meters $4.3 Billion Stamps $11 Billion Permit $26.4 Billion Other $3.6 Billion Customer Meters $20 Billion PVI Meters $3.1 Billion Stamps $10.9 Billion Permit $11.9 Billion Other $8.2 Billion 1995 Data2001 Data 376,600 PC Postage 1,969,109 1,967,515 364,131 PC Postage POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT The Channel 2002 1,607,870 393,193 PC Postage 2,001,063
19
POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT Profile In The Mail Stream Metered Other Stamps Permit All Mail Classes 16.03% 1.56% 27.49% 54.65% First Class Mail 27.13% 2.67% 45.04% 25.16% Priority Mail 7.79% 1.99% 67.77% 22.45% Standard B 1.14% 1.17% 21.64% 76.05% Standard A 5.84% 0.21% 2.13% 91.82% ODIS Quarterly Statistics Report Summary of Changes in Mail Class and Postage Evidencing Method; FY02 Qtr III data
20
POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT Profile In The Mail Stream ODIS Quarterly Statistics Report Summary of Changes in Mail Class and Postage Evidencing Method; FY02 Qtr III data Metered mail volumes as % of total avg daily volumes: All classes 27.49% First Class Mail 45.04% Priority 67.77% Standard B 21.64% Standard A 5.84%
21
Technology Migration Lowering Associated Costs POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT - 200,000 400,000 600,000 800,000 1,000,000 1,200,000 1,400,000 1,600,000 1,800,000 2,000,000 METER POPULATIONS IBI Meters 8,304 15,254 PC Postage 9,874 364,131 376,600 393,193 Digital CMRS 9,559 129,574 249,470 457,566 616,389 597,463 666,623 798,767 CMRS 592,031 631,196 658,281 853,631 833,985 866,516 992,511 887,018 848,384778,499 Manual 820,568 831,496 829,314 565,269 524,464 334,143 177,413 116,786 67,604.15350 199319941995199619971998199920002001 Q3 2002
22
POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT Retail Meter Revenue by AP 0 20,000,000 40,000,000 60,000,000 80,000,000 100,000,000 120,000,000 140,000,000 160,000,000 180,000,000 200,000,000 12345678910111213 Accounting Period 2001 2002
23
POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT Retail Meter Population by AP 860,000 880,000 900,000 920,000 940,000 960,000 980,000 1,000,000 1,020,000 1,040,000 12345678910111213 Accounting Period 2001 2002
24
POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT Commercial Meter Revenue by AP 0 200,000,000 400,000,000 600,000,000 800,000,000 1,000,000,000 1,200,000,000 1,400,000,000 1,600,000,000 1,800,000,000 12345678910111213 Accounting Period 2001 2002
25
POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT Commercial Meter Population by AP 520000 540000 560000 580000 600000 620000 640000 660000 680000 700000 12345678910111213 Accounting Period 2001 2002
26
POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT PC Postage Revenue by AP 0 1,000,000 2,000,000 3,000,000 4,000,000 5,000,000 6,000,000 7,000,000 8,000,000 9,000,000 12345678910111213 Accounting Period 2001 2002
27
POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT PC Postage Population by AP 0 100000 200000 300000 400000 500000 600000 12345678910111213 Accounting Period 2001 2002
28
Background on Terrorism and The Mail POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT The mails have been used to promote activities against a government since Medieval Times Last year, 8 letter bombs were mailed, only two detonated before detection Last year, 4 abortion clinics received letters containing suspected anthrax, all were hoaxes Last year, there were 16 threats against the government via the mails that were investigated, most were hoaxes
29
Postmaster General John Potter established the Mail Security Task Force Postal Inspectors Postal Managers Centers for Disease Control Union Representatives Management Associations USPS Inspector General Major Customers Security of the Mail -- Current Mobilization POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT
30
Safety and Security in the Workplace Mailroom Security Contingency Planning Mail Screening Mail Preparation Communicating and Messaging Mail Transportation Security Security of the Mail -- Task Force Sub-Groups POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT
31
The fear of disease transmitted via mail is not new: Security of the Mail -- Throughout the Ages POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT
32
Made Up of 11 CEO’s of Mail Industry Companies Chaired by PB’s Mike Critelli and USPS DPMG John Nolan Worked for Six Months: –To assess the current state of the mail communications network –To determine how mail could be enhanced to ensure its viability in the future Eight Areas of Recommended Activity are Supported by Three Basic Strategic Initiatives: –Respond to Customer Needs –Make the Mail Channel More Competitive –Unify the Industry Mailing Industry Task Force POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT
33
Transformation Plan Imperatives POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT Growth Through Value -- improving the quality, affordability and convenience of our products and services Increase Operational Efficiency -- using cost management, new technology, and workforce planning to improve operational efficiency Performance Based Culture --maximizing employee performance by creating a performance driven culture
34
How We Contribute to Transformation Objectives POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT Expand Access - use technology to expand reach and reduce cost –Postage technology products provide alternative, convenient, affordable access –Lower cost form of postage –Alternative to high cost retail stamp transactions –Attractive to growth market (Preferred customer segment) –Research indicates we can reach more of the market and more of their mail volume
35
POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT Information Rich Mail Products - use technology to make mail more competitive –IBI provides technology platform for data on the mail piece –Unique identification critical characteristic of IBI –Software products provide valuable transaction record capability –Integration with other Postal products and services; e.g., Delivery Confirmation How We Contribute to Transformation Objectives
36
POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT Products and Pricing to Match Customer Needs - use technology to make mail more valuable and easier to use –Customer options with variety of products and features that appeal to small, mid and large size customers –More flexible and responsive to changing customer needs by working through vendors –Work with industry to move to more cost- effective technology (e.g., remote reset) How We Contribute to Transformation Objectives
37
POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT Key Communications and CRM Tool - use technology to reach and inform –Data management features of software products attractive to customers –Web based products provide opportunities to inform and provide additional services when they come to us –Transaction data helps us to better understand our customers, their mailing behavior and anticipate their needs How We Contribute to Transformation Objectives
38
POSTAGE TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT Operational Efficiencies - use technology to take costs out of the system –Optimize logistics –Increase % of barcode mail in mail stream –Contributes to address hygiene by integrating address management system –Data can be used for workload planning –Optimize retail network –Provide alternative to stamp purchase –Work hour reduction with elimination of manual tasks How We Contribute to Transformation Objectives
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.