USPS "Informed Delivery" - Discussion

MailGuru

Well-known member
No doubt those of you in the States who are in the mailing business have heard of the new "Informed Delivery" initiative currently being rolled out by the USPS.

For those of you who haven't, here's a brief synopsis:

Basically, it is a free service available to all USPS residential customers (not businesses at this time) wherein you can get an email notification containing digital pictures of the address side of every letter-sized piece that will be in your mail box later in the day. Right now, it is limited to "letter-sized" pieces (no flats, catalogs, or packages), but, indications are that they may be adding those in the future.

My thoughts:

(1) Unless I've been waiting on the edge of my seat for a tax refund or something, I'm not sure what the usefulness of such a service would be.

(2) I'm a little apprehensive about where this is going (where it will finally lead). Will the consumer eventually have the ability in the future to dissect and identify which pieces they want delivered, and instruct the USPS to simply trash those pieces they do not wish to receive? While this may be advantageous to the consumer, I can see where it may be devastating to direct mail advertisers. If so, it would likely result in lower volume advertising mail which would ultimately severely cripple the USPS themselves. For instance, when DVR's came out, consumers were able to record their shows and play them back later while skipping over the commercials. I wonder what effect that had on the television advertising industry. Did it result in less advertisers buying air time? Did it result in lowering the price of television commercials? Will Informed Delivery adversely affect the direct mail advertising industry? Am I just being paranoid?

What are your thoughts?
 
There has been a rash of mail thefts lately in my area, San Francisco east bay, and it would be nice to be able to tell if, when you go to the mail box and its empty you could know if it was supposed to be . . . Trust me I'm all for print!!!!!
 
There has been a rash of mail thefts lately in my area, San Francisco east bay, and it would be nice to be able to tell if, when you go to the mail box and its empty you could know if it was supposed to be . . . Trust me I'm all for print!!!!!

Interesting. I had not thought of that angle (anti-theft security)
 
My thoughts and perspectives:

1.) I live in a high rise apartment and the thought of not going to the mail room each day to retrieve a bunch of trash would be nice. I'd rather go a few times a week when there is actually something worth retrieving.

2.) I don't see why the USPS would do this, what is the advantage to them? They don't make money (end of sentence) on taking my mom's $.49 a few times a year when she sends me a card. They make it off of you, the company who sends 10-20k in postage to the BMEU every day. Or Bank of America who I can't even fathom how much they spend in postage a year. How would they replace that revenue? I'm not saying it isn't possible but it would take a drastic change in the way the post office does business and they haven't even figured out how to replace the Grumman LLV yet.
 
I find it weird how you guys just get your packaged delivered like mail. In Australia, if its not a letter, It gets delivered to your door, they knock on your door or go to the office if a business. Give you your package and you must give them your name and sign for it.
If you're not there, they try the next day for a few times then you'll get a call from them that you need to collect it from their office.
If it's from Australia Post, (your USPS) they will leave a note and tells you where to collect it from (closest post office)
 
It's mostly because the USPS here is terrible, and UPS and FedEx do what you're describing since the USPS does it so poorly.
 
Will the consumer eventually have the ability in the future to dissect and identify which pieces they want delivered, and instruct the USPS to simply trash those pieces they do not wish to receive?

The first time I read about this, that was my first thought. I think that is exactly where it is going to lead - customers will be able to select which mail they do not want delivered. And it's going to hurt a lot of industries. My second thought is, why would anyone want to add more crap to their inbox???? I get so much spam it's not even funny anymore. Beyond that actually. I don't even get mad anymore. It's just part of the morning routine like coffee and cigarettes. Oftentimes, I elect for physical mail (power company, internet company, and credit card companies, you are never going to email my bills to me) just to help keep my inbox less cluttered.

Even if they do not allow you to not receive any "junk" mail, the fact that you see it before it arrives means you are less likely to pay attention to it reducing the effectiveness of direct mail.
 
I'm not a big fan of it either for the reasons mentioned above. How many people aren't even going to bother to go to their mailbox since they know what's there? It takes away some of the 'romance' of looking through the mail and seeing what was sent to you. I believe it has the potential to do as much harm as good.
One good reason for IV is if you have a PO box and you're a small business that doesn't get much mail. Instead of driving there, walking in, checking the PO box only to find there's nothing there and wasting how much of your time for nothing. The irony here is that IV is not available for PO boxes. I'm assuming it will be someday, but maybe they realize they don't want the PO box piling up with junk either.
Some day I will start a post about the further degrading of mailed statements and letters by the poor quality inkjet age we've entered, but that is for another day.
 
Even if they do not allow you to not receive any "junk" mail, the fact that you see it before it arrives means you are less likely to pay attention to it reducing the effectiveness of direct mail.

I just had a thought (I know, I know, y'all stop laughing -- it does happen every once in a while):

From a creative, mail piece design standpoint, direct mail designers, who are on the top of their game, will need change their strategy to design pieces, so that, when the front picture is displayed in the email, it intrigues the recipient, or, generates a level of curiosity such that they are actually looking forward to receiving the actual piece. Could be some opportunities there.
 
How long before this system gets hacked and a thief can look to see if there is a reason to visit your mailbox that day? It would be like window shopping.
 
Try taking your letter and $.49 to FedEx and see how far you get. I think USPS does a fantastic job considering the price.

@bobtucker:

I wholeheartedly agree, and, while it is traditional to bash the USPS (guilty as charged), you might want to take the following in to account:

The USPS delivers more mail, to more addresses, in a larger geographical area, than any other postal service in the world. In fact, 50% of the world’s mail goes through the United States Post Office. They deliver to more than 154 million individual delivery locations, to every state, city, town, and rural backwoods location in the country, every day, six days a week, as well as special package delivery on Sundays. Even if you added the resources of FedEx and UPS combined, it still would not be enough to accomplish this feat. Every individual living in the United States and its Territories has access to postal products and services and pays the exact same postage regardless of location. Approximately five hundred thousand career employees are involved in processing and moving an average of 155 billion letters and packages to each of those 154 million delivery points each year. If they were a private sector company, they would rank 43[SUP]rd[/SUP] in the 2014 Fortune 500, and 134[SUP]th[/SUP] in the Global Fortune 500 list. Most importantly, the USPS receives NO tax dollars for its operating expenses, and, must rely solely on the sale of postage products and services to fund its operations. (Source of numbers from USPS Postal Facts 2015).

Do they still have problems and challenges? You bet they do. Are they very adapt at shooting themselves in the foot on occasion? Yep. But, to bobtucker's point, they do a pretty damn good job considering the task at hand.

-All The Best

-MailGuru
 
How long before this system gets hacked and a thief can look to see if there is a reason to visit your mailbox that day? It would be like window shopping.

The system has been in existence for years, only now are they giving consumers a portal into it. Opportunities for hacking have existed for years, and we haven't heard anything yet.... yet.
 
Something I ran across today.....

Feed: Intelisent Postal Affairs Blog
Posted on: Wednesday, December 13, 2017 9:41 AM
Author:
Subject: Informed Delivery?
I signed up for the USPS Informed Delivery service as soon as it was offered in my area.
From the USPS page:
“Digitally preview your mail and manage your packages scheduled to arrive soon! Informed Delivery allows you to view greyscale images of the exterior, address side of letter-sized mailpieces and track packages in one convenient location.*
* Images are only provided for letter-sized mailpieces that are processed through USPS’ automated equipment”
So far I have two distinct observations to share:
#1 – Informed Delivery has changed my mailbox habits, and not for the better (even though being a mail geek, I know better!) I live in a complex that has a cluster box system. I used to go to the mailbox daily. I now skip the mailbox on days when the Informed Delivery preview is less than enticing. USPS has effectively stolen my “mail moment”.
#2 – When Informed Delivery rolled out, I was using both the app and the emails. On the app, there is a checkbox where you can report that you didn’t receive a piece of mail pictured. On the emails, there is wording at the bottom – wording that seems to have morphed:
From an email Informed Delivery Notification – August 2018 – “Didn’t get a mailpiece pictured above? Let us know. ”
Sometime during the beginning of September, the verbiage was drastically changed to – “Mailpieces may arrive several days after you receive the notification. Please allow up to a week for delivery before reporting missing mail.”
What? The notification isn’t for what is in today’s mail, it’s for what may be in this weeks’ mail?
Now USPS has stolen the Informed Delivery moment for me as well.

The post Informed Delivery? appeared first on Intelisent Postal Affairs Blog.
 
In addition, Informed shows you pieces of mail from the prior occupant of the address, even though those pieces don't get delivered.....and for those of you that doubted it and for those of you who still thinks the USPS knows what its doing:
 
in addition, informed shows you pieces of mail from the prior occupant of the address, even though those pieces don't get delivered.....and for those of you that doubted it and for those of you who still thinks the usps knows what its doing:

rotfl usps!
 

PressWise

A 30-day Fix for Managed Chaos

As any print professional knows, printing can be managed chaos. Software that solves multiple problems and provides measurable and monetizable value has a direct impact on the bottom-line.

“We reduced order entry costs by about 40%.” Significant savings in a shop that turns about 500 jobs a month.


Learn how…….

   
Back
Top