United States Postal Service Full Service Approved
  • request a quote
  • Move Update

    On Nov. 23, 2008, the United States Postal Service will require all standard presort mail to meet its newly revised standards for Move Update. This is a change the postal service hopes will significantly reduce the amount of mail that is undeliverable as addressed, which they say will lower their costs.

    Currently, standard presort mailings are not required to adhere to any Move Update rules, but first-class presort mailings are. However, the change will affect both classes of mail because the standards themselves are changing, the most significant difference being in the minimum frequency of Move Update processing. Today, Move Update processing must be done at most 185 calendar days before a mailing, but under the new standard that period will be shortened to 95 calendar days. This means that on Nov. 23, all presorted mailings must have been processed for Move Update no more than 95 days previously.

    For the mailing customer, the new rules combined with the requirement for standard presort mailings to comply can potentially mean more effective mailing campaigns, because fewer pieces will be wasted as undeliverable mail.

    For more detailed information, check out the USPS press release on Move Update here: http://www.usps.com/mailpro/2008/janfeb/page4.htm

    For information about our data services go to www.ipresort.com/data

    Related Posts:

    Intelligent Mail Barcode

    There is much buzz these days within the mailing industry about the new Intelligent Mail Barcode, yet its effective implementation date still seems a bit hazy. Recently, the postal service announced that it would be pushing back the date for requiring the IMB to May 2009, from its previous Jan. 2009 date. However, the IMB is up and running, available to mailers right now for use on letters and automation-rate flats, and mail using the old Postnet barcode will continue to be accepted until May 2010. (now updated to May 2011) Confused? You're not alone.

    The IMB is essentially an effort to further automate the mailstream by placing more information in the barcode. The current Postnet barcode is a 2-stage system that allows machines to read routing information from a mail piece. The IMB is a 4-stage system that adds information identifying the mailer, the class of mail, and any special services for the piece. It also includes a unique number to identify each piece of mail, which will allow mailers to track them.

    This tracking service is already available, however there is a catch: it is not included in the cost of postage. Mailers will have to pay for the tracking service, and that charge will be assessed by the number of tracking points the piece passes through. A mailer may have to pay several times just to track one piece of mail. Still, this tracking option may prove useful to mailers who want to coordinate a mailing campaign with other marketing tactics, such as telephone follow-ups or online advertising.

    Though the IMB is operational now in a trial phase, there are still specifics the postal service is working out before the system will replace Postnet barcodes. One of these is the issue of the size of the barcode itself. Some mailers expressed concerns over the increased size of the IMB over Postnet codes. A taller code could make existing stocks of window envelopes unusable once the new system is in place, and the postal service has already reacted to this by shortening the original design by 16.3 percent in September 2006. The current IMB height is between 0.125 and 0.165 inches.

    For more information on the Intelligent Mail Barcode, visit this link to the U.S.P.S. http://ribbs.usps.gov/index.cfm?page=intelligentmail

    For information about our computer presorting services go to www.ipresort.com/data.html
    © iPresort 2008

    Related Posts: