Direct Marketing Association's Jerry Cerasale on the Proposed USPS 'Summer Sale'
April 22, 2009 By Hallie Mummert, Editor-in-chief, Target MarketingAfter a decrease of 5.2 billion pieces of mail for its first quarter of FY2009, its eighth consecutive quarter with decline in volume, and the anticipation of an equally devastating second quarter, the U.S. Postal Service recently announced its desire to offer mailers a carrot instead of a stick to get volume going. If the proposed program gets enacted, the top 4,000 U.S. mailers will be eligible for a 20 percent to 30 percent discount on their postage bills for mail volume between June 15 and Sept. 15 that exceeds the baselines established by the Postal Service. These baselines will be determined using each mailer's volume from the June 15 to Sept. 15 period last year, and then adjusting "downward by the current mail trends for that mailer during the first two quarters of Fiscal Year 2009," according to the Direct Marketing Association (DMA).
This week, Target Marketing Tipline spoke with Jerry Cerasale, senior vice president of government affairs at the DMA, to get the insider scoop on when this proposal might go from idea to actuality, and what value it has for all mailers.
Target Marketing: What's the anticipated timeline for final approvals on the proposed summer rate reduction program?
Jerry Cerasale: First, the Postal Service has to file a request with the Postal Regulatory Commission [PRC]. We think it will be within the next two weeks ... It's been a week since we've known about [this proposal] and maybe even a little less than that. And then the PRC has 45 days to come out with a decision. We've actually spoken with the PRC, and there are a lot of due process issues—issues where people who might oppose or have different thoughts have to have an opportunity to say their peace—so it is highly likely that the PRC will take, if not all, a fairly significant portion of those 45 days.
TM: While it's been noted that likely just the top 4,000 mailers will be eligible for this special rate cut, does the development of such a program provide any indirect benefits to all mailers?
JC: Yes, I think so. This is actually the second attempt from the Postal Service to do something to grow volume. The first will start on May 11 for saturation mailers; those who will mail more than they did last year ... will have a lower rate.
This [proposal] is an attempt by the Postal Service again to grow volume in a slow period, in a period where they believe that they have some excess capacity. If this works, our view is that it will continue.

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