![]() |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
For many years, only the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) was aloud to sell stamps, it was a strict monopoly. For a fee, companies were allowed to lease a meter from the USPS and create their own stamps and postage at their office, but it was still necessary to return to the post office anytime the rates changed, so that the meter could be reset. Not an ideal situation by any stretch of the imagination. In time, the Postal Service started allowing certain retail stores to sell stamps, which improved the situation somewhat; but it was only by introducing online postage in 1998 that the Post Office finally caught up with the times. These days, the USPS allows Internet Postage to be purchased and printed directly by consumers, resulting in a unique barcode-enabled tag that can be applied right to the customers outgoing mail. There are also many third-party companies that have jumped on the online postage "bandwagon," including Stamps.com. This company specialize in "offline stamp printing," and allow customers to act as their own "self service" post office, no matter if that customer is a large business or a private consumer at home. All that is required in order to start printing your own postage with one of these firms is a laser or inkjet printer and the appropriate software--simple and straightforward. But the USPS hasn't been left out of the online postage rush, and their website (http://www.usps.gov ) provides a variety of online postage and stamp services, including ordering stamps online or buying commemorative stamp albums. Of course, the USPS provides fully secure online shopping and all orders are shipped by priority mail. Currently, experts say that small businesses and home-based offices are the most common users of online postage services, though larger companies are slowly entering the online postage market as well. In fact, the market for online services dealing with postage and stamps is expected to nearly double over the next five years, and is already approaching 10% of the total postage expenses of all small-businesses. The USPS is planning even more development of its online stamp and postage sales divisions, and soon, we could see a full-service virtual post-office online, open 24 hours a day. With numbers like these, and a growing list of online retailers jumping into the postage and stamp services business, waiting in line at the Post Office could very soon be a distant memory of how things used to be in the "not-so-good old days." But for now, buying a postage stamp online has become as easy as checking your email.
Put a post office in you office.. |
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||