The new Pitney Bowes facility in Grand Prairie, TX, will presort more than 1.6 billion pieces of First-Class letter mail per year. The 161,000-square-foot center will employ approximately 400 people. It replaces the former facility nearby that was destroyed in a fire this past February.
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Commercial printer company and personnel news from Printing Impressions’ April 2011 edition
With hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal judgments hanging over its head, ICM Inc., a local (Richmond, VA) direct mail and advertising company, filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy Thursday. That means it will be liquidated. The company, also known as In Control Mailing Inc., had assets of $128,000 but owed more than $1.81 million all over town, according to the bankruptcy filings.
ICM has been battling lawsuits for breach of contract and money owed filed by vendors including Xerox, Kenmore Envelope Co., Sir Speedy and Pitney Bowes, among others, the filings show.
The Brilliant Communication Awards honor Pitney Bowes’ leading, high-volume production printing and mailing customers around the world. The awards will recognize the innovators, early adopters and creative problem solvers who implemented ways to streamline workflow, ensure accuracy, and precisely market in order to communicate better with their customers.
Pitney Bowes Inc. announced that it will showcase solutions to create more valuable customer communications at the On Demand Exhibition and Conference 2011. The event will take place on March 22-24, at Walter E. Washington Convention Center, Washington, DC. Attendees will find the latest Pitney Bowes innovations on display at booth #2807.
The Volly cloud-based digital mail communications platform will empower consumers to receive, view, organize and manage bills, statements, direct marketing, catalogs, coupons and other content from multiple providers using a single application. This opt-in, consumer-focused consolidation service also includes online bill paying.
Commercial printing industry supplier company and personnel news from Printing Impressions’ January 2011 edition, highlighting Innovationdays 2011.
Customers aren't the only ones grappling with the friction of countless media channels. Marketers, in fact, have the tougher job of figuring out which communication vehicles make the most sense for their promotions-- and then explaining those results to upper management.
Learn how to build a media mix that adds to your company's profit and growth via:
- consistent and relevant cross-channel measurements
- performance allocation strategies
- standardized processes for sharing and acting on metrics
- testing strategies tied to profitability
Sponsored by: Pitney Bowes
To view this webinar click here!
In the United States, 31 percent of B2B firms surveyed reported that they have put personalized messages on bills, statements and customer service communications. Firms with fewer than 50 employees reported they are adopting transpromo communications at virtually the same rate as the largest companies.
Want an honest, open, unbiased and unfettered report on the quantity and quality of visitors who haunted the binding and finishing booths during Graph Expo earlier this month? Fact of the matter is, no such beast exists. Here are some observations that have two sides to them, and may or may not represent the truth.