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Post office seeing red over Netflix envelopes

Posted Dec 06 2007, 07:17 AM by Kim Peterson
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Image Credit: Flyawaycafe.comThose red DVD mailers Netflix uses are a huge pain in the butt for postal workers. In a report out this week, the Postal Service says it has to manually process 70% of Netflix's DVD envelopes because they jam up the mail machines.

And here's government bureaucracy at its finest. Normally the Postal Service would charge Netflix for having a "nonmachineable" mailpiece. But this kind of envelope isn't discussed in the official "Mail Manual," so the Postal Service can't classify it as nonmachineable.

So the Postal Service has had to suck it up and hand-process Netflix envelopes. That's added $41.9 million in labor costs over the past two years and will add $61.5 million over the next two, the service estimates.

No more. The Postal Service's Inspector General wants Netflix to make its envelopes easier to process or pay a 17-cent surcharge for each one. Netflix says it will redesign its mailer to avoid the fee. A spokesman spins the issue to note that the company actually saves the post office money by going to the post office to get returned discs. Netflix is entitled to have the discs delivered because it pays for first-class postage.

Netflix mails 1.6 million DVDs a day.

Citi analysts said that if Netflix has to pay the surcharge, monthly operating income per subscriber would fall by two-thirds, from $1.05 to 35 cents. Citi reiterated its "sell" rating on Netflix. 

Investors shrugged off the mini-drama yesterday. Netflix shares rose 18 cents to close at $23.93.

Comments

 

Now I know why my DVD's arrived cracked every once in awhile.

netflix should have been paying the added labor costs or redesigning the envelope at month 3 of year one not after 2 years.  another perfect example of gov't inefficiency/ineffectiveness.  so technically i have been paying for other people's netflix rentals the last 2 years.  figures.

Not only do they require hand processing, but they are a pain to sort and put in and out of the mailbox. They have a loose end that flops and doesn't behave like an envelope does. Each one needs to be handled specially, a real time killer on the front lines. signed, a relief rural mail carrier.

Well, that explains why once a week one of the DVDs we receive from Netflix is cracked or broken in two.  In one memorable week, we had no less than five Netflix DVDs delivered that were cracked or broken along an edge---probably because they were forced through the machines at the post office.  This is one Netflix customer who is grateful we haven't been required to pay for all the damaged DVDs we've had to send back in the past year.

Why are we hearing about this now?  I've been a subsctiber to Netflix since 2001...is the postal sevice just changing their way of operating NOW??

With everything the post office gets away with it is difficult to have any concern when they complain.  They should listen to the public complain about them and try to fix their system.  When it takes a week to get a letter delivered to an address four blocks away because they can't sort in small towns I don't they should even mention their problem with Netflix.  

What about blockbuster, they have the same design?

The post office doesn't like doing it's job. Who is surprised? I notice that I continue to receive massive amounts of junk mail delivered by the post office, and that stuff isn't 1st class postage. They don't complain about that. Just about good ol' 1st class postage customers. No wonder the postal service is going down the toilet.

The post office should be happy that the USPS otherwise known as snail mail is being used and should find ways to accomodate high volume mail user's. Just another example of how our goverment needs to revamp the USPS to make it profitable.

Boo hoo.  The Post Office might actually have to earn their $40.00/hour wages!

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