The U.S. Postal Service has posted proposals in the Federal Register for comment about changes in international shipping options that would potentially make it easier for customers to use the products for their shipping needs.
The proposed changes will make the USPS’s international products more aligned with its domestic products - Express Mail, Priority Mail and First-Class Mail - by merging the current eight options into four, writes DM News.
Proposed enhancements to international products would include “increasing customer convenience through the use of domestic packaging supplies, offering the popular flat-rate envelope option in Express Mail International and adding the flat-rate box option to Priority Mail,” according to the Federal Register summary.
Marketers have unleashed their holiday promotions earlier than ever this year, with many hitting the stores well before Thanksgiving. But Sirius XM isn’t launching most of its 24-hour holiday music channels until turkey day or later.
The newly merged company…
PC Magazine will stop publishing a print edition with its January issue. The magazine will shift operations entirely online.
The magazine will be sent via email with a link to the current edition. It will continue to look like the…
Walgreens has returned to 1 Times Square with its new 16,200-square-foot flagship store; the store flaunts signs, made up of 12 million LEDs, on its three sides.
The signs, running above and below the famous news “zipper,” will include diagonal…
Following an inability to agree with studios on payment for shows distributed online, the Screen Actors Guild has decided to pursue strike authorization from its members in a move the Alliance of Motion Pictures and Television Producers calls “bizarre.”
Should…
Brick-and-mortar retailers will be marking down prices on many items this holiday season to attract reluctant shoppers, but their holiday “price war†is a mere skirmish compared with that being waged online, writes the International Herald Tribune (via Retailer Daily).
The price-cutting…
Through the first half of the year, automakers have slimmed their ad spending by 10% to $6.1 billion, according to Nielsen Monitor Plus.
General Motors slipped 6% to $1.2 billion, while Ford Motor cut ad spend by 22% to $954…