CHICAGO -- Add one more item to the list of things you can do on
the Web: Buy postage.
The U.S. Postal Service announced its PC Postage program, which
enables individuals and businesses to buy postage over the Web,
using a credit card or electronic bank debit, and then print
bar-coded stamps directly onto envelopes, labels and business
documents, using a standard laser or ink-jet printer.
At this point, PC Postage is for domestic mail only.
Two California companies, Stamps.com of Santa Monica and E-Stamp
of San Mateo, received clearance from the U.S. Postal Service to
offer their services on the Web, and two other companies, NeoPost
of Hayward, Calif., and Pitney Bowes of Stamford, Calif., are beta
testing.
The technology behind the products could have applications that
go beyond the mere purchase and printing of postage. Stamps.com
technology, for example, "could be applied to print other items of
value like airline tickets, coupons and gift certificates, right
over the Internet," said Jeff Green, co-founder and vice president
of marketing for the company.
Galileo International, parent of the Apollo and Galileo CRSs,
hinted as much last March when Stamps.com announced it had received
a "strategic investment" from the CRS company.
"We expect our travel agency customers to benefit from
Stamps.com's postage solution and we are exploring the possibility
of leveraging Stamps.com's Internet technologies for secure
[on-line] delivery for travel-related documents," the company said
at the time.Galileo declined to elaborate.
As for selling postage over the Internet, a key target for
companies in the business will be the self-employed/ home office
(SoHo) market.
The idea is that Internet-based postage buying is potentially
cheaper than using a postage meter and more convenient than running
out to the post office during open hours to buy stamps.
Stamps.com, which plans to roll its product out nationally over
the coming months, said that although the SoHo office market makes
up a substantial portion of the $44 billion stamp and postage meter
marketplace, these businesses are the most neglected when it comes
to postage convenience.
The Internet postage systems have certain differences. With
Stamps.com, for example, users download free software and set up an
account. E-Stamp's system entails buying a starter kit for $49.99
and using an "electronic vault," a small piece of hardware about
the size of a roll of stamps that is used to store up to $500 worth
of downloaded postage.
According to E-Stamp, the advantage is that users do not have to
keep getting on the Internet each time they want to buy. One thing
that may bring retailers up short if they consider the products is
the surcharge, according to Robin Fetsch, who operates Specialty
Tours from her home in Falls Church, Va.
Stamps.com and E-Stamp, for example, have programs that include
a 10% "convenience fee" on postage used with monthly minimum
charges of $3.99 and 4.99, respectively, and maximum fees of $19.99
and $24.99.
Asked if she is interested in using the Web to buy postage,
Fetsch said, "I really don't want to pay an extra 10%. "It's enough
to make me bother to run to the post office."
Agents interested in finding out more about the various Internet
postage systems can get information at the following Web sites:
E-Stamp at www.estamp.-comStamps.com at www.-stamps.comNeoPost at www.neopost-.comPitney Bowes at www.pitneybowes.com