The invention relates generally to the field of processing mail and, more particularly, to the sorting of incoming mail in accordance with the relative importance of the mail to the recipient.
Large business mailers prepare and process various types of business mail utilizing high speed inserters to collate the sheets and stuff the same into envelopes. Invoices, advertisements for the purchase of goods and/or services, prepaid post cards as well as business reply envelopes are usually placed in the envelopes mailed by large business mailers. Recipients of business mailers mail may enclose a check and invoice and/or an advertisement order form in the business reply envelope and mail it to the business mailer. Recipients of business mailers mail may also supply information requested in the prepaid post card and mail the post card to the business mailer.
When the business mailer receives the business reply envelopes and/or prepaid or customer paid post cards from their customers, they process the mail in the order it is received. There is nothing on the mail piece that indicates to the business mailer the relative importance of the mail piece. For instance, an enclosed check for $1.00 is handled exactly the same as a check for $1,000,000.00.
As the prior art advanced, department identification codes in machine or human-readable format were placed on business reply envelopes and post cards. The identification codes increased the efficiency of the incoming mail sortation process. However, there was still no indication on the mail piece that indicated to the business mailer the relative importance of the mail piece. Thus, each department continued to process the mail in the order it was received.
The present invention overcomes the disadvantages of the prior art by enabling a mailer to sort incoming mail pieces in accordance with changeable criteria that are important to the mailer. This invention accomplishes the foregoing by placing a code on the mail piece to determine the priority for processing each business reply envelope, windowed envelope, or post card that is sent to a customer and returned to the mailer. The invention also teaches the placing of a unique identifier tying the mail piece to a data file or utilizing the information in the unique identifier to determine the priority for processing each business reply envelope, windowed envelope, or post card that is sent to a customer and returned to the mailer. The unique identifier would enable the mailer to establish parameters for evaluating the unique identifier so as to set a priority for processing mail that is in the mail stream, i.e., prioritize mail that is received just before a late fee is due, to improve customer relations. The code tying the mail piece to a data file may be used by the mailer to track payment cycles, order the sortation of incoming mail based upon credit balances, process mail based upon the expected amount of the enclosed check. The foregoing would enable the mailer to receive monies earlier and improve the mailers cash flow.
The mailer may use the information it obtains from the unique identifier and/or data file to revise the way it handles mail. For instance, the data may indicate which people pay bills when they receive them, which people pay bills on a certain day of the month, and which people pay bills when they are due, etc. Thus, the mailer schedule the sending of invoices to different people at different times of the month to improve the mailer's cash flow. Data obtained from the unique identifier and/or data file may also be used to determine the transit time from the customer to the mailer; determine the effectiveness of inserted advertising material; customer response time; determine early notification of mail in transit for quality control and to decrease customer inquiries; determine priority sorting based upon prior knowledge of mail stream contents, etc.
Referring now to the drawings in detail, and more particularly to
The processing application will contain data mapping applications to use the information contained in identifier 28. Identifier 28 may also be indexed to a database. This permits a virtually infinite amount of information concerning mail piece 20 to be stored and matched on inbound mail flow. This allows full, closed-loop, trackable mail.
Mail piece 20 also contains identifier 28 that was placed on mail piece 20 by seller ABC Electronics, Inc. to identify the customer who mailed mail piece 20 and/or indicate information about the contents of mail piece 20, and/or information about the customer who mailed mail piece 20, etc. Identifier 28 is a series of data (alphabetic, numeric or alphanumeric), that identifies the customer and/or information that the seller considers important. For instance, data field A may represent the date the statement enclosed in mail piece 20 was prepared; data field B may represent the dollar balance of the statement contained in mail piece 20; data field C may indicate or represent the customer's account number; data field D may represent the customer's sub account number; data field E may represent the date that payment is due on the statement enclosed in mail piece 20; data field F may represent the catalogue in which mail piece 20 was placed; data field G may represent the department to which the seller wants mail piece 20 delivered; data field H may represent the date mail piece 20 was mailed to the customer, data field I may be a seller sorting priority code; data field J may be a seller priority code, etc. It will be obvious to one skilled in the art that the seller may use other seller-defined identifier 28 data fields to process mail piece 20. Identifier 28 may be any number of characters.
Identifier 28 may also be linked to one or more seller data files that contain processing information for mail piece 20 and/or other information the seller is interested in tracking. Identifier 28 may be a bar code; encrypted; or an encrypted bar code. It would be obvious to one skilled in the art that identifier 28 may replace sorting code 15 (
The above specification describes a new and improved method for processing mail. It is realized that the above description may indicate to those skilled in the art additional ways in which the principles of this invention may be used without departing from the spirit. Therefore, it is intended that this invention be limited only by the scope of the appended claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20030055791 A1 | Mar 2003 | US |