T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1142.1 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Da doo run run, da doo run run | Thu Jul 12 1990 15:55 | 15 |
| re .0
>
> I do NOT condone what the Mill Mailroom is doing, but the cost of
> delivering MAIL to 3-4K employees has to be staggering.
That is of no bearing on the matter. Mail persons are paid to deliver mail,
not to decide what is and what isn't mail. IMHO, Trade rags are a crucial
component of the information flow to the individuals in this corporation.
I suggest that you pass the information in .0 to the Corporate Mail
systems Manager (NR02-2/C3) DTN 234 4459 and get a policy decision on
this...
q
|
1142.2 | | TIXEL::ARNOLD | Carrying a fully charged phaser | Thu Jul 12 1990 17:03 | 5 |
| And when/if you DO get a policy decision on this, please post the
results here, as then I've got about a dozen change of address cards
that I need to fill out pronto...
Jon
|
1142.3 | .0 FYI ONLY - I'm NOT going to tilt at this windmill | AMELIA::SEGAL | Len Segal, MLO6-1/U30, 223-7687 | Thu Jul 12 1990 17:43 | 16 |
| Please understand that I posted .0 as "FYI". I have NO intention of
making a stink about this to DEC Mgmt, as it does not effect me
directly and I have more important "oxen to gore".
There is only One item that I requested to be mailed to my office
and I have a call in to them to change my mailing address (as I was
getting the Product Safety Society Newsletter either on or after the
date of the meetings).
If someone else wants to follow up on this, be my guest...I've
already done it at two previous companies and gotten absolutely
nowhere. With the "down sizing" of DEC (ALL but one person in the
MLO Mailroom took the buyout), I'm sure that the current response at
DEC won't be any different.
Good luck!
|
1142.4 | His office is in MLO | SMOOT::ROTH | Grits: Not just for banquets anymore! | Fri Jul 13 1990 11:05 | 5 |
|
I wonder if 'bulk mail' addressed to a Mr. Ken Olsen is meeting the
same fate as the rest of the mail mentioned in .0 ?
Lee
|
1142.5 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Da doo run run, da doo run run | Fri Jul 13 1990 12:35 | 5 |
| I have just forwarded the contents of .0 to the corporate mail systems
manager, who hopefully will enlighten us...
q
|
1142.6 | Same old DEC, just playin' by different rules | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Fri Jul 13 1990 13:31 | 21 |
| I'll make a guess that the "corporate response" will be along the lines of
what's actually happening, i.e. DEC is not required to handle such mail
and that the Mail rooms aren't suppposed to be processing personal US Mail
(incoming anyway, they still seem to offer the service of taking properly
posted outgoing stuff).
I have no real objection with this policy. It's the company's right to do so.
I agree that it doesn't make much sense for mail room personnel to be making
business decisions which affect the ability of the rest of us to do our jobs
(like by trashing trade news which may critical for us to be aware of).
My real objection is that these policies or changes thereto "just happen"
without any advance warning. One day you're receiving Publishers Clearing
House sweepstakes entries and the next day the IEEE Journal is getting
thrown away and you're never the wiser. It would seem that if they can send
people around to personally put fliers on people's chairs to alert them to
a planned power shutdown or a library renovation, that they could give people
some warning that after such-and-such a date personal mail will no longer be
forwarded, rather than keeping it a secret.
-Jack
|
1142.7 | Well, for me this may be a blessing, ... | SEDGPX::COLE | A CPU cycle is a terrible thing to waste | Fri Jul 13 1990 13:43 | 4 |
| ... because now I won't get mail for the "Jack Cole" that worked
in the Mill years ago, is no longer with DEC, and who I hope isn't missing
all the catalogs and vendor mailings that I have been getting in Atlanta
for several years! :>)
|
1142.8 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Jul 13 1990 14:09 | 5 |
| >and that the Mail rooms aren't supposed to be processing personal US Mail
Since when are trade journals "personal"?
/john
|
1142.9 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Da doo run run, da doo run run | Fri Jul 13 1990 14:13 | 12 |
| as I mentioned before, I have forwarded .0 to the Corporate Mail Manager. I
have communicated with him in the past over other issues and found him to
be a co-operative and concerened individual. At this point, I would wait
for comment from him, and treat the actions described in .0 as a
misinterpretation of guidelines.
As a large number of people in Digital actually have "being abreast of
competitive advances etc in the industry" as part of their job
requirements, I can't see this holding much water...
q
|
1142.10 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Da doo run run, da doo run run | Fri Jul 13 1990 15:57 | 6 |
| And I have just received mail from the Corporate Mail Systems Manager, who
agrees that the scenario in .0 is wrong, and assures me that it will be
looked into.
q
|
1142.11 | Sounds like a facilities fiefdom builder | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Do the right thing! | Fri Jul 13 1990 16:39 | 30 |
1142.12 | Fuller Brush Yes | CURIE::DIMAN | | Mon Jul 16 1990 13:35 | 18 |
| This isn't a mail room issue...but
I just noticed that next to the Cafeteria in MRO4 there is a large
rack of flyers promoting things like Fuller Brush, Avon Products,
Mary Kay, etc. These look like that they are the same format so
I'll venture that they are printed by Digital from a master provided
by the outside company and then placed in individual racks by a
Digital employee.
On the one hand someone is tossing out mail that may be relevent
Digital employees' work, on the other someone is reserving rack
space and distributing business flyers that have nothing to do
with Digital.
May be the person that distributes this business junk stuff could
help the mail room distribute more legitimate mail?
|
1142.13 | Response from MLO Building Services Manager | ASABET::LEGERE | | Tue Jul 24 1990 14:58 | 24 |
| As the manager of the Mail operation here at the Mill, I am
concerned with the accuracy of the information contained in note
(1142.0).
First of all, any mail with a valid mail stop and addressee
is delivered. Whether it be first class or bulk.
Mail that is disposed of is limited to bulk rate mailing list
generated items such as product solicitations, trade organization
solicitations, trade magazines, solicitations for subscriptions,
catalogues, and the like THAT DOES NOT CARRY A VALID MAIL STOP.
Mail without a mail stop, requires research to attain the proper
address before we can deliver it. A thousand extra "look ups"
(our bulk rate daily average) is extremely labor intensive, especially
on top of the incorrectly addressed first class mail.
If you have subscribed to a publication and your mail stop appears
on the item rest assured that we will deliver it. Our role is one of
business support, and we will do everything we can to assure that our
tenants receive the services they need to conduct their business.
Thank you
|
1142.14 | Please consider your audience | NEWVAX::SGRIFFIN | Census counts on Digital | Tue Jul 24 1990 22:06 | 32 |
| > Mail that is disposed of is limited to bulk rate mailing list
> ...
>solicitations, TRADE MAGAZINES, solicitations for subscriptions,
Are you aware that some of these "bulk rate mailing list" publications
such as TRADE MAGAZINES actually cost us (or Digital) money? That we
actually SUBSCRIBE to these publications? That "qualification" for a
subscription depends on our job codes and functions?
> Mail without a mail stop, requires research to attain the proper
>address before we can deliver it. A thousand extra "look ups"
How about running off several hundred labels which state:
+-----------------------------------+
| This mail was received without |
| your mailstop. Please advise the |
| publisher of your mailstop or |
| further delivery will be ceased" |
+-----------------------------------+
Then the several thousand lookups become two months worth (please allow
two cycles to ensure that the publisher has had time to process the
correction). The worst thing to happen to a Digital employee is to
have a customer stop you or call and say, "What's this I saw in
_generic_trade_rag_ about so_and_so?" without us having a clue. You
may not think this would apply to one of you guys up north, but
customers do talk to engineers occasionally and the competitive info is
very useful as well.
Please understand that just because it is bulk rate and happens to be
missing the mailstop is not an absolute criteria for destruction.
|
1142.15 | Compromise? | EAGLE1::BRUNNER | Moonbase Alpha | Tue Jul 24 1990 23:52 | 6 |
| How about a "dead letter office" at each site mailing room? Depending on
the site, perhaps the incorrect mail could be held there for as long as
two weeks. If you think you are missing mail, you could go to the main mail
room and look through a few piles. That way, facilities doesn't have to do
a whole lot of work for incorrectly addressed mail, as proposed by -.1, and
it doesn't get tossed right away.
|
1142.16 | MIA MAIL | SLIPUP::DMCLURE | Stay fit, eat right, die anyway | Wed Jul 25 1990 10:32 | 40 |
| re: .15,
> How about a "dead letter office" at each site mailing room? Depending on
> the site, perhaps the incorrect mail could be held there for as long as
> two weeks. If you think you are missing mail, you could go to the main mail
> room and look through a few piles. That way, facilities doesn't have to do
> a whole lot of work for incorrectly addressed mail, as proposed by -.1, and
> it doesn't get tossed right away.
The PK03 mail room already has such a system (informally anyway),
but it is also expanded to handle lost and unknown addressee mail as
well. The way it currently works is simple: if you are expecting mail
that never seems to arrive, you go to the mail room and they let you
look through what might be referred to as "MIA letter bins". These
bins currently contain a fairly even mix of trade magazines and generic
"junk" mail (without correct mail stops), along with letters and packages
which are either incorrectly labeled, or contain out-dated mail stops.
I was recently awaiting some important mail and after awhile, I
became convinced that the mail was simply lost in the mail room due to
the fact that I had been shuttling between two different cubicals over
the past few months. I went to the mail room and was allowed to look
through the MIA bins. While I never found my mail, it turns out that
the underlying feature of such a system was that I did happen to spot
incorrectly addressed mail for five different people whose mail stops
I happened to know. Needless to say, these same five people later
received hand-delivered mail that day (courtesy of moi).
I should point out that this was my experience, and that these "MIA
letter bins" might not ordinarily exist. These bins also weren't very
big (which made my search easier). I would suggest that for larger
amounts of MIA mail, that a rotating queue of MIA mail bins (based on
the length of their MIA status) would be quite useful. In other words,
instead of having one ominous dumpster of mail (that nobody in their
right mind is going to want to dig through), have a series of five or
six trays where each tray is dated with a label showing when the tray
was set aside. This way, when a maximum MIA time is reached (i.e. a
month or two), then the MIA mail from the oldest tray is discarded.
-davo
|
1142.17 | arrghh! | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Expatriate Aussie | Wed Jul 25 1990 11:30 | 37 |
| There is a rather alarming sideline effect from .13.
I can have two (or more) basic addresses for incoming mail.
Peter Quodling or Peter Quodling
Senior Software Engineer Senior Software Engineer
Digital Equipment Corporation Mail Stop ZKO1-3/J35
110 Spitbrook Road Digital Equipment Corporation
Nashua, NH 03062 110 Spitbrook Road
Nashua, NH 03062
Now most preprinted bulk mailing labels (at least on the half a dozen
different magazines that I just checked, have sufficient space for
six or seven lines of information. The Mailer, typically uses the top two
lines for their own codes, So the right hand example above, would overflow
their label. Their data entry people, loading their mailing database, don't
understand the significance of a Mail stop system, and would no doubt trash
it, in deference to Job title (an equally easy way to find someone, based
on what they do). I have absolutely no control over how a publisher
produces their mailing labels, why should I be penalized.
As suggested in a previous note, advising people that their mail is
incorrectly addressed is a far more appropriate thing to do, at least then
they can attempt to remedy the situation.
Irrespective of that, I think it is the mail rooms duty to attempt to
deliver all mail. Arbitrarily trashing mail because it is too hard to look
up someones mailstop in elf or a phone book, is a pretty poor excuse. How
would we be if, Engineers trashed Computers because they couldn't seem to
get them to work... Or the cafeteria threw out the food, that "didn't taste
right", or the pay office trashed checks for people with "too many
deductions".
Cut us a break, and do the right thing for Digital.
Peter Q.
|
1142.18 | It is a "mail" room, is it not? | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Do the right thing! | Wed Jul 25 1990 12:28 | 21 |
|
re .17 et al
While peoplein NY have had complaints about outgoing mail not being sent
out because of (incorrectly allegedly) being "personal", one thing I do
have to say is that I get _all_ my mail, even mail that has a building
address from 2 years/1 job/2 sites ago. (Digital picks up its mail at the
post office.)
If the problem is that it is difficult to deliver the mail, then the
solution is to make the delivery easier. If every piece of incoming mail
is not delivered, then someone is not doing their job. Either the mail
room delivers mail, or it doesn't -- not delivering mail doesn't make it
much of a mail room.
How would the people in the mailroom like it of the post office trashed
their personal mail -- letters, bills, catalogs -- just because someone
didn't put a ZIP code on their home address?
/Peters
|
1142.19 | Wait a minute, there are cases.... | STAR::PARKE | You're a surgeon, not Jack the Ripper | Wed Jul 25 1990 12:56 | 10 |
| Re .-1
" Or the cafeteria threw out the food, that "didn't taste
right", "
^^^^^^^^
Sorry Peter, but this one has merit here.
}8-)}
Bill
|
1142.20 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Wed Jul 25 1990 13:11 | 13 |
|
Re .17, trashing the mail stop info:
Just add the ms info to the street address line.
110 Spitbrook Rd ZK01-2/J35
As to the larger question: Given a bare-bones mail room staff, and the
choice between getting all my mail late and not getting improperly
addressed mail - guess where my vote goes!
|
1142.21 | | MAMIE::DCOX | | Wed Jul 25 1990 13:16 | 19 |
| I guess the question is, "What is the purpose of a mail room?" Is the purpose
to deliver mail? Is the purpose to deliver mail, cheaply?
What do the mail rooms' customers have to say? This particular customer would
like his mail delivered. If there is something I can do to expedite that task
(such as making sure the mailers have my correct mail stop), I welcome
suggestions.
But I still want my mail delivered.
Seems to me that throwing out bulk mail because you do not want to look up the
address is analogous to telling a customer that he needs to talk to <whomever>
but not giving him the number because you don't want to grab your telephone
book and look it up. No?
Then again, perhaps I have my priorities backwards.
Dave
|
1142.22 | | TRCC2::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Wed Jul 25 1990 16:33 | 5 |
| I don't know for sure how the mailers' data entry folks react, but as a
customer the first time I got something with a DEC mailstop appended to the
address, I thought someone's printer had broken.
-dave
|
1142.23 | *what* problem? | SCCAT::BOUCHARD | Ken Bouchard WRO3-2 | Wed Jul 25 1990 21:20 | 6 |
| re: "I'll look into this"
Whenever anybody utters those words,you can be sure that the final
answer will be that nothing is wrong.
Ken
|
1142.24 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Wed Jul 25 1990 23:03 | 6 |
|
Hey, let's see how many letters Ken gets delivered from now on...
Seriously, why don't you cut the guy a break! He cared enough to
respond here, why not give him a chance to do the right thing!
|
1142.25 | Expensive trash.. | CRBOSS::PIERPONT | | Thu Jul 26 1990 11:39 | 10 |
| The Account Payable group that was in this building moved next door
some months ago. The vendors/suppliers are still sending mail to this
address. Each day it is sorted out and then carried to the next
building. What if people just trashed the the vendor mail?
There are also a large number of vendors that ship product to the
BILL TO ADDRESS: instead of the SHIP TO ADDRESS:. Waht if we just
trashed that product?
HP
|
1142.26 | open for suggestions | ASABET::LEGERE | | Thu Jul 26 1990 12:21 | 33 |
|
Well we could "what if" this subject to death. Many of the
suggestions that came in have merit, and I will get together with the
mail room folks and see if can work some of these ideas. Thanks for
your help. We receive about 15 to 20k pieces of mail a day, much of
which is incorrectly addressed. Anything folks can do to get the
proper mail stop on these articles will help, anything you can do to
reduce the volume will help. (cancelling subscriptions you don't use,
changing incorrect addresses etc.) Please don't think that we dispose
of everything incorrectly adressed, actually we look up about as many.
I wish I could show everyone the type of stuff we're talking about
here. Most of it is obviously unsolicited. A good example is when
we received about 1,000 Victoria's Secrets Catologues, none with mail
stops. (boy, this one should bring some abuse) Should we have looked
all these folks up and got these catologues out ? Do you think that
1,000 folks at the mill all sent for these catologues on the same day.
Bottom line is this would have taken us somewhere around 16 hours to
process. We simply don't have these resources, and I couldn't support
hiring folks to do this kind of work. So I guess in a sense we rely
on our mail people to use some discretion. If the article is not coming in
by the hundreds, without mailstops, and it looks to be at all buisiness
related, we will try to get it to you. I almost wish that the senders
would put no names on bulk deliveries, then we could send 10 to each
mailstop and not have to deal with look ups or folks complaining about
getting articles for folks who they don't know. The last thing we
want to do is not deliver an item of value to you. I'm open to
suggestions, and sure to hear criticisms, I will work all the
suggestions to the best of my ability. Please excuse any typo's
I'm short on time and leaving for vacation, but wanted to
respond before I left. I'll check in on this note upon my return.
Thanks,
|
1142.27 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Sat Jul 28 1990 20:12 | 6 |
| I personally have NEVER had problems with trade magazines being unable to put
the mailstop on an address. Mailstops are in common use at many corporations
and so the mailing label generation software at the trade rags is set up to
handle them.
--PSW
|
1142.28 | | CHESS::KAIKOW | | Mon Aug 13 1990 14:03 | 13 |
| re: 1142.1
> That is of no bearing on the matter. Mail persons are paid to deliver mail,
> not to decide what is and what isn't mail. IMHO, Trade rags are a crucial
> component of the information flow to the individuals in this corporation.
Correct.
However, I do use a PO Box for everything other than coresspondence chess and
letters from relatives, which go to my residence.
Periodically, I do get stuff at DEC, but very little.
|
1142.29 | Titles have no effect on delivery | CHESS::KAIKOW | | Mon Aug 13 1990 14:10 | 4 |
| re: 1142.17
There is no reason to put such a title in an address as it has nothing to do
with the delivery of the mail.
|
1142.30 | Tell it to the publishers | TLE::AMARTIN | Alan H. Martin | Mon Aug 13 1990 20:46 | 9 |
| Re .29:
>There is no reason to put such a title in an address as it has nothing to do
>with the delivery of the mail.
What are you telling him for? Trade rags with free subscriptions demand that
you provide the title to get the magazine; they put the title on the mailing
label by themselves.
/AHM
|
1142.31 | | BLUMON::QUODLING | Innovation, but no Momentum | Mon Aug 13 1990 23:59 | 6 |
| Yup, and with some of them, their "free" subscriptions are only for select
types of employees, so that if you tell them, you are a SW Eng, they ignore
you. If you tell them, you are a product manager, bingo....
q
|