How Big Data And The Internet Of Things
Will Change The Postal Service
Do you possess “expertise and critical knowledge of the Internet
of Things, data strategy and analytics, and the Postal Service’s operations,
infrastructure, products and services”? You might try and send your proposals
to the United States Postal Service, which is looking for a supplier to help it
make its “Internet of Postal Things
Project” real. Just in case you’re wondering what the hell I talking
about, here’s a quick recap.
Let’s start from something fairly obvious: few things are so
widespread and pervasive like the Postal Service. Perhaps less obvious is the
notion that few also collect so many data: postal operators collect a plethora
of information from their rich physical networks. The U.S. Postal Service, for
example, scans mail pieces and parcels up to 11 times, which represents a
potential of 1.7 trillion scans a year. Its big data supercomputer center is
already one of the most powerful in the United States.
In the future, according to a report released in Mayby
the U.S. Postal Service Office of Inspector General (OIG), “the convergence
between the increasing amount of actionable data, the ubiquity of network
connectivity to integrate and share this data, and the rapid development of analytics
may open up a new world of opportunities for postal operators — the “Internet
of Postal Things.”
New
packaging display at the United States Postal Service (Photo credit: Aranami)
The possibility of equipping the postal network (vehicles,
mailboxes, mail pieces and parcels, sorting centers, etc.) with low-cost
sensors will exponentially expand the capability of postal operators to collect
valuable data. This new rich data sources could help the Postal Service improve
operational performance, customer service, create new products and services,
and support more efficient decision-making processes. The “Internet of Postal
Things”, experts say, could also have a positive spillover effect on other
adjacent non-postal sectors, as the information collected by and for the Postal
Service could be useful to others.
Affixing sensors to postal trucks could help, for instance,
reduce fleet maintenance costs, optimize routes, report dead spots in
mobile and wireless coverage, or monitor environmental conditions, detecting
harmful chemical agents and pollution. Data collected by such sensors could
also become a basis for a new portfolio of postal services for government
agencies and other public and private entities. For example, accelerometers
could be placed on board to evaluate road conditions and detect potholes – the
data collected could then be sold to municipalities.
Postal big data could even help retailers select new retail
sites:, as it’s already happening in Germany, where DHL offers businesses paid
access to an online geomarketing tool called
Geovista, which combines geodata fromDeutsche Post Direct, external socio-demographic
and housing data, and statistics on consumption patterns. This information
helps marketers select new retail locations and prepare sales forecasts.
Opening the data could also create opportunities for third party developers:
France’s La Poste is working with innovative software companies to set-up new
services that leverage its databases, such as postcodes, post office locations,
or change of address files.
On the end user side, postal big data could foster the rise of new
consumer-centric delivery services: the report’s authors quote the SoPost platform, which, in the UK, lets people use Facebook and Twitter accounts as their
postal address for the delivery of gifts or product samples,
without actual delivery details being shared. In Sweden, DHL has been testing“crowdsourced
deliveries”, giving individuals the opportunity to deliver packages with
products ordered online directly to other end consumers. Using a mobile app,
the MyWays service connects individuals who ask for flexible deliveries with
those offering to transport parcels along their daily routes for a small fee.
With
these and other best practices in mind, on June 17 the OIG has issued a
solicitation for a company that will help it take advantage of all the data it
produces and will also imagine new ways to build innovative services around
them. Those interested in sending their proposal, and win the 100,000.00
contract, however, should better hurry up: the closing date is today.
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