Chester Business Club Charity

February 16th, 2011

Chester Business Club Charity walk help us support smaller charities that do not receive funding, like Mums Chums providing help and relChester Business Club Charity walk help us support smaller charities that do not receive funding, like Mums Chums providing help and relief for parents with a severely handicapped child.

Walk on the day £10 registration; sponsor yourself or others to walk. Give just a couple hours of your time, a great walk for all the family and, if you have one your dog. Start from through Duke’s drive and back along the river over the meadows, Chocolate stop! Juice stop! Bacon Butty stop! and Gin & Tonic at the end!

Sunday 8th May registration the Stand from 10am ief for parents with a severely handicapped child. Walk on the day £10 registration; sponsor yourself or others to walk.


CodEffect- Gone away mail management – a better solution

January 26th, 2011

SAVE MONEY PROTECT BRAND IMAGE CUT THE RISK OF IDENTITY FRAUD

Returned  gone way  mail (catalogues) represent a waste of money.  If you have 100,000 Return mail items per annum and your average mail pack is 50p, you have wasted £50,000 which could have been put to better use in reaching customers and prospects. Conversely, if you are over-suppressing your mailings due to inaccurate Returns information, you could be losing out on revenue opportunities.

Veridata are licensed by Arbutus Ridgeto use a proprietary 2d bar-coding system CodEffect. As a company we provide a specialist, automated and quick turn around service for processing returned and undelivered mail.  As such, Royal Mail supports Veridata in the delivery of Returned and gone away mail Management solutions.

What is CodEffect?

CodEffect identifies the recipient of undelivered mail. It encapsulates a mailer ID, campaign code, customer URN or other customer related data along with the complete customer name and address information into a two dimensional (2D) barcode. All data is encoded in order to minimise the barcode’s size.

This means that large amounts of data can be securely encrypted, including data that doesn’t appear in the text of the mailing item and enables large amounts of data to be captured cheaply and accurately.

The 2D barcodes are small and discreet and printed to be visible through the window of each envelope. After a letter is returned, Veridata scans the unopened envelope and decodes the barcode to obtain the required information/name and address of the intended recipient and to identify the mailer who originated the piece. This allows Veridata to create a list of undeliverable names and addresses for the mailer.

The barcodes are printed using industry-accepted DataMatrix standards.

The principal users of CodEffect are printers of bulk mailings who are looking for a cost-effective returns handling solution and a straightforward way of integrating returns handling into their systems.

CodEffect has 2 distinct elements – simple data capture from returns and data verification/enhancement. These are 2 distinct and separate services, designed so that users can ‘buy-in’ to both services, however this is not mandatory.

As far as the “core” data capture service is concerned, the pricing model is simply based on the number of scans performed – the amount of data captured is irrelevant as the amount of work is the same. One of the key selling points of a CodEffect capture solution is a fixed charge, regardless of the amount of data captured.

It can carry a considerable amount and variety of alphanumeric data such as – amount, payee, account information, personal identification information, or customer references; however valuable marketing data could also be added giving detailed information on geographic/demographic success rates of campaigns.

For more information Call Tim Craig 0n 01925 242360

PS We recycle all waste paper/catalogues  helping the environment and you to lower your carbon footprint.

PPS Catalogues can be saved for reuse if required


Bringing down the cost of gone away mail

January 26th, 2011

Save up to 50% on your returned and ‘gone way’ mail/catalogues

In partnership with Arbutus Ridge we process their CodEffect 2d barcode, a powerful method of encoding large amounts of data. Successfully used by many organisations including HMRC and Tesco, the latter in the first six months that they have been using it have seen a 50% reduction in its operational costs for returned mail.

It attracts a lower charge rate to capture than standard alpha/numeric data and we can return the data files on a daily basis if required.

Veridata now offers this encrypted 2d bar-coding system which means that capture of name & address, campaign codes etc. is considerably cheaper and enables us to offer our customers great savings for processing their returned mail.

CodEffect capture solution offer a fixed charge, regardless of the amount of data captured. There is no charge for the software or the creation of the barcode.

The CodEffect service has two distinct elements – simple data capture from returns and

data verification & enhancement. If required it can explain the reason for returns by

running them against a number of industry wide data sets.

The discreet two-dimensional barcode can be set in various places in or outside the envelope

Also included in the cost is the destruction and responsible disposal of all waste paper, which is recycled locally; this helps reduce your carbon footprint. Our service also helps you to comply with EU Directives on Landfill PAS2020 and Royal Mail’s Sustainable Mail.

Technical Requirements

Veridata in partnership with Arbutus Ridge will provide all software required to manage the printing of the CodEffect 2d barcodes free of charge and will work alongside the Client and chosen print company to install and test the process. Full technical requirements will be produced on agreement of contract.

Supplied as Windows DLL’s, which you can integrate using Visual Basic

For further information please contact

Tim Craig Business Development Director

Tel:01925 242360 email: tim.craig@veri-data.co.uk

PS As part o our service we destroy and recycle all paper helping to lower your carbon footprint


WEEE Producer Compliance Registration

January 10th, 2011

Producer Compliance Registration

Total Postweigh International Ltd

(WEE/KG0294UR)

Introduction

This document is a declaration that Total Postweigh International Ltd is registered with Northern

Compliance as a producer of EEE presented for sale in the UK. For further clarification please contact

0845 257 7024 or info@northerncompliance.org .

Producers Details

Company:

E Mail:

Telephone:

Total Postweigh International

Ltd

john@postweigh.com

01434381182

Address: 1 Skelgillside

Alston

CA9 3TR

Cumbria

Producer

Defined as manufacturer, importer and/or re-brander of EEE made ready for sale in the UK

Declaration


WEEE & RoHS Compliance with Totalpost

January 10th, 2011

Totalpost produce and distribute electrical equipment onto the market and as such we are bound by *WEEE regulations. Many people may not be aware of what WEEE is and/or how it affects them, that is why Total are registered with a WEEE compliance agency to help our customers, when they wish to dispose of old unwanted electrical items.

* The Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Directive (WEEE Directive) was introduced into UK law in January 2007 by the Waste Electronic and Electrical Equipment Regulations 2006.WEEE

See http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk/business/topics/waste/32084.aspx

WEEE is a huge spectrum of products from computers, mobile phones, (and in our house equipment chargers), printers and faxes, to washing machines, fridges and even fluorescent tubes. At least one million tonnes of WEEE from domestic and commercial sources is discarded in the UK every year. And this figure is growing. If you care about the environment and your carbon footprint we all need to take action now. (Also see our recycling process for Veridata Direct Mail ‘gone aways’ and returns process)

The WEEE Directive is European environmental legislation. It aims to address the environmental impacts of WEEE, and to encourage its separate collection, and subsequent treatment, re-use, recovery, recycling and environmentally sound disposal.

Another piece of environmental legislation, with which Totalpost has to comply and be aware of, is the RoHS Directive (the Restriction of the use of certain Hazardous Substances in electrical and electronic equipment) which came into force on 1st July 06.

This Directive bans the placing on the EU market of new electrical and electronic equipment containing more than agreed levels of lead, cadmium, mercury, hexavalent chromium, polybrominated biphenyl (PBB) and polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDE) flame retardants. With the new regulations impacting on us all, we take our responsibilities with regards to the correct disposal of electronic equipment very seriously and again have facilities in place to make sure that we comply fully and can help our customers every step of the way.

For further information please call Tim Craig on 44 (0)1925 242360


Totalpost plc Managing Director David Hymers received his MBE at Buckingham Palace from Her Majesty the Queen 8th December 2010

December 9th, 2010

8th December 2010 at the Buckingham Palace

Congratulations from Tim & Kirsty Craig at Veridata

David Hymers has been awarded an MBE for “services to Industry and International Trade” in the 2010 Queen’s Birthday Honours List.  David is Chairman & Managing Director of Totalpost Services Plc, a well respected privately owned independent market leader specialising in mailroom solutions to Companies in over 18 countries around the world.  The award recognises David’s hard work and commitment in the field of business, & for working with Business Link in the North and also with the management & Vice Chairmanship of an Export Club for Cumbria via UK Trade & Investment.

A surprised, delighted and humbled David said “Whilst I have received the award, I feel it is a testimony to all the employees at Totalpost as I know that without such a great team, we would not be doing so well, so each and every one of the team – in UK/Europe and USA – deserves a share in this recognition and I said so in my acceptance call to Her Majesties representative.”

A spokesperson for Totalpost said “We are delighted for David; the award of MBE is extremely well deserved. David has made a significant contribution to Business and to International Trade and the wider community and he has developed Totalpost Services Plc to ensure it is a substantial force in the mailroom market.”

People whose names are published in The Queen’s Birthday Honours and New Year Honours lists usually receive their award from The Queen at an Investiture in Buckingham Palace. There are usually 20 Investitures held in the Ballroom at the Palace each year. Up to 150 recipients attend each ceremony, and each recipient can nominate three friends or relations to sit in the audience to witness the occasion. The Queen enters the room attended by two Gurkha Orderly Officers, a tradition begun by Queen Victoria in 1876. Also on duty are members of The Queen’s Body Guard of the Yeomen of the Guard, which was created by Henry VII in 1485.

Veridata returned & ‘gone away’ mail handling … a Totalpost Services plc company


TNT Post joins forces with DMA to promote green direct mail

December 2nd, 2010

LONDON – TNT Post and the Direct Marketing Association have signed a letter of understanding pledging commitment to working together to promote environmental best practice within the direct mail sector.

The letter contains a call for the responsible use of direct mail and proposes the implementation of at least two joint initiatives over the next 12 months.

TNT Post claims to have a firm track record of bringing ethical innovations to the market, including its CarbonNeutral mailing service and greenPost product, which will provide a foundation for future projects.

88% of the carbon footprint of a piece of direct mail is in the ‘end of life’ solution.

The projects will be developed by a strategy group formed of TNT Post and members of the DMA’s Mailing Houses Council, and will be aimed at businesses of all sizes.

In line with the PAS 2020 environmental standard, TNT Post and DMA will work together to deliver advice, recommendations and information to help minimise the environmental impact of direct mail.

Gillian Lyall, chair of the DMA’s Mailing Houses Council, said: “The signing of this letter of understanding indicates the DMA and TNT Post’s commitment to both the continued growth of the sector and the environment.

“It sets out a positive framework of how we, and the rest of the industry, can work together to create a more advantageous situation for all organisations operating in the sector.”

Nick Wells, chief executive of TNT Post UK, said: “As a trusted provider of postal and direct mail services and solutions to thousands of organisations large and small, TNT Post is well placed to generate interest amongst businesses and mailing houses.

“This expertise, coupled with the DMA’s market position, underpins the strength of this joint effort.” nam et ipsa scientia potestas est – For Knowledge Itself is Power

by TrueBlueTerrier » Sat Dec 19, 2009 1:31 pm http://www.brandrepublic.com/Discipline … 900409/TNT

Veridata have been committed to providing a GREEN gone away mail data capture  service for 14 years and all waste paper generated by our process  is confidentially destroyed and recycled.


Bill Clinton & 9/11

November 17th, 2010

Our paradigm now seems to be: something terrible happened to us on September 11, and that gives the right to interpret all future events in the way everyone else in the world must agree with us. And if they don’t they can go straight to hell.

Bill Clinton


Marketing News Direct mail ‘has had a good 2010′

November 17th, 2010

Monday 15th November 2010

Direct marketing has had a good year as companies have turned to its “age old attributes of targeting, respond rates and accountability” to bolster their economic recovery, a commentator has said.

Mail Marketing Week news editor Russell Parsons noted that 2010 has been a year in which the UK economy “crept diffidently but definitely out of recession”, as well as a period when many businesses utilised traditional forms of marketing in order to boost their brand exposure.

“And let us not forget that fantastic tool of engagement, the direct mail pack and how the tactile nature of that medium can help develop lasting relationships in a way that other avenues are not yet quite able,” he added.

Mr Parsons therefore suggested that 2010 could be seen as a year when traditional and new forms of media worked together as complementary, rather than competitive forces within businesses. He was speaking ahead of Marketing Week’s Engage Awards, which take place on May 24th, 2011.

Source: http://directmarketing.thomsonlocal.com/Win/News-Archive/Marketing-News/?storyId=83945


The church organist and the domino players

November 11th, 2010

He had a cadaverous, blue veined face with a long pointed, sniffy nose and rheumy eyes, he was not a man you could warm to, but he was extremely polite, and always neatly dressed, collar and tie summer or winter. The nails on his long bony fingers were scrupulously clean, meticulously manicured; he played the organ in the local church. He had been widowed for twenty three years lived alone and seemed to have no family or friends and seldom had much to say.

Most weekday lunchtimes he came to the pub, more often in the winter when we always had a big fire. On a good weekday lunch time there would be three or four domino schools with a constant drone of banter and gossip, punctuated with triumphant exclamation as someone knocked or went out. Man and boy they were all locals all of a similar age to him, but somehow they all looked younger more hearty, robust and lively. To me it seemed that they just tolerated him to make up the numbers. Two or three of them were also active members of the church and from time to time the vicar would drop in and join them for a drink. It was he that told me that he and the organist had come to the village at the same year 1953.

When I took over this village pub I inherited the domino players, three dart teams, the Royal Antediluvian Order of Buffalos and the 1914 -18 hot pot dinner. This dinner for veterans of the Great War was held every year on or near the eleventh and paid for by the brewery. In 1970 we served twenty seven, some of them domino players four years on we were down to fifteen. The organist never attended.

In those four years I had hardly exchanged more than a few words with him, other than polite platitudes. Then one day, at the end of October when it was lashing down outside and there was a customary lull at the tables for a pee break, he came to the bar as he always on his own. The others bought their drinks in rounds but he always bought his own and would painstakingly count out his change from a small purse. That lunchtime there were two young guys at the bar talking about a documentary they had watched on 20th century warfare the previous night. Aware that he must have heard some of the conversation, I looked up as I pulled his pint of mild.

‘What do you make of all this talk of war?’ I said. It was banal remark; I was just passing the time of day and not really expecting much of a response.

‘Oh,’ he said slowly, ‘I don’t much like to think about that sort of thing,’ and then paused, ‘I‘ve been living on borrowed time this last fifty years.’

He paid and went back to his dominos. I was busy with other customers but something about the pause, fifty years, it intrigued me.  He didn’t sup fast so it was probably the best part of forty minutes before he came back for another pint.

‘Fifty odd years is a long time,’ I said as he counted out his change, ‘you’d be a lot younger then.’

As he handed me his money he paused as if deciding whether this required an answer and then he said, ‘ I were, nineteen when I were at the Marne,’ another pause, ‘with Kings Liverpool, it were the first time I saw men killed, it weren’t good.’   He returned to his game

This conversation such as it was took place on a Friday and I was busy but the words stayed with me all weekend. I thought I knew quiet a lot about WW1 but I was surprised when I looked it up, to see the Marne was September 1914.

Monday lunch time he was back in and when he came to the bar I had to ask, ‘How come you were there at the beginning?’

‘Oh’, he spoke slowly, ‘I were with territorials so we were first to go, we went over with General Haig’.

That Monday I learned more, as part of BEF he did not get his first UK leave until the end of 1915 by when he had been involved some serious action, and then he told me…..

‘When I came home, first thing was to go pub to see my mates. I felt a bit daft going down in uniform so I got changed and I were in civvies when two young lasses stopped me’, he paused, and said simply, ‘they both gave me a white feather.’

‘What did you say to them?’ I said outraged and also beginning to feel a little ashamed, books and covers came to mind.

‘Oh’, he sighed, ‘I weren’t going to bandy words with them’, he said, ‘I’ve still got ‘em, silly business.’

Over the next few months I learned that he served four years in the trenches, the Somme the lot, right through to the 11th hour of the 11th day and that his best mate was killed on the 10th. That’s why never came to the memorial supper, he said he just did not want to remember.

One Sunday on his way home from church he came in with his bible, there, between the pages were two white feathers. It was as much as I could do to choke back the tears. I made an excuse went down the cellar and cried.

He died a year later, there were five people at his funeral and no mention of WW1 in the short obituary in the local paper.