Not so sure it is cheaper. I use flat rate all the time,,,can't beat it. Why does UPS use USPO services? What's it cost to send a letter UPS? Point is never ends up cheaper.
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.TM7
Riddle me this bat man, if USPS is cheaper why do most companies ship by UPS? if it was cheaper wouldn't Cabelas send me stuff by the post office rather than by UPS. I have to have things going to a post offce box for them to ship by USPS and they would rather send it to the physical address than the post office box. And it only makes sense to ship things by USPS to areas they do nto service and pay more to send it there rather than set up a local office that will not pay for its self.
Ok I'll riddle you this ... all sites have calculators , Just go Run the numbers .. USPS is cheaper.
If your a volume business UPS and Fedex may offer price breaks depending on negotiated contract and your business volume.
You also get real-time tracking.
A recent test was run (December 2012) here were the results.A 5-pound package going to San Francisco from New York.
Overnight service cost $85.07 (for delivery by 3 p.m.) or $91.76 (by 10:30 a.m.) with either FedEx or UPS $52.20 at the Post Office, with guaranteed delivery by noon, additionally . If you print a shipping label at home and schedule a pickup through USPS.com, the rate is only $39.14.
(USPS cheaper)Full shipping comparison includes price quotes from each courier for 5- and 10-pound packages sent to Chicago and San Francisco from New York City, In general, UPS and FedEx offer more options for expedited shipping, with guaranteed delivery times,
but charge much higher prices.Media Mail from the Postal Service emerged as the absolute cheapest option overall, costing only $4.15 for a 5-pound package and $6.19 for a 10-pound package to either city. However, the service applies only to "educational materials" such as books and DVDs.
For other items,
the Postal Service's Parcel Post beat out UPS Ground and FedEx Home Delivery, although the estimated transit times were six days to Chicago and eight days to San Francisco, compared with guaranteed delivery in two days to Chicago and five days to San Francisco with UPS or FedEx.
FedEx and UPS mirror each others' prices and services, quoting precisely the same rates, down to the cent, almost across the board. The sole exception is ground delivery, where FedEx Home Delivery maintains a slight lead over UPS Ground. In the comparison, the price differences amounted to no more than a couple of dollars and change.
There was
substantial savings with flat-rate boxes from the Postal Service, which ship for the same price regardless of weight or destination, as long as the contents fit in one of several sizes the Postal Service provides. For instance, shipping a 10-pound package overnight to San Francisco costs $39.95 vs. $76.95 for regular Express Mail at the Post Office or $116.17 at FedEx or UPS. The heavier the package (up to 70 pounds), the greater the savings.
Be sure to price out both regular and flat-rate shipping at the Postal Service for Priority Mail, a two-to-three-day service, or overnight Express Mail, the only option with point-by-point tracking and a money-back-guaranteed delivery time.
All the FedEx and UPS services researched include tracking and a money-back guarantee, although consumers may not be able to claim a refund if a late delivery can be blamed on a fine-print problem such as inclement weather or an incomplete shipping label -- or if a package is mailed too close to Christmas. FedEx is suspending its guarantee for Home Delivery beginning Dec. 11. The company will still guarantee pricier FedEx Express deliveries, which entitle the shipper to a refund if they arrive even one minute late. However, beginning Dec. 18, the guarantee will apply only if a package is delayed more than 90 minutes.
Beyond Price. As perks such as money-back guarantees suggest, there is more to consider than just price when determining the best cheap shipping provider. Factors including convenience, reliability, and customer satisfaction. The American Customer Satisfaction Index historically favors FedEx, which has outscored UPS by two points and the Postal Service by eight points on average over the past 15 years. In 2012, it bested the other two by only one point (earning 82 out of 100).
As for convenience, the Postal Service far outnumbers UPS and FedEx with more than 35,000 retail offices. However, the private companies compete by operating about 40,000 drop boxes apiece, accepting packages 24/7 at a time when the Postal Service has cut business hours at thousands of locations.
All three couriers provide free pickup service for packages with print-at-home shipping labels. Only the Postal Service offers free Saturday delivery for all shipments. Saturday delivery costs an additional $15 with either UPS or FedEx, with the exception of FedEx Home Delivery. The schedule for that service is Tuesday through Saturday, instead of Monday through Friday.
Not only did the USPS rank cheapest but also is the most convenient with more than 35,000 retail offices.
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So basically if you can't compete .... Rally your lobbyists , run up the hill, pay off a bunch of congressmen to pass ridiculous arbitrary laws that bind the hands of your competition and kill their service. That's one way to dispense with more efficient competition.