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3 Business Addressing Standards

31 General

311 Joint Industry and Postal Service Standardization Efforts

This chapter defines standardized formats for business addresses to be used on mailpieces. This standardization effort was originally initiated by the Direct Mail Association (DMA) Business-to-Business Users' Group in late 1987 and included the involvement of other DMA segments groups who provide business-to-business list services. The Postal Service's Address Management Office and National Customer Support Center (NCSC) have worked closely with these groups to pinpoint problem areas and develop recommended solutions. Members of the Graphic Communications Association (GCA) have also provided strong support for the development of these business-to-business addressing standards.

As awareness of business-to-business addressing issues became more widespread, a broader scope of industry participation was facilitated by the establishment of a special ad hoc Business-to-Business Addressing Subcommittee of the Mailers' Technical Advisory Committee in the fall of 1989.

Numerous joint working meetings were held to thoroughly define standardization needs and develop the components of the recommended addressing guidelines outlined in this section. It should be noted that this effort intentionally dovetailed with the earlier joint industry and Postal Service program that established the general addressing standards. Industry and USPS joint work groups will continue to be created to provide the information necessary to achieve the highest level of address quality possible.

312 Unique Addressing Issues

For consumer and residential addresses, a complete and correct address consists of three basic lines of information: Customer or Recipient Line, Delivery Address Line, and Last Line (City State ZIP). Depending on the address type, other address data elements could include apartment or suite numbers, Post Office Box addresses, and a complete rural/highway contract route address (with route and box numbers).

Significantly, in terms of content, business-to-business mailers have much more to worry about with various permutations of firm names, the use of prestige addresses, and auxiliary company and personnel data, e.g., titles, personal/professional, and department or division. Consequently for the business-to-business mailer, the scope of standardization and list maintenance and correction becomes much more complex.

By establishing preferred format or data element location guidelines, defined character lengths, standard abbreviations, and a progression of compression steps, a process has been created that now enables mailers to uniformly condense business address components to any practical length, depending on the purpose and the need to abbreviate the data. The use of standardized abbreviations and logical compression steps is intended to facilitate the computer-based merge/purge process, Postal Service multi-line optical character readers (MLOCR) and industry address matching services including ZIP+4 and NCOA.

The mailer has full discretion in the use of standard abbreviations and compression guidelines to optimize computer data storage and output to a mailpiece. There is no intent to mandate the use of these abbreviations or guidelines if the mailer prefers the full spelling.

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313 Business Address Standardization Factors

Address standardization has the potential to improve many phases of the business-to-business mail process - from merge/purge to delivery. The following are specific problem areas these standards can address.

313.1 Costly Inefficiencies in the Merge/Purge Process

It is hard to identify and eliminate duplicate addresses when address data is presented in varying formats, i.e., when abbreviation and compression tactics are applied randomly or multiple data element combinations are used.

313.2 Costly Poor Address Hygiene

Businesses often prefer to use "prestige" or "vanity" addresses and occasionally use multiple versions of their firm name, depending on their market needs. They also apply differing abbreviation and compression tactics. As a result, match rates against Postal Service address improvement products, i.e., NCOA, Address Change Service (ACS), and ZIP+4, are low.

313.3 Costly Missed Opportunities for Barcoding Discounts

Because of inconsistencies in business address formats, business addresses often do not match against ZIP+4 data used to produce a barcode. Business-to-business mailers find it harder to take full advantage of new automation and barcoding discounts.

313.4 Costly Non-Deliverability

Inconsistent addressing tactics or missing address elements due to varying compression methods often result in non-deliverable mail. Delivery of mail within an organization may also be impaired if internal mailstops are not part of the address. In this context mailstop refers to a unique routing code used by a company for internal mail delivery. It does not include the traditional information, such as Accounts Payable Branch, or Attn To:. Example: Mailstop ABC 456.

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314 Purpose of Standardization

The purpose of standard abbreviations and compression guidelines is to provide a uniform reference when there is a need to condense address data. The standards contain the following components: an address format model indicating preferred address data element locations, a progression of optional line compression steps, and a table of standard abbreviations for the most commonly used business words. These tools are designed to meet the following objectives:

a. Improve computer matching of business address data in the merge/purge process and enhance the application of Postal Service address improvements.

b. Facilitate proper address compression for data transfers and differing output presentations, e.g., for Postal Service delivery vs. inside letter personalization or Cheshire labeling vs. ink jet printing.

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