USPS

New ad campaign won't save the Postal Service

USPS having a hard time finding a new ad agency to make snail mail seem cool again.

The United States Postal Service is having a hard time finding a new ad agency to take on the challenge of making snail mail seem cool again—and for understandable reasons. Since it last inked a deal with agency 13 months ago, the USPS has owned up to the fact that it's bleeding money and not just because it's a huge, inefficient government agency. People just don't mail as much stuff [PDF] any more, and we doubt a new ad campaign is going to change that. "I don't think advertising can do a whole lot at this point," a consultant told AdWeek of the USPS's ad strategy on Monday . "They've got so many issues, [the ad campaign review] is almost akin to rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic."

Convincing people to buy stamps and drop things in mailboxes is not a new challenge for the USPS. Since it started selling stamps in the 1840s , the agency has been forced to innovate in order to serve the growing nation, and they were pretty successful for a nearly two centuries. First came the jump from postmen on horseback to the U.S. Mail Steamship Company and the Pacific Mail Steamship Company. Then came the Railway Mail Service, Air Mail Service and most recently various Express and Priority Mail Services. In between, there were all kinds of renegotiations of what the post office could do including but not limited to passport services and banking services for immigrants. This was all going well until the invention of the Internet, when email started hacking away at the USPS's revenue. Competition from folks like UPS and FedEx didn't help, and now people are wondering if we need the Postal Service at all .

Enter the influence of advertising. In some shape or form, U.S. Postal Service ads have always focused on boo-hooing the Internet. That or they just ignore that the Internet is a helpful way of sending information from one place to another. And since they can't own email, the USPS has historically twisted its advertising message into a narrative about how the mail is somehow better than the email. Its most recent ad campaign could not have been more blunt with that message. Launched last year, it focused on information security, something that the Internet just isn't very good at evidently:

Continue reading the story and watch USPS ads from earlier eras at The Atlantic Wire .

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