New Mail Inserter Offers Affordable Hi-Tech Choice

A Pitney Bowes product story
Edited by the Printingtalk editorial team Dec 8, 2005

The luxury of devoting specific inserting technology to particular applications is one that is not open to every business, according to Pitney Bowes.

The luxury of devoting specific inserting technology to particular applications is one that is not open to every business, according to Pitney Bowes.

Often, budget or space limitations can play a part in dictating the kind of technology that a business can employ and, subsequently, the applications that a business can accept.

Now, for what it claimed to be the first time, Pitney Bowes has addressed that dilemma, designing an inserting system that offers users variety in the choice of work processed.

The Pitney Bowes FPS Series Inserter enables transactional and marketing direct mail to be processed accurately and at productive speed.

The company added that flexibility is offered in the choice of modular rotary and friction feeders.

The interchangeable design enables users to expand mailing capabilities, mixing and matching configurations to suit the job at hand.

With claimed fast, simple make-ready functions, the FPS processes letters at speeds of up to 14,000 per hour and flats at up to 9,000 per hour.

Operating speeds are coupled with the flexibility to process diverse and creative mailing campaigns.

The FPS can handle from one-page to 100-page collations in one envelope and accepts sensitive paper inserts and even curled envelopes with no disruption to productivity.

Inserts such as booklets, coupons, even 'onion skin' annual reports can also be processed, said the company.

From output scanning to full-scale file-based processing, the FPS is also said to offer options for mail-piece quality assurance, or total automated job reconciliation and reprint.

Increasingly, customers are looking for guarantees and processing proof at every stage, and options to provide such reassurance can enhance critical customer relationships, according to Pitney Bowes.

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