Ending Soon! Save 33% on All Access

FedEx, UPS and the Postal Service: Where Shipping Rates Are Headed FedEx and UPS are looking ahead to a busy holiday season as ecommerce thrives.

By Kate Taylor

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

FedEx and UPS are ready for the most wonderful – and profitable – time of the year.

UPS announced Tuesday that it plans to hire up to 95,000 workers during the busy holiday season – perhaps so as to avoid a repeat of last year's struggles. Last year, the company had planned to hire 55,000 seasonal workers, but was forced to add 30,000 additional hires to handle the surge in deliveries. Still, UPS was blamed for ruining thousands of customers' Christmases, when it couldn't deliver last-minute orders on-time even with the extra employees.

UPS's biggest competitor, FedEx, is also planning on boosting its holiday hiring numbers. On Wednesday, the company announced plans to hire more than 50,000 extra workers to handle holiday-season package deliveries – more than double last year's plan to hire 20,000 seasonable workers. While FedEx has a smaller slice of the ecommerce market than UPS, the company also faced criticism when it failed to deliver packages on time for Christmas 2013.

However, FedEx's biggest recent business decision is going to hit the company after all the Christmas stockings are put away.

Related: How Consumers Contributed to the Shipping Nightmare on Christmas

On Tuesday, FedEx announced that it will implement rate increases for its Express, Ground and Freight services as of Jan. 5. In all areas, the company's U.S. shipping rates will increase by an average of 4.9 percent. The company's decision to apply dimensional weight pricing to all FedEx Group shipments, announced in May, will also take effect in January.

UPS has not announced any plans to increase its own prices.

At the heart of all these changes is the increasing importance of the ecommerce market. FedEx is already cashing in on online shopping. On Wednesday, the company announced that ecommerce drove FedEx's Ground's "very strong" performance in the first quarter, which resulted in revenue of $11.7 billion, up 6 percent from the previous year. The U.S. Postal Service also hopes to lure big ecommerce companies, introducing new lower rates for customers who ship at least 50,000 parcels a year, much to FedEx and UPS's chagrin.

More than anything, shipping services don't want to be left behind in the ecommerce rush. Failure to anticipate last-minute online shoppers was the downfall of UPS last holiday season. It's a mistake that neither UPS nor FedEx is willing to make again.

Correction: An earlier version of this article misstated UPS's seasonal hires figure for 2014.

Related: 6 Ways to Whip Your Business Into Shape Before the Holidays (Infographic)

Kate Taylor

Reporter

Kate Taylor is a reporter at Business Insider. She was previously a reporter at Entrepreneur. Get in touch with tips and feedback on Twitter at @Kate_H_Taylor. 

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business News

Now that OpenAI's Superalignment Team Has Been Disbanded, Who's Preventing AI from Going Rogue?

We spoke to an AI expert who says safety and innovation are not separate things that must be balanced; they go hand in hand.

Franchise

What Franchising Can Teach The NFL About The Impact of Private Equity

The NFL is smart to take a thoughtful approach before approving institutional capital's investment in teams.

Employee Experience & Recruiting

Beyond the Great Resignation — How to Attract Freelancers and Independent Talent Back to Traditional Work

Discussing the recent workplace exit of employees in search of more meaningful work and ways companies can attract that talent back.

Business News

Scarlett Johansson 'Shocked' That OpenAI Used a Voice 'So Eerily Similar' to Hers After Already Telling the Company 'No'

Johansson asked OpenAI how they created the AI voice that her "closest friends and news outlets could not tell the difference."

Business Ideas

Struggling to Balance Your Business and Your Relationship? This Company Says It Has a Solution.

Jessica Holton, co-founder and CEO of Ours, says her company is on a mission to destigmatize couples therapy so that people can be proactive about relationship health.

Marketing

Marketing Campaigns Must Do More than Drive Clicks — Here's How to Craft Landing Pages That Convert Clicks into Customers

Following fundamental design principles will ensure that your landing pages lead potential customers from clicking on an ad to completing a purchase.