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mail industry

What are FIMs? (Facing Identification Marks)

Facing Identification Marks
Facing Identification Marks

Facing Identification Marks (FIM) are barcodes meant to aid in faster and more accurate sorting and delivery of the mail. They’re not the ones you are probably thinking of – the ones at the bottom of envelopes. Those are Intelligent Mail Barcodes (IMB), and we’ll get to them in a later post.

FIMs are located at the top of the envelope, so you might not have ever given them a second thought. They’ve been around in common use since the 1980s, long before IMBs came into play.  So, what’s the FIM’s deal?

Here’s what the Postal Service says, straight from the horse’s mouth: “The FIM allows automatic facing (orientation) of letter-size mail for cancellation (postmarking). The FIM also identifies reply mail that bears preprinted barcodes, and the automated processing equipment routes barcoded mail directly to high-speed barcode sorters.”

They are located at the top of the envelope, to the left of where the postage goes. You’ll most likely see them on Business Reply Mail (BRE) envelopes, whose postage is pre-paid by the sender. Send them off without a stamp, easy-breezy.

More common as the years have gone by, are Courtesy Reply Mail (CRM) envelopes. They’re the ones that come with your paper bills – a pre-printed address, but you still need to foot the bill for a stamp.

Closely related are envelopes for Automated Bill Payments. FIMs do the heavy lifting to insure that these mailpieces are processed quickly – which is crucial for making sure you don’t have to tell someone “the check is in the mail,” and incur a late fee.

And everyone’s favorite: Direct Mail campaigns. Different entities use different envelopes (BRE or CRE) to make giving a donation easier, and the FIM insures it gets to where it’s going with speed.

The Nitty Gritty

FIMs are palindromic (they read the same forwards and backwards). We love a palindrome. Even though these codes are harder to decipher, just the knowledge that they are palindromic is pretty rad. Let’s dive in.

There are five different types of FIM:

FIM A is used for mail that has postage and an Intelligent Mail Barcode (IMB). You’ll most likely see it used on preprinted CRM and MRM (Metered Reply Mail) envelopes, but it can be applied to any mail.

FIM B is used for BRM without a preprinted barcode. BRM is paid for by the sender; because not having a barcode costs more, it is rarely used.

FIM C is used for BRM with a preprinted Intelligent Mail Barcode, as well as Permit Reply Mail (PRM) with a pre-printed delivery-point barcode.

FIM D is used only with Information-Based Indicia (IBI) postage. That’s for postage that has been paid for electronically.

FIM E is used to mark Share Mail, where the Intelligent Mail Barcode is used as postage. We can’t think of the last time we saw Share Mail, though. Those are postcards and envelopes sent with larger mailings, which you can address/forward to someone else without paying postage.


What have we learned about Facing Identification Marks?

There are five different types of Facing Identification Marks. They’re each specifically used for a variety of mail types. Since FIMs are used on preprinted envelopes, it’s likely you will never have a need for truly understanding a FIM. But, you’re here, looking around a site that gets into the details of the U.S. Mail, so we’d hate to leave out any cool information you might use at your next trivia night.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facing_Identification_Mark

Further reading about envelopes: What happens to unreadable mail?

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mail industry

What happens to unreadable mail?

Excellent video by Tom Scott on what happens with unreadable mail. These are envelopes where the mailing address cannot be read by the automatic processing of local USPS facilities.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XxCha4Kez9c

Basic Process

  • Local Processing Plant automatic processing. Something is unreadable.
  • A picture of the unreadable mail gets sent to the remote encoding center
  • If it is read in time then the piece of mail is able to stay “within automation” at the local processing plant. If it isn’t read in time then there is a second chance when it is sent through the local processing plant again a couple of hours later.
  • The guessed address is compared to the known address database. If there is only one matching address then that is that. If there are multiple similar addresses, then one needs to be selected from the matches from the database.

In the past there have been more of these encoding centers. But over time the trends are that fewer people are addressing their mail by hand and that the automatic processing technology is becoming better and better.

More information on USPS history and envelope history here.

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mail industry

How Security Envelopes Are Made

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Snail Mail Research and Further Reading

Snail Mail Research (see also: Balloon Mail, Pony Express, and Carrier Pigeon)
Further reading and research on the topic of Snail Mail. For your pleasure and curiosity. There are not a lot of articles written on the subject so please read carefully.

Snail Mail Discrimination
http://blogs.sfweekly.com/thesnitch/2013/11/city_wants_sro_residents_to_ge.php

One resident accused a front desk manager of holding mail hostage, forcing residents to sign over checks, and making them pay rent before releasing their mail.

Modern Day Snail Mail (via http://www.swiss-miss.com/)
http://www.cristinavanko.com/modern-day-snail-mail

I wanted to create my own modern day version of “snail-mail.” My rules for this type experiment were simple: create handwritten text messages for 7 days, i.e. no using the keyboard on my phone to send a message. I wrote out my message on paper and then I snapped a photo to send as a text message.

Little Ideas: Revive Snail Mail
http://suzikcreative.wordpress.com/2013/07/22/little-ideas-revive-snail-mail/

In my opinion there are few things that say I love you, I care about you or I’m thinking of you more than a personalized, handwritten note.

Why Snail Mail Was Dear To Us Once
http://www.frasercoastchronicle.com.au/news/why-snail-mail-was-dear-to-us-once/2059129/

Like most folk today, I have not put pen to paper for many years. The convenience and immediacy of email and Face book are just too compelling to avoid.

Correspondence with far-away friends today is more of an ongoing conversation, and bears little resemblance to the art of letter-writing we enjoyed in the previous century.

snail mail text conversation