The bottom line is that customers' expectations changed a lot through COVID. They basically want three things right now: fast, free and flexible.
The competitors out there have set the bar pretty high. People expect next-day delivery, but not so much same-day delivery. That's the ball game we're competing in right now, but our structure isn't really set up for that.
When I talk about weekend delivery, it's something we have to negotiate with our bargaining units, and we're doing that right now. The cost of weekend delivery is prohibitive for us because of overtime. It will be quite a large number to do that; otherwise, we would have done it already. That's one example.
In terms of pricing, if you look at other markets around the world, the U.K., Australia, France and even the United States have been able to work out a pricing approach based on a calculation that incorporates inflation, costs and what else is going on in the economy, the market and so on. We've had two price increases in the last decade, and we've had none in the last four years. Therefore, we need that funding in order to support the turnaround strategy we're trying to execute with the rest of the organization. That gets into investments in electric vehicles or in centralized mailboxes, which you raised.
By the way, the government's clear direction is to keep door-to-door delivery where it is today and not expand the use of community mailboxes, and we certainly abide by that and respect that strongly. However, the experience with CMBs has actually been quite good over time in that they're secure, safe and convenient, and they're efficient for the organization.