Mailroom
A mailroom or post room (UK) is a room in which incoming and outgoing mail is processed and sorted. Mailrooms are commonly found in schools, offices, apartment buildings, and the generic post office. A person who works in a mailroom is known as a mailroom clerk or mailboy and the head person (sometimes the only person) is called the postmaster. The mailroom is responsible for a company's incoming and outgoing mail. A mailroom clerk deals with the preparation of packaged goods, letters, and other mail for shipping by the local post office or by an independent shipping service.
In a large organization, the mailroom is the central hub of the internal mail system and the interface with external mail. The postmaster manages the department, clerks assist them and mailboys deliver mail for other employees in different departments using a mail cart or a trolley doing regular rounds throughout the day. Sometimes the mailboys will trolley sort using the departmental slots on the trolley to reduce work at the central hub and to speed internal mail.[1]
In a small organization, or within a department or a large organization, a mailroom can be associated with the breakroom; these rooms can be combined into one. For instance, a mailroom can contain an area for employees to take a break. Besides Pigeon-hole messageboxes, this area might have a kitchenette with a coffee maker, microwave, table and chairs, refrigerator, sink, pantry, or oven. The mailboy is often the sole employee of the mailroom and is referred to by some employees as a gofer, which implies as a menial job position — for example: an employee who starts off "at the bottom", working in the mailroom runs errands (aka a runner), makes copies, files papers, makes teas and coffees and so forth.
See also
Look up mailroom in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
References
- ↑ "A P Systems MAILROOM". A-p-systems.com. Retrieved 2012-07-20.