USPS Mobile Application Platform
The US Postal Service historically negotiated vertically-integrated contracts for the systems in their distribution centers: hardware, software, infrastructure, maintenance and training together in a monolithic mega-contract. This created a significant operational bottleneck — workers carried multiple single-function devices or made repeated trips to device docks to complete their work. My team secured R&D funding to demonstrate the value of a more flexible approach: multiple applications on shared devices, supported by common libraries to accelerate future development.
Powering Our Public Services
Over two years, we delivered a comprehensive platform to their fleet of a quarter-million mobile devices:
- Hardware Abstraction Layer enabling application portability across diverse device types
- Peripheral Integration Libraries standardizing connectivity to printers, scanners, and Bluetooth devices
- Secure Launcher Environment providing authentication, settings management, and seamless app switching
- Enterprise Web Services Platform supporting device management and secure data transmission
The financial impact was substantial — several million dollars in annual savings through reduced labor costs, streamlined workflows, and accelerated application development. More importantly, we transformed the agency's procurement strategy, allowing them to tap into a broader developer ecosystem and shift to more targeted, competitive contracts.
Return to Sender: Unexpected Revenue
When a senior executive requested a demonstration of our development toolkit's capabilities, we responded with action rather than PowerPoints. In just days, we created a package verification application that compared actual dimensions and weight against shipper manifests.
On the backend, we used some thoughtful statistical analysis to determine the likelihood that the deviations we saw were random measurement errors. Our results strongly implied that a major e-commerce rainforest company was consistently under-reporting — a discovery that recovered several million additional dollars annually in fees and contractual penalties.
This experience was a great exercise in user-centered design, juggling competing priorities, and challenging our assumptions. More personally, it meant a great deal to me upon learning the impact of postal mail to especially seniors and rural populations. It meant a great deal to me to know that hundreds of millions of people benefitted from the work multiple times per week, and years later I still smile when I receive a package with an "eVS" label.
