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Saturday, July 26, 2025

Le Hunte challenges TTPost to keep evolving

by

Raphael Lall
2482 days ago
20181010
Minister of Public Utilities Robert Le Hunte, second from left, cuts the Ribbon to open the TTPOST Chauganas  Corporate Shop and Delivery Office yesterday. Also in photo, from left, are TTPOST Chairman Eula Rogers, Chauganas Mayor Gopaul Boodhan, TTPOST Managing Director Richard Saunders and President of Chauganas Chamber of Commerce Vishnu Charan.

Minister of Public Utilities Robert Le Hunte, second from left, cuts the Ribbon to open the TTPOST Chauganas Corporate Shop and Delivery Office yesterday. Also in photo, from left, are TTPOST Chairman Eula Rogers, Chauganas Mayor Gopaul Boodhan, TTPOST Managing Director Richard Saunders and President of Chauganas Chamber of Commerce Vishnu Charan.

ANISTO ALVES

Raphael John-Lall

Pub­lic Util­i­ties Min­is­ter Robert Le Hunte yes­ter­day told of­fi­cials of the T&T Postal Cor­po­ra­tion (TTPost) the com­pa­ny has to keep evolv­ing to meet the de­mands of the con­tem­po­rary busi­ness world.

“If you do not change and you are not con­stant­ly rev­o­lu­tion­iz­ing your­self, you will die. That is busi­ness,” he said.

In an ad­dress at the launch of TTPost’s re­tail cor­po­rate of­fice in Ch­agua­nas, the Min­ster that as an or­gan­i­sa­tion with 1,084 em­ploy­ees that de­liv­er mail week­ly to 250,000 house­holds through­out the coun­try at least twice a week, TTPost must do more to be­come to­tal­ly fi­nan­cial­ly in­de­pen­dent.

“We have to move or­ga­ni­za­tions like TTPost 100 per cent out of their de­pen­den­cy on the state. When we are able to do that, if the state does not have to sub­si­dize for TTPost, by ex­ten­sion the state is able to take that sub­sidy and ap­ply it to oth­er ar­eas like old age pen­sion, schools and books,” he said.

Le Hunte said the say­ing the cus­tomer is al­ways right is a pri­vate sec­tor law that ap­plies to al­most all busi­ness­es “be­cause at the end of the day it is your cus­tomer that keeps you in busi­ness.”

He ex­plained: “You are not op­er­at­ing a busi­ness for your­self, you are op­er­at­ing a busi­ness to sat­is­fy a need and as long as that need is there you need pro­vide that need. One of the dif­fer­en­ti­at­ing fac­tors is cus­tomer ser­vice.”

The min­is­ter said even for those pri­vate busi­ness­es that op­er­ate in a mo­nop­o­lis­tic seg­ment of the mar­ket, there is the need to main­tain ex­cel­lent cus­tomer ser­vice.

“As a mat­ter of fact, be­cause you are the on­ly provider of that ser­vice, the onus is up­on you to raise your game and en­sure what the cus­tomer wants he gets,” he said.

Ac­cord­ing to LeHunte, while TTPost has un­der­gone many changes in the last 20 years, in­no­va­tion will keep the or­ga­ni­za­tion alive, so it is im­por­tant to seek out op­por­tu­ni­ties “to get in­volved in us­ing tech­nol­o­gy.”

He al­so not­ed that TTPost op­er­ates in an in­dus­try where the core busi­ness is de­clin­ing, so it is im­por­tant to re­main rel­e­vant.

“We do not live on an is­land on­to our­selves and what hap­pens in the world im­pacts on us. If you are op­er­at­ing in an in­dus­try that is chang­ing rapid­ly, if you de­cide to stay still, then you will end up be­ing a di­nosaur,” he said.


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