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Simon Thompson (Royal Mail)
Simon Thompson (Royal Mail)
from Wikipedia

Simon Thompson (born August 1966)[2] is a British business executive. Thompson was a non-executive director of Royal Mail until May 2023 when he resigned from the role following industrial action that took place in response to a cost-cutting and restructuring plan.[3]

Key Information

During the COVID-19 pandemic, he was managing director of the Test and Trace App, a key element of the UK government's widely-criticized £37 billion Test and Trace scheme.[4] Before that, he was Chief Product Officer at Ocado. He has also worked at Apple, HSBC, lastminute.com, Morrisons and Honda Europe.[1][5]

In May 2023, it was announced that Thompson would "step down" as head of Royal Mail. In the statement announcing his departure, Mr Thompson said he had been "incredibly proud to lead Royal Mail during this crucial period, and the changes made and negotiated have given Royal Mail a chance to compete and grow."[6] The Communication Workers Union (CWU) had previously called for Thompson to step down. Despite the financial impact caused by Thompson's failure to reach a settlement with the CWU during the company's busiest period, he received a payout of approximately £257,000.

In May, 2024, more than a year after Thompson's restructuring and cost-cutting measures had been implemented, the formerly state-owned company posted a £336 million loss.[7]

Criticism

[edit]

In 2023, as Royal Mail's CEO, Thompson appeared twice before the UK parliament's business, energy and industrial strategy select committee (BEIS). The first BEIS cross-party committee in January 2023, chaired by MP Darren Jones, heard testimony from Thompson and also from Dave Ward, the General Secretary of the Communication Workers Union on issues related to Royal Mail workers' industrial action.[8]

In January 2023, Mr Thompson provided a detailed response to the Select Committee meeting, covering all questions raised during the hearing.[9]

Thompson appeared before the BEIS committee for a second time because he was recalled by MPs who felt he had not given "wholly correct" answers at his first appearance.[10][8] Thompson's second appearance was also noteworthy due to the fact that Darren Jones had deemed it necessary that Thompson, Royal Mail's chair Keith Williams, and operations development director Ricky McAuley all swear an oath to tell the truth before the committee under a warning of contempt of parliament and a "potential perjury."[10][8]

Summing up the session, Jones was quoted in The Guardian as suggesting a common theme among answers given to the committee by Thompson and his two associates: "We have rogue posters, rogue managers, we have isolated incidents, we have a global pandemic, we have industrial action," he said. "It is everyone else's fault, nothing to do with me, guv [sic]."[11]

Investigations into data misuse at Royal Mail

[edit]

In December 2023, the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) wrote to the BEIS committee following concerns raised about personal data use. Despite the hundreds of anecdotal reports of data misuse mentioned during the BEIS committee hearings, they concluded that there is insufficient evidence of misuse of personal information and stated they were satisfied that Royal Mail had identified and rely on a lawful basis of use.[12]

Prioritisation of tracked parcels over letters and non-tracked items at Royal Mail

[edit]

As a result of public concerns raised to the BEIS committee, in January 2024, OFCOM published a report on Royal Mail's quality of service. They concluded that "in the evidence we assessed, we did not identify any suggestion that Royal Mail's senior management had directed the prioritization of parcels over letters outside of recognized contingency plans."[13] However, a Sunday Times undercover investigation [14][15] concluded that the tracked parcels were being prioritised by Royal Mail in breach of company policy. This investigation also lines up with claims made by postal workers to the BBC[16] and hundreds of complaints made to the BEIS committee Chair, Darren Jones.

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Simon Thompson is a British business executive who served as chief executive officer of from January 2021 to October 2023. Previously a at the company since 2017, Thompson's background includes roles in technology and logistics, such as executive positions at and managing director of the programme at the Department of Health and Social Care. During his tenure, Thompson oversaw Royal Mail's response to structural challenges, including a sharp decline in traditional letter volumes offset by surging parcel demand driven by e-commerce growth during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. He pursued a transformation plan to adapt operations, proposing changes to delivery schedules—such as eliminating second-class mail on Saturdays—and revising working practices to improve efficiency and cut costs by £300–350 million annually, amid reported operating losses exceeding £1 billion in the prior year. These reforms triggered extended industrial action by the Communication Workers Union (CWU), representing postal workers, resulting in multiple nationwide strikes from 2022 to 2023 that cost the company an estimated £100 million additional in losses and disrupted services. Thompson's leadership drew scrutiny, including parliamentary accusations of providing inaccurate testimony on the use of handheld devices to monitor worker productivity, initially denied but later acknowledged as involving performance data collection to support operational changes. He received a £140,000 bonus in 2022 despite these disputes and financial strains on employees, prompting criticism during cost-of-living pressures. Thompson departed amid ongoing union tensions, with the board citing the need for fresh leadership to advance modernization; he subsequently joined Windracers, an autonomous drone logistics firm.

Background

Early life and education

Simon Thompson was born in August 1966. Thompson earned a degree in computer science from De Montfort University in Leicester, graduating in 1987.

Pre-Royal Mail career

Prior to joining the Royal Mail board, Simon Thompson held senior executive roles focused on digital transformation and technology across diverse industries. His early career included positions at Motorola Inc. and Honda Motor Europe Ltd., followed by work at Apple Inc. where he contributed to product strategy. Thompson then advanced online booking and e-commerce at lastminute.com and TUI Travel plc. At Wm Morrison Supermarkets plc, he led efforts to develop the retailer's initial online presence and digital operations. Subsequently, Thompson headed digital commerce initiatives at , emphasizing technological integration in banking services. These experiences culminated in his role as at plc, where he oversaw product development and innovation until mid-2020.

Appointment and initial role

Selection as CEO

Simon Thompson was appointed Chief Executive of on 11 January 2021, effective immediately, following the resignation of his predecessor Rico Back in May 2020, which had left the company without a permanent leader for over seven months. At the time of his selection, Thompson had served as a on 's board since November 2017, with a designated focus on . The board selected Thompson for his extensive background in and , drawing from senior roles at companies including (as chief product officer), Apple, , , , and Honda Europe, as well as his leadership in developing the app from May to October 2020. No external recruitment process or competitive search was publicly detailed; the appointment appeared to prioritize his internal familiarity and expertise to accelerate ongoing reforms amid a parcels boom driven by and the . Royal Mail's interim chairman Keith Williams emphasized the company's position in "significant transition," stating the need to "move quickly" to enhance services and adapt to declining letter volumes, which had eroded profitability, while capitalizing on surging parcel demand. Thompson's appointment aligned with the execution of a £1.8 billion five-year transformation plan launched in 2019, including 2,000 job cuts announced in 2020, and followed a recent pay agreement with the Communication Workers Union to avert further disputes.

Transition to leadership

Simon Thompson was appointed chief executive of Royal Mail on 11 January 2021, succeeding interim CEO Stuart Simpson, who had led the company since Rico Back's departure in July 2020. As a on the board since 2017, Thompson's internal promotion facilitated a seamless handover, emphasizing continuity in strategic direction. Simpson, previously group , departed at the end of January 2021 following a brief transition period, receiving a £450,000 exit package plus a pro-rated 2020-21 bonus. The appointment coincided with a senior management restructure, including the creation of distinct leadership roles for Royal Mail's operations and its international parcels subsidiary GLS, under group CEO Martin Jansen. Thompson's immediate priorities centered on executing the £1.8 billion five-year transformation initiated in 2019, which sought to adapt the business to falling letter volumes and rising parcel demand through operational efficiencies and network modernization. His background in technology and logistics, including prior roles at and leadership of the app, positioned him to drive digital and supply chain reforms. This transition occurred amid recent labor agreements, such as the December 2020 pay deal with the Communication Workers Union, which averted further disruptions following a challenging year marked by pandemic-related surges in parcels and disputes over second-class delivery standards. Thompson's salary was set at £525,000, with potential bonuses tied to performance targets.

Strategic leadership at Royal Mail

Modernization efforts amid declining letter volumes

Under Simon Thompson's leadership as CEO from March 2021, Royal Mail confronted a structural decline in addressed letter volumes, which had fallen by more than 60% from their 2004-05 peak due to digital substitution for traditional mail. This trend accelerated post-pandemic, with volumes dropping approximately 20% from pre-2020 levels, prompting Thompson to prioritize a £1.8 billion transformation plan aimed at reorienting the business toward parcels amid growth. Central to these efforts was substantial investment in automation and infrastructure to enhance efficiency in a low-volume letter environment. Royal Mail allocated over £1 billion toward automating mail sorting and processing facilities, targeting 90% automation in parcel operations by 2023-24 to reduce manual handling and adapt to fluctuating workloads. Thompson emphasized building competitive infrastructure, including new sorting hubs and technology upgrades, to offset letter revenue losses, which accounted for addressed volumes declining by a high-single-digit percentage annually excluding elections. Operational reforms included proposals to regulators for flexibility under the universal service obligation, such as geographic delivery clustering and potential alternate-day second-class letter service to align capacity with demand realities. These measures sought to address mismatches where letter volumes fell 1.8 billion items short of projections in the first nine months of 2022-23, enabling resource reallocation to higher-margin parcels without immediate six-day elimination, though deliveries remained mandated by rejection of broader cuts. Despite optimistic internal views that letter decline might stabilize, Thompson's strategy focused on parcels-focused efficiency to sustain viability amid ongoing erosion.

Focus on parcel services and digital adaptation

Under Simon Thompson's leadership as CEO from March 2021 to May 2023, Royal Mail accelerated its pivot toward parcel services to counter the structural decline in letter volumes, which had fallen due to email, online billing, and other digital substitutes for physical correspondence. Parcel revenues exceeded 50% of the company's total by mid-2022, reflecting a deliberate reorientation where Thompson described Royal Mail as "a parcels business that also does letters." This shift capitalized on e-commerce expansion, with parcel volumes rising 30% to 1.7 billion items in the fiscal year ending March 2022, driven by online retail growth during and post the COVID-19 pandemic. To support this focus, Thompson oversaw substantial capital investments in parcel infrastructure, including the £200 million Midlands Parcel Hub, a 132,000 square meter automated facility opened in 2021 and designed to process up to 800,000 parcels daily, enabling faster handling for e-commerce partners. Additional automated sorting centers followed, such as the first fully automated parcel sorter in Northern Ireland, operational from July 2022 and capable of 157,000 parcels per day, followed by similar installations in Manchester by December 2022. These hubs integrated advanced robotics and conveyor systems to reduce manual sorting, aligning with Thompson's goal of scaling capacity for peak e-commerce periods like Black Friday and holiday seasons. Digital adaptation efforts under Thompson emphasized operational modernization through and data-driven processes, drawing on his prior experience in technology-led at , where he contributed to automated fulfillment systems. By April 2022, achieved 50% across parcel operations, with a target of 90% by fiscal 2023-24 to boost efficiency, cut costs, and enable new offerings like enhanced tracking for online retailers. This included deploying high-speed sorting machines and exploring seven-day parcel delivery models to match consumer expectations for rapid fulfillment, amid discussions with stakeholders on structural changes to the network. Such initiatives formed part of a broader £1.8 billion transformation plan initiated pre-Thompson but advanced under his tenure to adapt the legacy postal model to internet-driven parcel demands.

Financial and operational reforms

Under Simon Thompson's tenure as CEO, beginning in March 2021, Royal Mail pursued a multi-year transformation plan emphasizing a shift from declining letter volumes to parcels operations, backed by a £1.8 billion investment in network upgrades and technology to support growth. This included operational enhancements such as increased in sorting facilities and revised working practices to prioritize next-day parcel delivery, aiming to align capacity with fluctuations amid competition from private carriers. Financially, the company targeted aggressive cost reductions, announcing in May 2022 an ambition to achieve £350 million in savings for the through streamlined management structures and operational efficiencies, an increase from prior plans amid pressures. A key measure involved eliminating around 700 managerial roles in January 2022, projected to deliver £40 million in annual cost benefits by reducing administrative overhead while preserving frontline delivery capacity. These initiatives contributed to parcels comprising 56% of Royal Mail's revenue by 2021-22, though overall group revenues declined 1.6% year-over-year due to post-lockdown shifts in consumer behavior. Operational reforms faced resistance but advanced via a April 2023 agreement with the Communication Workers Union, termed "Business Recovery, Transformation & Growth," which incorporated changes to contracts, hours, and processes to cut costs and improve parcel competitiveness without immediate volume-based pay alterations. Thompson publicly committed in November 2022 to "whatever it takes" for turnaround, including proposals to amend the universal service obligation—such as potentially ending letter deliveries—to reallocate resources toward profitable segments, though regulatory approval was pending at his departure. These efforts yielded adjusted operating profits of £416 million for in 2021-22, up from £344 million the prior year, despite broader group challenges from strikes and letter market contraction.

Challenges and controversies

Industrial relations and strikes

Thompson's leadership at coincided with protracted industrial disputes with the Communication Workers Union (CWU), representing over 100,000 postal workers, centered on demands for pay rises exceeding amid proposed operational changes to address declining letter volumes and mounting losses. The company reported letter volumes had fallen by 25% since 2019, necessitating reforms like Sunday working trials, mail center closures, and reduced second-class delivery frequency to shift resources toward profitable parcel services, but the CWU viewed these as threats to and traditional terms. Thompson insisted pay negotiations be linked to acceptance of these efficiencies, arguing the firm faced £1 million daily losses during strikes and required transformation to avoid , a stance the union decried as using workers' livelihoods as leverage. Tensions peaked in July 2022 when unilaterally imposed a 2% pay increase—effectively a real-terms cut against 11% inflation—prompting the CWU to ballot members, with 83% voting for on a 77% turnout. The first national 24-hour strike occurred on , 2022, disrupting deliveries during peak autumn demand, followed by further actions on October 29 and 30, and November dates including the busy pre-Christmas period, totaling over a dozen strike days by early 2023. countered with improved offers, including a 9% rise over 18 months in late October 2022, but these were rejected as insufficient without guarantees against "attacks" on members via disciplinary measures for alleged or rule-breaking during the dispute. The conflict intensified through winter 2022-2023, with strikes on December 23-24 and additional dates in January and February 2023, exacerbating financial strain as the company posted a £1 billion loss for the fiscal year ending March 2023, partly attributed to strike-related disruptions estimated at £400 million. Thompson faced parliamentary scrutiny in January 2023 over his £540,000 salary and £140,000 performance bonus, awarded despite the turmoil, while the CWU accused management of union-busting tactics and called for his removal, claiming the board prioritized shareholder value over workforce stability. Arbitration efforts in late 2022 and early 2023 yielded a provisional deal for up to 10% pay increases over two years contingent on change acceptance, but it was paused amid mutual recriminations until July 2023, after Thompson's departure, when strikes formally ended following CWU member approval. The episode highlighted underlying causal pressures: Royal Mail's legacy universal service obligation clashed with e-commerce-driven parcel growth, rendering rigid union contracts unsustainable without concessions, though CWU sources emphasized management's intransigence as the primary barrier to resolution.

Parliamentary scrutiny and data tracking issues

In January 2023, Simon Thompson testified before the Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Committee, stating that Royal Mail's Postal Digital Assistant (PDA) devices, which track postmen's locations and delivery times via GPS and scan data, were not used to monitor individual worker productivity or pressure staff to increase speeds. This claim drew scrutiny after whistleblower reports and union allegations emerged that managers had indeed employed PDA data to enforce performance targets, such as requiring deliveries within specific time windows, in violation of company policy prohibiting such usage for individual monitoring. Following hundreds of complaints questioning the accuracy of his evidence, the committee recalled Thompson on January 24, 2023, to clarify inconsistencies. During his recall appearance on February 22, 2023, Thompson conceded that "rogue" managers had breached policy by using PDA tracking data to push workers for faster performance, though he maintained this was not systematic company practice and pledged investigations into the incidents. He described the devices as tools for , such as route optimization and volume forecasting, but acknowledged their misuse in some depots to generate reports on delivery speeds, potentially contributing to worker stress amid ongoing strikes. The Communication Workers Union (CWU) and committee members criticized Thompson for downplaying the extent of data-driven surveillance, arguing it undermined trust and fueled industrial disputes, with MPs like labeling his initial testimony as misleading. The committee's March 17, 2023, report concluded that Thompson's January statements were not "wholly accurate," as evidence showed PDA had been routinely used for individual performance management despite denials, recommending referral to for potential enforcement over universal service obligation (USO) compliance tied to delivery reporting. This scrutiny highlighted broader concerns about Royal Mail's practices, including underreporting of letter delivery failures— later found only 69.3% of letters met next-day targets in 2022-2023 against a 93% regulatory standard—and prompted calls for stricter oversight of how tracking metrics influence operational decisions without transparent worker safeguards. Thompson defended the systems as essential for adapting to parcel growth, but the episode eroded parliamentary confidence, with MPs accusing him of either incompetence or deliberate obfuscation in handling verifiable discrepancies.

Delivery prioritization and universal service obligations

Royal Mail's universal service obligation (USO), mandated by the Postal Services Act 2000, requires the company to provide a uniform tariff for letter delivery to every address in the six days a week (Monday to ), with targets including 93% of first-class mail delivered within one working day and 98.5% within two working days, alongside 98.5% of second-class mail within three working days, and completion of 99.9% of delivery routes daily. Under Simon Thompson's tenure as CEO from March 2021 to May 2023, addressed letter volumes continued a long-term decline driven by digital communication alternatives, with projections for high-single-digit percentage falls excluding elections, while parcel volumes surged due to growth, prompting a strategic emphasis on higher-margin parcels to offset revenue losses. This shift manifested in operational practices that deprioritized letters, including internal posters and verbal instructions to postal workers to deliver tracked parcels and priority items first, with letters ranked lower in sequence, as evidenced by whistleblower submissions and worker testimony. Thompson initially denied any formal policy of parcel prioritization over letters during ary evidence on 17 January 2023, stating it was "absolutely not true," but later acknowledged such instructions occurred as temporary exceptions amid pandemic disruptions and when questioned again on 22 February 2023. The Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Committee concluded that these practices reflected a policy of letter deprioritization, contributing to USO non-compliance, rather than isolated incidents. Delivery performance data underscored these failures: in the 2022-23 financial year, achieved only 73.7% of first-class mail delivery within one working day against the 93% target, with similar shortfalls for other metrics, and completed approximately 90% of delivery routes daily versus the 99.9% requirement, resulting in widespread letter delays exceeding those for parcels as reported by consumer groups. These misses were systemic, persisting before, during, and after the , and independent of strikes, according to the committee's analysis of operational data. In February 2023, Thompson admitted that was failing its USO to deliver letters six days a week to every address, acknowledging policy shortcomings in maintaining universal coverage amid volume shifts. The parliamentary committee's March 2023 report declared that had "systemically failed to deliver against parts of its universal service obligation," referring the company to for potential enforcement action on USO breaches, including the six-day requirement, and criticizing Thompson's initial testimony as misleading on prioritization and performance management practices. subsequently launched an investigation in May 2023 into the 2022-23 performance failures, focusing on compliance with delivery targets integral to the USO.

Resignation and immediate aftermath

Announcement and reasons cited

On May 12, 2023, Simon Thompson announced his intention to step down as chief executive of , with his departure scheduled for October 31, 2023, to allow time for a successor to be appointed. In his statement, Thompson cited the completion of key structural changes, including infrastructure investments and recently negotiated agreements with trade unions, as having positioned the company for future success, stating it was "the right time to hand over to a new CEO to lead through the next phase of its transformation." International Distributions Services, Royal Mail's parent company, endorsed the timing of the announcement, noting that the resolution of an 18-month industrial dispute with the Communication Workers Union (CWU)—which had involved multiple strikes and cost the company over £1 billion—provided an opportunity for fresh leadership to advance ongoing reforms. The company emphasized that Thompson's tenure had delivered essential modernization amid declining letter volumes, though it acknowledged external pressures including parliamentary criticism over operational transparency. Thompson's decision followed reports from early May 2023 indicating he was in discussions with the board, amid ongoing scrutiny from a January 2023 parliamentary inquiry where he faced accusations of misleading MPs regarding the extent of electronic tracking of delivery workers' productivity—a claim Royal Mail later admitted involved undisclosed practices. However, official statements from Thompson and the company framed the resignation primarily in terms of strategic transition rather than direct concession to these controversies.

Impact on Royal Mail

Thompson's resignation, announced on May 12, 2023, and effective October 31, 2023, followed the resolution of a prolonged dispute with the Communication Workers Union (CWU), which had culminated in a proposed 9.9% pay increase over two years and the acceptance of changes to working practices, ending strikes that disrupted operations from late 2022. This settlement, ratified by CWU members in July 2023, marked a cessation of that had cost an estimated £1 billion in the fiscal year ending March 2023, primarily through lost revenue and increased costs during peak periods. The departure provided International Distributions Services (IDS), 's parent, an opportunity to transition leadership without ongoing union antagonism, as Thompson's tenure had become synonymous with the conflict. Financially, the immediate aftermath saw no abrupt recovery, with IDS reporting continued operating losses for in the first half of fiscal 2023-24, exacerbated by prior impacts and a 20% decline in letter volumes. However, the prompted structural reforms; in July 2023, Martin Seidenberg, former GLS CEO, was appointed group CEO, consolidating oversight of and international parcels under one executive to streamline strategy and reduce silos that had hindered adaptation to e-commerce-driven parcel growth. Seidenberg emphasized integrating operations to address inefficiencies, including second-class delivery delays that reached 24.7% failure rates in early 2023. Operationally, Thompson's exit coincided with intensified scrutiny from , which fined £5.7 million in January 2024 for quality failures linked to 2022-23 disruptions, underscoring persistent challenges in maintaining obligations amid parcel prioritization. Yet, the change enabled a pivot toward modernization without the baggage of prior accusations against Thompson, such as misleading on delivery tracking and prioritization, fostering a cleaner slate for negotiations and reforms. CWU viewed the resignation positively, stating it allowed focus on of the deal rather than personal disputes. Overall, while short-term stability was achieved through strike resolution, the impact highlighted 's vulnerability to turmoil in a declining letters market, with parcels comprising 60% of by mid-2023 but insufficient to offset structural losses.

Post-Royal Mail activities

Involvement in logistics innovation

In May 2024, Simon Thompson joined Windracers Group as Group , leading the development and commercialization of autonomous unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) for cargo . Windracers focuses on low-cost, AI-enabled platforms that enable self-flying operations without ground-based pilots, targeting middle-mile transport challenges such as remote deliveries and . The company's ULTRA series UAVs feature a 10-meter wingspan, payloads of up to 150 kg, and ranges exceeding 1,000 km, leveraging distributed for reliable autonomous navigation in diverse environments. Under Thompson's leadership, Windracers advanced its technology with the January 2025 launch of the ULTRA MK2, which incorporates increased power output, higher payload capacities, and reduced operational costs compared to prior models, specifically designed to disrupt traditional logistics by minimizing fuel use and enabling scalable cargo deployment. In an April 2025 interview, Thompson emphasized the MK2's potential to address inefficiencies in middle-mile logistics, including faster resupply to isolated areas via electric or hybrid propulsion systems that lower emissions relative to manned aircraft. Thompson has overseen strategic expansions, including a June 2025 contract for remote deliveries in using ULTRA drones for low-emission autonomous cargo operations in challenging terrains. Concurrently, the company partnered with Aviation Sans Frontières in June 2025 to deploy drones for medical in remote African regions, demonstrating practical applications of the for time-sensitive, hard-to-access supply chains. These initiatives build on prior trials, such as FAA-approved flights and collaborations with entities like the , positioning Windracers' innovations as viable alternatives to conventional trucking or short-haul aviation in global networks.

References

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