Where does the name DHL come from?
These are
the first letters of the last names of the three company founders, Adrian
Dalsey, Larry Hillblom and Robert Lynn.
In 1969,
just months after the world had marvelled at Neil Armstrong's first steps on
the moon, the three partners took another small step that would have a profound
impact on the way the world does business.
The
founders began to personally ship papers by airplane from
Customers
stood to save a fortune.
With this
concept, a new industry was born: international air express, the rapid delivery
of documents and shipments by airplane.
The DHL
Network continued to grow at an incredible pace. The company expanded westward
from
Deutsche Post World Net and DHL
Consolidation
At the
beginning of 2002, Deutsche Post World Net became the major shareholder in DHL.
By the end of 2002, DHL was 100% owned by Deutsche Post World Net.
In 2003,
Deutsche Post World Net consolidated all of its express and logistics
activities into one single brand, DHL. The DHL brand was further strengthened
by Deutsche Post World Net's acquisition of Exel in December 2005. The DHL
expertise is pooled from a number of companies acquired by Deutsche Post World
Net. To name a few:
Deutsche
Post Euro Express: in operation since 1997 through internal growth and
investments in leading European companies, network for parcel and express
services in more than 20 countries, market leader for business customers in
Danzas:
founded in 1815, based in
Deutsche
Post World Net in 2000, world leader in air freight and ranked second in ocean
freight. Overland transport and supply chain management complete the Danzas service
portfolio.
Air
Express International: largest American air freight provider, integrated into
the Danzas group in 2001.
Exel: at
the time Deutsche Post World Net acquired Exel in December 2005, it had around
111,000 employees in 135 countries. Exel primarily offers transport and
logistics solutions for key customers.
Source: dhl.de
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