The pressure is on to move to faster and faster delivery to the end consumer. Here are a few strategies shippers can adopt to drive profitability in their transportation networks while still providing what their customers really want.
Travis Peter is a strategic solutions engineer at Green Mountain Technology (GMT), a parcel spend management service provider for shippers with over 10 million parcels per year.
As e-commerce continues to explode, the arms race for faster fulfillment is becoming increasingly intense. Two of the largest players, Amazon.com and Wal-Mart Stores Inc., are jockeying for position as the e-commerce kings. Their latest battleground: the online grocery market.
While these giants forge ahead, many other e-commerce shippers find themselves struggling to keep up. One problem that many of them inevitably face is maintaining profitability while still providing end customers the fast fulfillment that they desire. To accomplish this, retailers that hope to stay in the race must continually adapt and optimize their networks to keep their shipping costs and transit times low.
This focus on efficient, cost-effective fulfillment is having a significant impact on the carriers that serve the e-commerce market. According to "The Impact of Brand Strategy on Parcel Transportation: GMT 2017 Benchmark Report," a research report prepared by Green Mountain Technology in partnership with Cleveland Research Company, most parcel and less-than-truckload (LTL) carriers identify two-day-or-less order fulfillment as their primary strategic focus. They also cite it as one of their most difficult competitive challenges.
Opportunities to mitigate rising costs
The need to meet end customers' growing expectations is raising costs for e-commerce shippers, but there are ways they can mitigate those costs while still maintaining efficient operations. For example, with the widespread advent of omnichannel commerce, customers have more ways than ever to place orders, and single customers often place multiple orders throughout the day. Shipping a multitude of smaller packages can quickly accumulate unnecessary shipping costs, since flat surcharges, such as residential and delivery-area surcharges, are applied on a per-package basis. As a result, it is increasingly important for retailers to identify opportunities to combine split orders into single packages. In that regard, implementing improved "cartonization" logic to determine the ideal box size and the optimal arrangement of items within that box often provides a significant return on investment. Additionally, consolidation of orders from the same customer that occur within a specified time frame can further reduce the likelihood of split orders. By effectively scheduling these order holding periods with their fulfillment cycle and carrier cutoff times, shippers can reduce their shipping cost without any negative impact on transit times.
Another example of a way to keep costs down is to pay attention to the impact of package size on freight costs. Consider the example of dimensional weight, which is is based on the total volume of the package relative to the total weight. In recent years, the introduction by FedEx and UPS of dimensional weight as a basis for all air and ground freight charges has added yet another complexity to U.S. parcel distribution costs. In the most recent example, in September, FedEx announced that it will begin applying dimensional weight adjustments to its SmartPost service in 2018. Once that policy goes into effect, FedEx will calculate the billable weight of a SmartPost package by taking the greater of the actual weight and the dimensional weight. The adjustments, if they occur, will always be increases in billable weight. (Similar practices are gaining ground internationally as well; for example, DHL and Canada Post also apply dimensional weight adjustments to shipments.)
Dimensional weight adjustments, coupled with large- and oversize-package surcharges (based on the length and girth dimensions of a package), further underline the importance of box engineering in minimizing transportation costs. In many cases, parcel shippers can easily avoid a lot of unnecessary cost by selecting or engineering a slightly smaller box that falls within these dimensional constraints.
Amazon and Wal-Mart invest large sums of money in their networks in order to achieve faster fulfillment times, opening distribution centers across the globe and acquiring e-commerce and brick-and-mortar companies alike to maximize their consumer reach. Not every shipper has access to the amount of investment capital required to follow in Amazon's path, but larger retailers have taken to shipping from their store locations to mimic a larger distribution network. Target, for example, recently announced its Target Restock program, which allows customers with a Target credit card to order a variety of household items in-store and have them delivered directly to their homes by the next day for a flat US$5 fee. In a similar vein, shippers can eliminate the costly residential leg of a delivery by providing a "buy online, pickup in store" offering, which naturally shortens transit time. Both of these methods seek to shrink the distance between ship point and customer in order to shorten transit times and reduce costs; however, it is important to note that stores will most likely require special resources and inventory management considerations to be able to directly fulfill orders.
Achieving faster transit time does not always require a broad distribution network. Shippers can "zone skip" by consolidating orders with similar destinations into trailers and sending them directly to carrier hubs near those destinations. Additionally, shippers can explore the use of regional carriers. These carriers service various sections of the country and operate more efficiently within these service areas than larger international carriers can, which often leads to faster transit times at an equal or lower cost. Retailers looking to ship locally and quickly can also leverage crowdsourced carriers through the use of services such as Instacart or Deliv. These options allow retailers to more easily adapt to fluctuating demand, particularly during peak periods when other carriers' networks are bottlenecked.
The last, and possibly the most important, insight lies in a retailer's ability to identify what its customers truly value in an online shopping experience. Fast order fulfillment is not the answer for every retailer, with some customers preferring "no-risk" return policies or increased shipment visibility to receiving their items one or two days faster. Aligning e-commerce strategy with customer expectations for the individual retailer will always be the best way to get the greatest value for their transportation spend.
Shipping in an increasingly express world is not getting any easier. Shippers must continue to innovate and adapt their networks to be able to keep pace with burgeoning customer expectations. Those retailers that are best able to navigate the new complexities of their networks will be the ones with the best opportunity to succeed.
A move by federal regulators to reinforce requirements for broker transparency in freight transactions is stirring debate among transportation groups, after the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) published a “notice of proposed rulemaking” this week.
According to FMCSA, its draft rule would strive to make broker transparency more common, requiring greater sharing of the material information necessary for transportation industry parties to make informed business decisions and to support the efficient resolution of disputes.
The proposed rule titled “Transparency in Property Broker Transactions” would address what FMCSA calls the lack of access to information among shippers and motor carriers that can impact the fairness and efficiency of the transportation system, and would reframe broker transparency as a regulatory duty imposed on brokers, with the goal of deterring non-compliance. Specifically, the move would require brokers to keep electronic records, and require brokers to provide transaction records to motor carriers and shippers upon request and within 48 hours of that request.
Under federal regulatory processes, public comments on the move are due by January 21, 2025. However, transportation groups are not waiting on the sidelines to voice their opinions.
According to the Transportation Intermediaries Association (TIA), an industry group representing the third-party logistics (3PL) industry, the potential rule is “misguided overreach” that fails to address the more pressing issue of freight fraud. In TIA’s view, broker transparency regulation is “obsolete and un-American,” and has no place in today’s “highly transparent” marketplace. “This proposal represents a misguided focus on outdated and unnecessary regulations rather than tackling issues that genuinely threaten the safety and efficiency of our nation’s supply chains,” TIA said.
But trucker trade group the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association (OOIDA) welcomed the proposed rule, which it said would ensure that brokers finally play by the rules. “We appreciate that FMCSA incorporated input from our petition, including a requirement to make records available electronically and emphasizing that brokers have a duty to comply with regulations. As FMCSA noted, broker transparency is necessary for a fair, efficient transportation system, and is especially important to help carriers defend themselves against alleged claims on a shipment,” OOIDA President Todd Spencer said in a statement.
Additional pushback came from the Small Business in Transportation Coalition (SBTC), a network of transportation professionals in small business, which said the potential rule didn’t go far enough. “This is too little too late and is disappointing. It preserves the status quo, which caters to Big Broker & TIA. There is no question now that FMCSA has been captured by Big Broker. Truckers and carriers must now come out in droves and file comments in full force against this starting tomorrow,” SBTC executive director James Lamb said in a LinkedIn post.
The “series B” funding round was financed by an unnamed “strategic customer” as well as Teradyne Robotics Ventures, Toyota Ventures, Ranpak, Third Kind Venture Capital, One Madison Group, Hyperplane, Catapult Ventures, and others.
The fresh backing comes as Massachusetts-based Pickle reported a spate of third quarter orders, saying that six customers placed orders for over 30 production robots to deploy in the first half of 2025. The new orders include pilot conversions, existing customer expansions, and new customer adoption.
“Pickle is hitting its strides delivering innovation, development, commercial traction, and customer satisfaction. The company is building groundbreaking technology while executing on essential recurring parts of a successful business like field service and manufacturing management,” Omar Asali, Pickle board member and CEO of investor Ranpak, said in a release.
According to Pickle, its truck-unloading robot applies “Physical AI” technology to one of the most labor-intensive, physically demanding, and highest turnover work areas in logistics operations. The platform combines a powerful vision system with generative AI foundation models trained on millions of data points from real logistics and warehouse operations that enable Pickle’s robotic hardware platform to perform physical work at human-scale or better, the company says.
Bloomington, Indiana-based FTR said its Trucking Conditions Index declined in September to -2.47 from -1.39 in August as weakness in the principal freight dynamics – freight rates, utilization, and volume – offset lower fuel costs and slightly less unfavorable financing costs.
Those negative numbers are nothing new—the TCI has been positive only twice – in May and June of this year – since April 2022, but the group’s current forecast still envisions consistently positive readings through at least a two-year forecast horizon.
“Aside from a near-term boost mostly related to falling diesel prices, we have not changed our Trucking Conditions Index forecast significantly in the wake of the election,” Avery Vise, FTR’s vice president of trucking, said in a release. “The outlook continues to be more favorable for carriers than what they have experienced for well over two years. Our analysis indicates gradual but steadily rising capacity utilization leading to stronger freight rates in 2025.”
But FTR said its forecast remains unchanged. “Just like everyone else, we’ll be watching closely to see exactly what trade and other economic policies are implemented and over what time frame. Some freight disruptions are likely due to tariffs and other factors, but it is not yet clear that those actions will do more than shift the timing of activity,” Vise said.
The TCI tracks the changes representing five major conditions in the U.S. truck market: freight volumes, freight rates, fleet capacity, fuel prices, and financing costs. Combined into a single index indicating the industry’s overall health, a positive score represents good, optimistic conditions while a negative score shows the inverse.
Specifically, the new global average robot density has reached a record 162 units per 10,000 employees in 2023, which is more than double the mark of 74 units measured seven years ago.
Broken into geographical regions, the European Union has a robot density of 219 units per 10,000 employees, an increase of 5.2%, with Germany, Sweden, Denmark and Slovenia in the global top ten. Next, North America’s robot density is 197 units per 10,000 employees – up 4.2%. And Asia has a robot density of 182 units per 10,000 persons employed in manufacturing - an increase of 7.6%. The economies of Korea, Singapore, mainland China and Japan are among the top ten most automated countries.
Broken into individual countries, the U.S. ranked in 10th place in 2023, with a robot density of 295 units. Higher up on the list, the top five are:
The Republic of Korea, with 1,012 robot units, showing a 5% increase on average each year since 2018 thanks to its strong electronics and automotive industries.
Singapore had 770 robot units, in part because it is a small country with a very low number of employees in the manufacturing industry, so it can reach a high robot density with a relatively small operational stock.
China took third place in 2023, surpassing Germany and Japan with a mark of 470 robot units as the nation has managed to double its robot density within four years.
Germany ranks fourth with 429 robot units for a 5% CAGR since 2018.
Japan is in fifth place with 419 robot units, showing growth of 7% on average each year from 2018 to 2023.
Progress in generative AI (GenAI) is poised to impact business procurement processes through advancements in three areas—agentic reasoning, multimodality, and AI agents—according to Gartner Inc.
Those functions will redefine how procurement operates and significantly impact the agendas of chief procurement officers (CPOs). And 72% of procurement leaders are already prioritizing the integration of GenAI into their strategies, thus highlighting the recognition of its potential to drive significant improvements in efficiency and effectiveness, Gartner found in a survey conducted in July, 2024, with 258 global respondents.
Gartner defined the new functions as follows:
Agentic reasoning in GenAI allows for advanced decision-making processes that mimic human-like cognition. This capability will enable procurement functions to leverage GenAI to analyze complex scenarios and make informed decisions with greater accuracy and speed.
Multimodality refers to the ability of GenAI to process and integrate multiple forms of data, such as text, images, and audio. This will make GenAI more intuitively consumable to users and enhance procurement's ability to gather and analyze diverse information sources, leading to more comprehensive insights and better-informed strategies.
AI agents are autonomous systems that can perform tasks and make decisions on behalf of human operators. In procurement, these agents will automate procurement tasks and activities, freeing up human resources to focus on strategic initiatives, complex problem-solving and edge cases.
As CPOs look to maximize the value of GenAI in procurement, the study recommended three starting points: double down on data governance, develop and incorporate privacy standards into contracts, and increase procurement thresholds.
“These advancements will usher procurement into an era where the distance between ideas, insights, and actions will shorten rapidly,” Ryan Polk, senior director analyst in Gartner’s Supply Chain practice, said in a release. "Procurement leaders who build their foundation now through a focus on data quality, privacy and risk management have the potential to reap new levels of productivity and strategic value from the technology."