Follow us on Twitter!
Blog Header Logo
DG&A's Transportation Consulting Blog
Posted by on in Best Practices in Freight Management
  • Font size: Larger Smaller
  • Hits: 1973
  • 0 Comments
  • Print

Manage your Freight Spend Data to Improve Your Profitability

b2ap3_thumbnail_dreamstime_l_100942113.jpg

For the past 15 years, my colleagues and I have been working with shippers throughout North America to help them save money on freight transportation. In 2018, this cost has hit the radar screens of CEOs, as the tightness in freight capacity has placed upward pressure on freight rates. Many shippers have been experiencing rate increases in the high single digits and even double digits. Some CEOs have been highlighting the impact of freight costs during their quarterly investor calls and earnings reports.

A company’s freight costs often represent between two and ten percent of total revenues. For many companies in the manufacturing, distribution and retail sectors, their expenditures on freight have a direct and significant impact on their companies’ bottom lines.

Twelve years ago, I wrote a blog on this topic. In that blog, I identified one of the consistent problems we encounter in working with shippers on a day to day basis, namely a lack of complete and accurate information on their freight transportation activities. Twelve years later, this problem persists, and it is not limited to small companies. In fact, many companies with freight expenditures of five to fifty million dollars or more face the same problem.

“You can’t manage what you cannot measure.” Good quality freight data is an essential starting point in the management of freight transportation.

There are two sets of freight data. Operational data focuses on metrics such as on-time service, shipments per day, and claims ratios. Financial data addresses KPIs such as billing accuracy, cost per pound by mode, cost per shipment, and freight cost as a percent of revenue. In addition to the strong economy and tight capacity, there are several other issues that are having an impact on freight transportation expenditures.

First, there has been a considerable amount of industry rationalization. Here in Canada, large transportation organizations such as TFI and Manitoulin have purchased many carriers of all sizes in the parcel, less than truckload and truckload sectors. Some of these acquisitions have been merged together as numerous brand names and carrier choices have disappeared from the market. America has been going through the same process. Shippers now have fewer options and their negotiating power has been reduced.

Second, freight companies have become a lot smarter. Rather than going for market share, they are looking for profits. They evaluate shippers based on how well their businesses fit within their networks, the location of their vendors and customers, the ease of making pickups and deliveries and the quality of the head haul and back haul freight they have in those corridors. Shippers with the highest operating ratios receive preferred capacity allocations while less “carrier friendly” clients receive lesser or more inconsistent allocations. If shippers have poor practices that hinder the movement of their carriers’ assets, they are paying the price.

Third, carriers have figured out that if they use their scales and dimensioning devices, they can weigh and measure the freight they move more accurately. They are now charging more precisely and aggressively for the true cubic space occupied. As a result, carriers can and are securing revenue that they may have missed in the past.

What is interesting is that some shippers have high quality ERP and accounting systems. However, when they try to extract a year’s worth of freight transportation data, they receive files that are riddled with errors and omissions. What is even more disappointing is that many companies simply don’t know what they spend on freight or don’t seem to care.

Even after the years we have been in the business, and the articles we have written on this topic, we still find companies that have primarily an outbound transportation focus. Inbound freight costs are viewed as “free” since they are embedded in the landed cost of the products they receive from their vendors. This is a glaring omission and a significant lost cost saving opportunity.

Another comment we hear is that the company’s freight bills are audited by a freight audit company or by a knowledgeable resource within the company. If any discrepancies appear, they are addressed by one of these individuals. This is not what we see. A failure to manage a company’s freight spend can result in many missed opportunities to improve the company’s bottom line. Let me explain.

With good quality freight spend data, a shipper can identify:

• Variances to budget by mode or geographic area

• Opportunities to consolidate smaller shipments into larger lower cost shipments

• Carrier selection errors where small parcel shipments are moving with LTL carriers at LTL rates rather than with small parcel carriers at small parcel rates

• Carriers not supplying the levels of equipment that they contracted to provide resulting in the movement of loads by more expensive fleets

• Non-compliance with a company’s routing guide that could be costing the company many thousands of dollars

• Opportunities to take advantage of lead times to use less costly (intermodal) or alternate (standard ground versus expedited) transportation

• Recurring accessorial costs that can be reduced or eliminated through implementation of Best Practices

• Spot rates for recurring freight movements that should be under contract

• Carriers that don’t have the information management tools need to support their business

• Rate changes brought on by a reclassification of a commodity (due to a change in packaging, scaling or other reasons) rather than by a rate increase

• Core carriers that are providing transit times that are inferior to non-core carriers which can be used as leverage in rate negotiations

• Opportunities to quantify the precise financial impacts of changes in shipment measurements, freight rates and accessorial charges.

In other words, during this period of economic strength and tight capacity, many shippers are missing a range of opportunities to reduce their freight transportation expenses. What can a company do to fix this problem? Find out in the next blog.

 

To stay up to date on Best Practices in Freight Management, follow me on Twitter @DanGoodwill, join the Freight Management Best Practices group on LinkedIn and subscribe to Dan’s Transportation Newspaper (http://paper.li/DanGoodwill/1342211466).

0

Comments

  • No comments made yet. Be the first to submit a comment

Leave your comment

Guest Saturday, 27 April 2024

Most Recent Posts

Search


Tag Cloud

YRCW 2014 freight volumes Carriers Canada U.S. trade asset management Canada's global strategy Swift Toronto Maple Leafs consumer centric mentoring Retail Muhammad Ali shipper-carrier roundtable Freight Matching Montreal Canadiens shipping FuelQuest network optimization 360ideaspace Donald Trump Stephen Harper Trade Vision small business CP Rail trade Electric Vehicles Life Lessons Transplace Politics Microsoft truck capacity 2014 freight forecast Truckload Keystone Pipeline Trucking cheap oil pipelines 2015 Economic Forecast Transcom Fleet Leasing CSX Conway Dan Goodwill coaching broker bonds Shipper ELD Transportation Buying Trends Survey dimensional pricing business security Spanx USMCA China Social Media in Transportation 3PL Regina Outsourcing Sales technology 3PLTL Omni Channel Dedicated Trucking Digitization buying trucking companies Business Development customer engagement solutions provider Deferred Packaging cyber security economic outlook energy efficiency Driver Shortage driver pay Transportation freight bid US Election Derek Singleton Tariffs Sales Management Loblaw Cleveland Cavaliers rail safety Education Trump driver autonomous vehicles US Auto Sales CSA Leadership transportation audit freight agreements CITA Shipper Pulse Survey Accessorial Charges Harper Davos speech Whole Foods Online grocery shopping Crude Oil by Rail truck drivers Transloading Load Boards 2013 Economic Forecast robotics Werner FCPC Hockey FMCSA Otto financial management David Tuttle carrier conference Training New Hires selling trucking companies economy Government Map-21 $75000 bond Packaging Doug Davis Toronto natural disasters NAFTA CN Rail Leafs recession freight transportation US Manufacturing Masters in Logistics BNSF the future of transportation last mile delivery Business Transformation Strategy Coronavirus ProMiles CN Global Transportation Hub Transportation service Canada 2012 Transportation Business Strategies. Jugaad Broker Warehousing computer Job satisfaction Consulting freight rate increases US Economy US Housing Market New York Times transportation news cars freight marketplace Digital Freight Networks Climate Change Training digital freight matching Dedicated Contract Carriage Sales General Motors Geopolitics Reshoring ShipMax NS computer security Horizontal Supply Chain Collaboration UP supply chain management Sales Strategy Grocery freight transportation conference Rotman School of Business Adrian Gonzalez Uber Freight truck driver Freight marketing Rate per Mile Canadian economy Search engine optimization tanker cars shipping wine shipper-carrier contracts capacity shortages Failure Freight Rates Justice business start-up freight costs Scott Monty home delivery Fire Phone hiring process driver shortages IANA Canadian truckers home delibery University of Tennessee online shopping freight payment RFP Retail transportation bulk shipping e-commerce capacity shortage Distribution freight broker Impeachment intermodal automation Business skills Habs derailments TMP Worldwide Canadian freight market Blockchain USA Truck Facebook NCC Blogging fuel surcharge Rail freight RFP TransForce professional drivers Canadian Transportation & Logistics CRM driverless Twitter Freight Carriers Association of Canada freight payment freight audit Driving for Profit freight cost savings Tracy Matura transportation newspaper CSA scores Finance and Transportation Freight contracts Load broker MPG Surety bond NMFC freight transportation in 2011 Yield Improvement Associates MBA Success Canada-U.S. trade agreement YRC Freight Shuttle System KCS LCV's Crisis management trucking company acquisitions freight forwarders computer protection Schneider Logistics employee termination Colilers International shipper-carrier collaboration Business Strategy FMS Bobby Harris Success failure entrepreneur routing guide broker security Entrepreneur Career Advice drones Wal-Mart Freight Capacity APL Infrastructure JB Hunt Management autos Social Media risk management Celadon Covid-19 small parcel Canadian Protests Doug Nix Freight Management dynamic pricing economic forecasts for 2012 dark stores Software Advice LinkedIn Amazon peak season BlueGrace Logistics Trucker Protest FCA Hudsons Bay Company Ferromex President Obama Global experience Transport Capital Partners (TCP) Right Shoring Sales Training Anti-Vax future of freight industry Emergent Strategy Railway Association of Canada EBOR Value Proposition TMS Comey laptop freight audit 2014 economic forecast Freight Recession Inbound Transportation LTL

Blog Archives

April
March
February
December
October
September
August
June
May
April
March
January