Benchmark TMS 2013 American Shipper
description
Transcript of Benchmark TMS 2013 American Shipper
Published November 2013
Global Transportation Management Benchmark Study: Climbing the Visibility Sophistication Ladder
Sponsored by:
Written By:
Eric Johnson
Research Director
American Shipper
In partnership with:
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Executive Summary
Welcome to American Shipper’s fifth annual benchmark study of global transportation management, produced in conjunction with the Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA). This report annually looks into the trends that impact how shippers and logistics service providers manage their international freight transportation processes, and the technology that helps support those processes.
This year, readers might notice a small, but substantial change in the title of the report. The report is now called the Global Transportation Management Benchmark Study to reflect the way shippers’ supply chains have grown. Shippers and their service partners don’t just manage the movement of goods from one country into another – rather, they manage freight flows across multiple countries, with sourcing markets quickly evolving into consumer markets.
This report also differs a bit from those in years past in that it dives deep into three particular areas of global transportation management: visibility; the quality of data underlying that visibility; and the extent to which shippers’ transportation management has gone global.
Nearly 350 qualified global logistics practitioners participated in the survey from early September through early October.
At its most basic level, visibility is the collection of key pieces of infor-mation about a shipment, and the dissemination of that information to relevant stakeholders. How complex the data gathering and dissemina-tion is depends on the demands of the ultimate consumer of visibility. Yet there is little consensus among shippers and 3PLs about what constitutes visibility. Shipper respondents were three-times more likely than 3PLs to view visibility as merely knowing details about a ship-ment. But forwarders were more likely than shippers to define visibility on the more sophisticated end of the spectrum. This makes sense in that forwarders increasingly see themselves as providers of technology and data aggregators, not just movers of freight.
One of the hardest areas of visibility for IT vendors and LSPs to communicate to shippers is the return on investment. In many cases, visibility provides a hard-to-define benefit that nonetheless exists. Many shippers, and often even forwarders, have a difficult time determining
visibility
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Data Quality
Going Global
the dollar benefit of visibility. This report found that around two-thirds of shipper respondents say they can identify the ROI from visibility, while the other third said they are either uncertain of the benefits or unable to quantify them. Nearly a quarter of respondents said they haven’t made any investment in visibility. A slightly higher percentage of forwarders (about 75 percent) said they can identify the ROI in their visibility investment.
Shippers—whether using a system or not—are intent on improving their data quality. Nearly 90 percent of systems-based shippers and 75 percent of manual, or spreadsheet-based shippers, say they are actively working to improve data quality. More than half of systems-based shippers said they strongly agree that improved data quality is a priority. It makes sense that systems-based shippers would have even more impetus in this regard. Feeding reliable, accurate data into a system can alleviate man-hours spent chasing shipment status updates, or auditing shakier data.
This year, respondents were asked to rate the quality of data accuracy, timeliness, and completeness. Third-party logistics providers, ocean carriers, and air carriers rate the best across all three metrics, while rail and drayage operators rate at the bottom. Respondents reported slightly better quality in terms of timeliness and accuracy versus completeness across all partners. One other thing to note: large swathes of respon-dents in all three metrics reported data quality was only “fair.” That’s hardly a damning indictment, but also not a ringing endorsement for the state of data quality among any individual providers.
Shippers use their global transportation management platform to manage a number of geographies, with Asia and North America unsurprisingly the most well represented. Large shippers, in particular, report that their systems reach every corner of the trading world. Yet respondents to the survey said their logistics decision-making power is overwhelming concentrated in North America.
Shippers also characterized foreign-to-foreign global transportation moves as harder to manage than inbound or outbound moves from their home market. Hardly any said their inbound/outbound shipments were harder to manage.
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Table of Contents
Section I: Introduction..........................................................................................................................................................4
Section II: Demographics ....................................................................................................................................................5
Section III: Defining Visibility ...............................................................................................................................................7
Section IV: Measuring Data Quality ..................................................................................................................................13
Section V: Automation’s Role in Global Transportation Management ..........................................................................18
Section VI: How Global is Global TM? ..............................................................................................................................23
Section VII: Best Practices ................................................................................................................................................25
Appendix A: About Our Sponsors .....................................................................................................................................26
> Amber Road ..............................................................................................................................................................26
> CargoSmart Limited ...................................................................................................................................................26
> INTTRA .......................................................................................................................................................................27
> JDA Software Group, Inc............................................................................................................................................27
> LeanLogistics ............................................................................................................................................................28
Appendix B: About Our Partner ........................................................................................................................................29
> Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA) ...............................................................................................................29
Appendix C: About American Shipper Research ............................................................................................................30
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Figures
f I G u r E 1 : Industry Segments ......................................................................................................................................5
f I G u r E 2 : Company size .............................................................................................................................................5
f I G u r E 3 : Job Titles Surveyed ....................................................................................................................................6
f I G u r E 4 : Definition of Visibility—Shippers vs. 3PLs ..................................................................................................8
f I G u r E 5 : Visibility—Days Prior to Shipment ..............................................................................................................9
f I G u r E 6 : Does Visibility Provide Quantifiable ROI—Shippers vs. 3PLs ..................................................................10
f I G u r E 7 : Does Visibility Provide Quantifiable ROI—Large Shippers vs. Small/Medium Shippers ..........................11
f I G u r E 8 : What Systems Provide Visibility Input—Manufacturers vs. Retailers .......................................................12
f I G u r E 9 : Are You Working to Improve Data Quality—Systems-Based vs. Manual Shippers .................................13
f I G u r E 1 0 : Number of Unique Integrations—Shippers vs. 3PLs .............................................................................14
f I G u r E 1 1 : Quality of Integrations with Global TM Platform ....................................................................................15
f I G u r E 1 2 : Quality of Data Timeliness From Partners .............................................................................................16
f I G u r E 1 3 : Quality of Data Completeness from Partners ........................................................................................16
f I G u r E 1 4 : Quality of Data Accuracy From Partners ...............................................................................................17
f I G u r E 1 5 : Definition of Visibility—System-based vs. Manual Shippers .................................................................18
f I G u r E 1 6 : Current Global TM Platform ...................................................................................................................19
f I G u r E 1 7 : Current vs. Most Critical Global TM Functionality .................................................................................20
f I G u r E 1 8 : Does Global Transportation Platform Meet Needs—Shippers vs. 3PLs ...............................................21
f I G u r E 1 9 : Biggest Benefit of Using Global TM—Shippers vs. 3PLs ......................................................................22
f I G u r E 2 0 : Biggest Challenge in Using Global TM ..................................................................................................22
f I G u r E 2 1 : Geographies Covered by Global TM Platform .......................................................................................23
f I G u r E 2 2 : Location of Logistics Decision-Making Power ......................................................................................24
f I G u r E 2 3 : Difficulty in Managing Foreign-to-Foreign Shipments ...........................................................................24
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Section I: IntroductionWelcome to American Shipper’s fifth annual benchmark study of global transportation management, produced in conjunction with the Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA). This report annually looks into the trends that impact how shippers and logistics service providers manage their international freight transportation processes, and the technology that helps support those processes. This year, readers might notice a small, but substantial change in the title of the report. The report is now called the Global Transportation Management Bench-mark Study to reflect the way shippers’ supply chains have grown. Shippers and their service partners don’t just manage the movement of goods from one country into another—rather, they manage freight flows across multiple countries, with sourcing markets quickly evolving into consumer markets.
This report also differs a bit from those in years past in that it dives deep into three particular areas of global transportation management: visibility; the quality of data underlying that visibility; and the extent to which shippers’ transportation management has gone global.
Nearly 350 qualified global logistics practitioners participated in the survey from early September through early October. It’s important to recognize that global transportation management is a broad term that covers the full cycle of transportation activity, including procurement, planning, order management, tendering, event management, and financial settlement. For the purposes of this study, the focus is placed specifically on the stages involving planning through event management and the visibility into each leg of those processes. Procurement and settlement are purposely set aside to focus on the “blocking and tack-ling” of global logistics management.
It is also critical to understand that this benchmarking initiative strictly pertains to global and cross-border transportation management. Quali-fied respondents represent a variety of industry segments, including retail, manufacturing, materials, and third-party logistics. Responses from carriers, consultants, technology vendors, and other unqualified respondents are not included in the aggregate data presented of this report. Distribution channels for the 27-question benchmarking survey included American Shipper’s Website, e-mail lists, and newsletters. In addition, RILA’s members were invited to participate via e-mail promo-tions directly from associatiom. As a policy, American Shipper does not share any individual survey responses. All data is displayed in aggregate only.
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Section II: DemographicsA typically broad mix of industry groups participated in this year’s survey, with a little more than a third of respondents coming from the 3PL sector, and around a quarter each from the retailing and manufacturing sectors.
In terms of company size, participants broke evenly between small, medium, and large, characterized by those companies that have sales of less than $100 million annually, those with sales between $100 million and $1 billion, and those with sales of more than $1 billion. American Shipper finds particular significance in using the $1 billion in sales marker as a threshold for comparison.
3PL/Forwarder/NVOCC/Intermediary
Retail/Wholesale
Process manufacturing
Discrete manufacturing
Government/Public Sector
Raw materials/Commodities
Engineering/Construction/Energy
12%
8%5% 4%
13%
22%
37%
Less than $100 million
Between $100 million and $1 billion
More than $1 billion
37%
29%
34%
f I G u r E 1 : Industry Segments
f I G u r E 2 : Company size
304 total respondents
348 total respondents
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More than half of respondents in this year’s survey identify themselves as managers, with another 20 percent at the director level. The rest of the respondent pool is split evenly among executives and staff.
C-Level (CEO,CIO,CFO, etc)
Executive (SVP, VP, GM, etc.)
Director
Manager
Staff
Other, please specify
9%2%
53%
8%
9%
20%
f I G u r E 3 : Job Titles Surveyed
167 total respondents
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Section III: Defining VisibilityThis report has traditionally looked at what visibility shippers have into their freight transportation process, but this year’s report attempted to dive deeper into the issue. Visibility has become a highly sought-after component for shippers, and a necessary offering for logistics services providers. But there remains a lack of clarity about what visibility consti-tutes. Speak with five different shippers and you’ll get five slightly different definitions for visibility. The same is true with freight forwarders.
Respondents to this year’s survey were pointedly asked for their definition of visibility, and the responses fell into four broad categories: those who view visibility simply as having knowledge about shipment details; those who see it as being about tracking-and-tracing their shipments; those who see it as having a true end-to-end view of their freight transportation process; and those who see visibility as incorporating some degree of business intelligence and analytics into the information gathered.
Among the gathered responses, these were some of the most compelling ones:
• “Access to details involving the product, the packaging, the terms, the destination and the availability from manufacture to delivery.”
• “Real-time knowledge of position, possession, and availability of goods. The ETA of the next handoff, the final arrival at port, and the final destination, as well as the flow of funds and the docu-mented approval processes that affect final delivery.”
• “The ready availability of a standardized set of data in a searchable format specific to planned and in-transit shipments that provides accurate assessment of shipment status, size, schedule, content and cost.”
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At its most basic level, visibility is the collection of key pieces of infor-mation about a shipment, and the dissemination of that information to relevant stakeholders. How complex the data gathering and dissemina-tion is depends on the demands of the ultimate consumer of visibility. As Fig. 4 shows, there is little consensus among shippers and 3PLs about what constitutes visibility. Shipper respondents were three-times more likely than 3PLs to view visibility as merely knowing details about a shipment. But forwarders were more likely than shippers to define visibility on the more sophisticated end of the spectrum. This makes sense in that forwarders increasingly see themselves as providers of technology and data aggregators, not just movers of freight.
f I G u r E 4 : Definition of Visibility—Shippers vs. 3PLs
142 total respondents
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
BI/AnalyticsTrue End to End ViewPure Track and TraceShipment Details
7%
22%25%
7%
Shippers
3PLs
53%
48%
4%
33%
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Fig. 5 shows the way this report has traditionally looked at visibility—how far in advance does a shipper know about his or her freight. In other words, how far ahead of time does a shipper know about the freight before it has even become freight. Breaking respondents up between those that use a global transportation management system and those that don’t, it’s clear that respondents using a system are more than twice as likely as those that don’t to have a view of their shipment in that window of 10 to 30 days before the transportation process begins. Manual-based shipper respondents, meanwhile, said they are nearly twice as likely to only have visibility to their freight less than 24 hours before shipment.
f I G u r E 5 : Visibility—Days Prior to Shipment
189 total respondents
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
More than30 days
10-30 days6-10 days3-5 days1-2 daysLess than24 hours
13%
18%19%
7%
22%
28%
8%
13%
Systems-based Shippers
Manual Shippers
13%
16%
13%
28%
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One of the hardest areas of visibility for IT vendors and LSPs to communicate to shippers is the return on investment. In many cases, visibility provides a hard-to-define benefit that nonetheless exists. This is a generalization, of course. There will be shippers that derive clear-cut benefits from their visibility systems—reduced inventory, shorter transit times due to pinpointing chokepoints, and less staff required to manu-ally pull status information from various carriers. But many shippers, and often even forwarders, have a difficult time determining the dollar benefit of visibility. Fig. 6 underscores this, with around two-thirds of shipper respondents saying they can identify the ROI from visibility. The other third said they are either uncertain of the benefits or unable to quantify them. Nearly a quarter of respondents said they haven’t made any investment in visibility. A slightly higher percentage of forwarders (about 75 percent) said they can identify the ROI in their visibility investment.
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
N/A - We havenot made
any investmentsin visibility
Stronglydisagree
DisagreeUncertainAgreeStronglyagree
30%
37%
42%
15%
6% 6%
23%
4%
Shippers
3PLs
19%20%
0%0%
f I G u r E 6 : Does Visibility Provide Quantifiable ROI—Shippers vs. 3PLs
140 total respondents
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0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
N/A—We havenot made anyinvestments in visibility
Stronglydisagree
DisagreeUncertainAgreeStronglyagree
12%
34%
42%
17%
6% 6%
28%
15%
Large Shippers
Small/MediumShippers
24%
15%
0%0%
f I G u r E 7 : Does Visibility Provide Quantifiable ROI—Large Shippers vs.
Small/Medium Shippers
140 total respondents
Looking at the same issue through the lens of shipper size, nearly 36 percent of small and medium shippers said they can’t identify a ROI on visibility, or are uncertain about it. Again, a little more than half of respondents said they can tell what their ROI is.
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0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70%
N/A—We do not have a system that provides visibility
International Transportation Management System (ITMS)
Ocean Booking Portal
Warehouse Management System (WMS)
Inventory Management System
Domestic Transportation Management System (TMS)
ERP
3PL/Managed serviceManufacturers
Retailers
9%
13%
24%
28%
24%
38%
27%
43%
29%
28%
38%
33%
44%
35%
62%
55%
f I G u r E 8 : What Systems Provide Visibility Input—Manufacturers vs. Retailers
195 total respondents
One of the crucial elements of building and maintaining a visibility system is the work it takes to connect all the components of a transpor-tation chain. Remove a single link from a shipper’s chain, and the chain breaks. In this case, it’s the chain of information. True visibility comes from having insight into every leg of a transportation move, but that’s often easier said than done. Practitioners tasked with managing visi-bility—whether with a shipper or 3PL—know it’s more than just connecting with service partners like ocean carriers, trucking compa-nies, railroads, and customs agencies. It’s also about effectively drawing information from other systems, some internal and many external. Fig. 8 shows that visibility users must pull data from a variety of systems to complete their puzzle. Both manufacturers and retailers rely on their 3PLs to support their visibility, but manufacturers rely on their ERPs and domestic transportation management systems (TMS) more than retailers, while retailers rely more on their warehouse management systems, ocean booking portal and international TMS.
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Section IV: Measuring Data QualityBehind every great visibility system is great data—timely, accurate and complete data. Recognizing how crucial data quality has become, this report endeavored this year to explore the quality of data shippers and 3PLs have, and what they’re doing to improve it.
Nothing underscores the point more than Fig. 9, which shows ship-pers—whether using a system or not—are intent on improving their data quality. Nearly 90 percent of systems-based shippers and 75 percent of manual, or spreadsheet-based shippers, say they are actively working to improve data quality. More than half of systems-based shippers said they strongly agree that improved data quality is a priority. It makes sense that systems-based shippers would have even more impetus in this regard. Feeding reliable, accurate data into a system can alleviate man-hours spent chasing shipment status updates, or auditing shakier data
52%
39% 37% 35%
6%10%
2% 2% 2% 2% 2%
12%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
N/AStronglydisagree
Moderatelydisagree
UncertainModeratelyagree
Stronglyagree
Systems-based Shippers
Manual Shippers
f I G u r E 9 : Are You Working to Improve Data Quality—Systems-Based vs.
Manual Shippers
172 total respondents
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The challenge in visibility often comes from the sheer number of data integrations needed to properly run a system. Fig. 10 shows the bulk of respondents have between one and 10 such integrations, a somewhat manageable figure. But more than a third of shippers, and nearly 30 percent of 3PLs, have more than 10, and one in five shipper respon-dents said they had more than 30 integrations. That’s a lot of complexity to manage.
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
More than30 unique integrations
11-30 uniqueintegrations
1-10 uniqueintegrations
0 uniqueintegrations
10%8%
17%
12%
Shippers
3PLs
61%
56%
20%16%
f I G u r E 1 0 : Number of Unique Integrations—Shippers vs. 3PLs
126 total respondents
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f I G u r E 1 1 : Quality of Integrations with Global TM Platform
81 total respondents
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
Warehouse
management
3PL-managed systems
Sales and operation planning
Purchase order management
Procurement
Inventory management
Freight paymentERP
Domestic transportation
management system
Very well
Well
Adequately
Not well
Not well at all
N/A
14%
15%
25%
9%
23%
15%
10%
25%
21%
4%
28%
13%
9%
17%
25%
7%
28%
14%
14%
29%
20%
6%
20%
11%
5%
16%
21%
10%
38%
10%
9%
24%
28%
5%
25%
9%
9%
18%
23%
5%
30%
15%
28%
9%
9%
23%
19%
12%
36%
6%
10%
22%
15%
11%
4%
More to the point, are those integrations providing quality data? Fig. 11 shows not many are providing what respondents would consider high quality data. There isn’t a single category of integrations where as many as 50 percent of respondents said data quality is good or great. Most fell into the good-to-adequate to not-very-good range.
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f I G u r E 1 2 : Quality of Data Timeliness From Partners
117 total respondents
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100% Excellent
Good
Fair
Poor
Very Poor
N/A
9%
32%
7%
20%
32%
10%
24%
28%
25%
12%2%
17%
42%
7%
12%
21%
9%
25%
27%
30%
8%2%
13%
28%
7%
11%
41%
25%
41%
22%
2%11%
22%
3%
27%
36%
11%
29%
4% 1%
33%
28%
5%
1%
Third Party Logistics Providers
SuppliersRail/Intermodal
Service Providers
Ocean Carriers
Drayage Operators
Motor Carriers
CustomersAir Carriers
f I G u r E 1 3 : Quality of Data Completeness from Partners
112 total respondents
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
Third Party Logistics Providers
SuppliersRail/Intermodal
Service Providers
Ocean Carriers
Drayage Operators
Motor Carriers
CustomersAir Carriers
Excellent
Good
Fair
Poor
Very Poor
N/A
7%
29%
4%
22%
38%
9%
22%
32%
27%
9%
22%
31%
2%
11%
32%
8%
27%
23%
32%
7%2%
13%
31%
6%
10%
41%
26%
38%
23%
2%11%
23%
6%
26%
33%
11%
27%
9%1%
33%
22%
9%
1%1%
2%
In years past, this report has asked respondents to rate the timeliness, completeness, and accuracy of its transportation partners, but never separately. This year, respondents were asked to rate those three elements individually. In truth, there is not much variation. Third-party logistics providers, ocean carriers, and air carriers rate the best across all three metrics, while rail and drayage operators rate at the bottom. Respondents reported slightly better quality in terms of timeliness and accuracy versus completeness across all partners.
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f I G u r E 1 4 : Quality of Data Accuracy From Partners
112 total respondents
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
Third Party Logistics Providers
SuppliersRail/Intermodal
Service Providers
Ocean Carriers
Drayage Operators
Motor Carriers
CustomersAir Carriers
Excellent
Good
Fair
Poor
Very Poor
N/A
8%
38%
3%
23%
28%
8%
30%
26%
27%
7%
21%
38%
6%
13%
23%
9%
30%
23%
31%
5%
10%
38%
7%
12%
33%
25%
39%
23%
2%11%
24%
3%
21%
41%
12%
29%
5%
34%
24%
8%
1%2%
One other thing to note: large swathes of respondents in all three metrics reported data quality was fair. That’s hardly a damning indict-ment, but also not a ringing endorsement for the state of data quality among any individual providers.
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Section V: Automation’s Role in Global Transportation ManagementWhether a shipper uses a transportation management system is an integral variable in determining how it defines visibility. Indeed, it’s little surprise that shippers with a manual approach were more likely than systems-based shippers to characterize visibility along the least sophisticated lines, as seen in Fig. 15. Eighty percent of these manual shippers define visibility as having access to shipment details or basic track-and-trace, compared to 64 percent of systems-based shippers. Alternatively, systems-based shippers were nearly twice as likely to consider visibility to be either an end-to-end view of their transporta-tion process or an analytics and business intelligence-driven process. Perhaps the message here is that shippers already using a system are looking to evolve to the next stage of visibility, while those that are not using a system simply aspire to tackle visibility in its most basic forms.
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
BI/AnalyticsTrue End to End ViewPure Track and TraceShipment Details
23%
16%
31%
3%
Systems-based
Manual
57%
48%
6%
17%
f I G u r E 1 5 : Definition of Visibility—System-based vs. Manual Shippers
142 total respondents
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Fig. 16, meanwhile, shows the variety of ways in which modern ship-pers handle global transportation management. Less than a quarter of respondents said they handle it manually, which is encouraging, especially considering that percentage tends to be higher in other American Shipper operations benchmark reports. That a mix or hybrid of these various approaches remains the most common platform is not surprising. Transportation management remains a tricky task to tackle, considering the coordination of foreign transportation providers and management of a freight move as it transitions from international to domestic. As shippers seek to align their TMS with upstream capabili-ties like purchase order management, the task gets trickier. The reality is that global transportation management is hard to fit under one umbrella, even in an environment where cloud-based deployment models and communities are gaining undeniable traction.
Manual, we handle all global transportation with phones/faxes/email
3PL(s) represents us in foreign countries and manage most/all of the activities
In-house developed and maintained software
Remote via on-demand systems or platforms provided by technology vendor(s)
Remote via cloud systems or platforms provided bytechnology vendor(s)
Traditional licensed installed software provided bytechnology vendor(s)
A mix or hybrid of all of these
None of these1%
32%
15%
5%
16%
23%
4%
5%
f I G u r E 1 6 : Current Global TM Platform
199 total respondents
What functions shippers have and what they consider most critical is presented in stark relief in Fig. 17. While track-and-trace, scheduling, booking, and documentation production are the top current functions, among that list, only track-and-trace is also considered among the most critical. Tellingly, analytics is the second most commonly cited critical function, followed by better connectivity to supply chain partners. One thing to note: Almost across the board, what shippers consider to be critical is far less than what they have, indicating IT vendors are perhaps providing more system than most shippers need.
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0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90%
Network design
Other
Freight exchange
Dynamic rate engine
Returns/reverse logistics
Financial settlement
Claims management
Parcel shipping
Mode optimization
Transportation network optimization
Contract management
Route/schedule optimization
Collaborative transportation management
Event management
Freight invoice management
Connectivity to customers, vendors, partners, etc
Analytics
Order management
Electronic booking
Electronic shipping documentation
Shipment scheduling
Tracking & tracingMost Critical
Current
44% 71%
19% 60%
19% 56%
11% 56%
30% 49%
41% 45%
24% 45%
20% 41%
17% 40%
18% 29%
15% 28%
11% 27%
18% 24%
15% 24%
5% 20%
5% 20%
4% 19%
3% 12%
6% 12%
3% 11%
1% 9%
3% 8%
f I G u r E 1 7 : Current vs. Most Critical Global TM Functionality
79 total respondents
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To further this point, the report asked shippers directly to rate whether their global transportation management platform was meeting their needs. Fewer than half of both shippers and 3PLs said their system met all their needs. Around 40 percent of both groups said it covers some or none of their global transportation needs. Not a single shipper said their system exceeds their needs, another sign that managing global transpor-tation is not a simple exercise.
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
N/A
It cove
rs none
of my g
lobal
transp
ortatio
n needs
It cove
rs so
me, but
not all o
f my g
lobal
transp
ortatio
n needsUncertain
It meets
my global
transp
ortatio
n needs
It exceeds m
y global
transp
ortatio
n needs
8% 8%
0% 0%
14%
5%
Shippers
3PLs37%39%
42%
31%
14%
2%
f I G u r E 1 8 : Does Global Transportation Platform Meet Needs—Shippers vs. 3PLs
127 total respondents
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So what benefits do shippers and 3PLs get from their global platform? Both groups largely cited increased efficiency and better data as the biggest benefits. Shipper respondents reported marginally more benefit in transportation service, while more 3PLs said a reduction in headcount was a benefit.
Interestingly, there was virtual consensus between shippers and 3PLs about the biggest challenges of global transportation management. The cost to invest in a system, and the challenge in integrating it with other internal systems were considered slightly bigger challenges than integrating with external service providers and systems or training staff to maximize the value of the platform.
f I G u r E 2 0 : Biggest Challenge in Using Global TM
195 total respondents
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
Training required to maximize
value of platform
Lack of integration between global
transportation platform and systems from
external service providers
Lack of integration between global
transportation platform and other
internal systemsCost to
invest
in the platform
61%66%
60%57%
51% 49%46% 47%
Shippers
3PLs
f I G u r E 1 9 : Biggest Benefit of Using Global TM—Shippers vs. 3PLs
191 total respondents
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
Data accuracyReduction in headcount
Better transportation
service
Better transportation
rates
Efficiency
84%
30%
85%
29%
43%35%
40%
29%
61%52%
Shippers
3PLs
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Section VI: How Global is Global TM?Another area of emphasis in this year’s report was measuring just how global shippers have become. Fig. 21 highlights that shippers use their global transportation management platform to manage a number of geographies, with Asia and North America unsurprisingly the most well represented. Large shippers, in particular, report that their systems reach every corner of the trading world.
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
N/A
Other
Middle East
Latin America
Europe
North America
AsiaLarge Shippers
Small/MediumShippers
8%
10%
13%
3%
44%
17%
65%
55%
77%
72%
77%
69%
56%
45%
f I G u r E 2 1 : Geographies Covered by Global TM Platform
242 total respondents
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Yet respondents to the survey said their logistics decision-making power is overwhelming concentrated in North America. This decision-making power is spread out slightly more among 3PLs. Notably, few organiza-tions said their decision-making power is decentralized.
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
Middle East
Other
Asia
Latin America
N/A
Europe
Our global transportation management decisions and policies are not centralized
North America Shippers
3PLs
1%1%
1%1%
1% 9%
1% 4%
2% 3%
4% 7%
4% 5%
87%71%
f I G u r E 2 2 : Location of Logistics Decision-Making Power
351 total respondents
With shippers expanding into new markets, more and more have to incorporate moves between foreign markets—ones that don’t touch their home market at all. Respondents were asked whether these foreign-to-foreign global transportation moves were harder to manage than inbound or outbound moves from their home market. Not surprisingly, 40 percent said these moves were more difficult to manage. Another 37 percent said they were about the same. Hardly any said their inbound/outbound shipments were harder to manage.
Much more difficult to manage foreign-to-foreign moves
More difficult to manage inbound/outbound home market moves
Uncertain
About the same
More difficult to manage foreign-to-foreign moves
40%
37%
6%
3%
14%
f I G u r E 2 3 : Difficulty in Managing Foreign-to-Foreign Shipments
65 total respondents
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Section VII: Best PracticesEach American Shipper benchmark report seeks to impart strategic knowledge on its readers, and in this case, the emphasis is on improving global transportation management through better visibility and data quality. This report advocates that shippers:
1. Move toward a more sophisticated view of visibility that incorpo-rates upstream components, like purchase order management, as well analytics that feed into planning and optimization.
2. Strive to understand and delineate the costs of visibility and the return on investment you get from your system or process.
3. Establish relationships with transportation providers and service partners with the understanding that data quality is paramount.
4. Examine your current global transportation management platform intently, and determine whether it is the correct approach for where your company will be in the next two to five years.
5. Work with your IT vendors and logistics partners to create a system that truly meets your needs—not more, not less.
6. Clearly spell out what the biggest benefits of your global transpor-tation management system are—a lack of clarity will inhibit future investment.
7. Make sure your platform is capable of going to the places your company plans to go—as companies enter new markets, global transportation becomes exponentially more complex.
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a m b E r r o a D
Amber Road is the world’s leading provider of on-demand Global Trade Management (GTM) solutions. By helping organizations to comply with country-specific trade regulations, as well as plan, execute and track global shipments, Amber Road enables goods to flow unimpeded across international borders in the most efficient, compliant and profitable way.
Our Global Logistics solution provides a range of transportation management, logistics and supply chain visibility capabilities for importers and exporters including contract and rate management, carrier selection and booking, freight audit, order and shipment visi-bility, data quality management, and performance management reporting. By taking a holistic, integrated approach to global trade, Amber Road accelerates the movement of goods across international borders, enhances compliance and reduces global supply chain costs. For more information, please visit www.AmberRoad.com or email us at [email protected].
c a r G o S m a rt l I m I t E D
CargoSmart Limited is a Software as a Service (SaaS) global shipping and logistics solutions provider that enables shippers, consignees, logistics service providers, NVOCCs, and ocean carriers to keep cargo moving and delivered on time. Award-winning shipment management applications include visibility, documentation, contract management, compliance, and private label solutions.
CargoSmart launched its services in October 2000. Leveraging over 10 years of experience and an extensive network of over 30 ocean carriers, CargoSmart is dedicated to providing high quality products and services that consistently meet or exceed customers’ requirements and expectations. CargoSmart has successfully helped over 22,000 customers worldwide to lower transportation management costs, streamline operations, and reduce the risk of late shipments.
To learn more, please visit www.cargosmart.com.
Appendix A: About Our Sponsors
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Appendix A: About Our Sponsors, Continued
I n t t r a
INTTRA is the world’s largest, multi-carrier e-commerce network for the ocean shipping industry. INTTRA professionals work with 49 leading carriers and NVOCCs, 109 software alliance partners, as well as their customers, to streamline and standardize their shipping processes worldwide through a network of more than 220,000 shipping professionals. Over 530,000 container orders are initiated on the INTTRA platform each week, representing 21 percent of global ocean container trade. For more information, visit www.inttra.com.
J D a S o f t wa r E G r o u p, I n c .
JDA® Software Group, Inc., The Supply Chain Company®, offers the broadest portfolio of supply chain, retail merchandising, store opera-tions and all-channel commerce solutions to help companies manage the flow of goods from raw materials to finished products and into the hands of consumers. JDA’s deep industry expertise and innovative cloud platform help companies optimize inventory, labor and customer service levels. As a result, JDA solutions have become the standard for the world’s leading retailers, manufacturers and distributors. To learn more, visit jda.com or email [email protected].
JDA—The Supply Chain Company Worldwide Headquarters | Scottsdale, Arizona, U.S.A. Office: 480-308-3421 Worldwide: +1-480-308-3000
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Appendix A: About Our Sponsors, Continued
lEanloGIStIcS
LeanLogistics is a global solutions provider of transportation manage-ment system (TMS) applications and supply chain services enabled by the industry’s largest transportation network. The LeanLogistics Trans-portation Network empowers shippers, carriers and other participating members to reduce costs, improve services and gain complete visibility.
Used by many Fortune 1000 companies, LeanLogistics LeanTMS™ delivers complete transportation planning, execution, settlement and procurement, as well as supply chain visibility and business intelligence. LeanTMS processes millions of shipments across the largest multi-modal transportation network in the US.
For outsourced transportation solutions, LeanLogistics offers Managed Transportation Services that leverage the data intelligence of the network with transportation expertise to ensure clients receive maximum value.
For additional information, please visit www.LeanLogistics.com.
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Appendix B: About Our Partner
r E ta I l I n D u S t ry l E a D E r S a S S o c I at I o n ( r I l a )
RILA is the trade association of the world’s largest and most innovative retail companies. RILA members include more than 200 retailers, product manufacturers, and service suppliers, which together account for more than $1.5 trillion in annual sales, millions of American jobs and operate more than 100,000 stores, manufacturing facilities and distribution centers domestically and abroad. For additional information visit www.rila.org
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backGrounD
Since our first edition in May 1974, American Shipper has provided U.S.-based logistics practitioners with accurate, timely and actionable news and analysis. The company is widely recognized as the voice of the international transportation community.
In 2008 American Shipper launched its first formal, independent research initiative focused on the state of transportation management systems in the logistics service provider market. Since that time the company has published more than a dozen reports on subjects ranging from regulatory compliance to sustainability.
ScopE
American Shipper research initiatives typically address international or global supply chain issues from a U.S.-centric point of view. The research will be most relevant to those readers managing large volumes of airfreight, containerized ocean and domestic intermodal freight. American Shipper readers are tasked with managing large volumes of freight moving into and out of the country so the research scope reflects those interests.
mEthoDoloGy
American Shipper benchmark studies are based upon responses from a pool of approximately 40,000 readers accessible by e-mail invitation. Generally each benchmarking project is based on 200-500 qualified responses to a 25-35 question survey depending on the nature and complexity of the topic.
American Shipper reports compare readers from key market segments defined by industry vertical, company size, and other variables, in an effort to call out trends and ultimate best practices. Segments created for comparisons always consist of 30 or more responses.
lIbrary
American Shipper’s complete library of research is available on our Website: AmericanShipper.com/Research.
Annual studies include:• Global Trade Management Report
• Global Transportation Planning & Procurement Benchmark
• Global Transportation Management Benchmark
• Global Transportation Settlement & Measurement Benchmark
• Import Operations & Compliance Benchmark
• Export Operations & Compliance Benchmark
contact
Eric Johnson Research Director American Shipper [email protected]
Appendix C: About American Shipper Research
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