HOW-TO GUIDE
From managing highly complex transportation strategies, decentralized operations, and extremely dynamic environments, the core challenge in overseeing global shipping activities comes down to an overreliance on manual processes and a lack of standardized information. With improved supply chain visibility in the cloud, however, manufacturers can counter cost increases, while navigating global economic uncertainty. This paper discusses four ways manufacturers can achieve this goal.
Critical challenges in running a global supply chain
With approximately 80% of global trade volume involving maritime transport, it’s critical for your organization to create savings in global shipping activities to offset tariff fluctuations and volatile final mile spending.1 Poorly managed transportation spend results from having too many highly manual processes, a fragmented network of many service providers, and a significant lack of standardized information. This complicates decision-making and hinders smarter spend strategies, especially when it comes to common logistics challenges like complex cross-border transportation strategies, decentralized operations, and extremely dynamic environments.
As demand fluctuates or tariffs increase the cost of goods sold (COGS), manufacturers must be able to quickly exploit modal shifts and broader carrier networks to assure supply and reduce costs.
Highly complex transportation strategies
Global transportation planning involves thousands of lanes in many regions, over varied modes, all marked by different units of measurement, currencies, and terms. As a result, manufacturers must overcome discrepancies from non-normalized information with additional time and labor, generating major administrative burdens, and difficulty in conducting meaningful transportation analysis.
Decentralized operations
Large manufacturers are often comprised of various and competing business units, sometimes grown through acquisition. They often lack centralized transportation management control resulting in wasted money due to different spending and execution strategies in each division.
Extremely dynamic environment
The many players and factors involved with organizing and executing transportation make it difficult to predict outcomes with confidence. A high level of change and volatility means manufacturers experience unpredictable service and highly variable spend over time.
What follows are four ways that improved visibility into global supply chain operations and a transportation management system (TMS) can help counter cost increases driven by uncertainty, volatility, and geo-politics, while navigating fluctuations in the global economy.
1. Leverage advanced freight procurement and contract management
Optimizing transportation spend in a global supply chain requires manufacturers to partner with multiple carriers and logistics providers. Managing these transportation contracts throughout their lifecycle requires dealing with large amounts of data, frequent changes and updates, and propagating contract and rate changes to all internal transportation stakeholders.
Transportation needs change so frequently that when sourcing occurs across continents, a manufacturer cannot balance the lowest possible spend with maintaining high customer service without an automated system. To avoid spending creep, manufacturers must manage the lifecycle of freight rates and service—from the bid process to the fine-tuning of allocation and execution plans.
Controlling global transportation spend effectively is not possible with manual processes. Managers need decision support based on high-quality data from across their transportation networks.
When lines of supply shift to new regions, a broader set of carriers might need to be invited to procurement cycles. Similarly, if new tariffs come into play, expanding the number of carriers involved in a bid can increase competition and help achieve greater cost-savings to offset higher COGS. Managing the cycle of transportation contracts and amendments on spreadsheets and email causes the entire process to suffer from inefficiency and poor auditability. Expenses that can typically be eliminated by automation end up cutting into the operating margin and adding to the cost of goods sold. Companies that haven’t moved their supply chain management networks to the cloud must deal with:
- Highly manual contract and rate management
- Complex decision-making to optimize routing that balances service with costs
- Lack of data standardization—due to reliance on spreadsheets and email
- Shipments at a higher cost than planned • Overspending from poor routing compliance
- Poor analytic capability for contributing cost factors (lane utilization issues, carrier performance, routing compliance, excessive dwell times, container detention/demurrage fees, freight invoice errors)
2. Integrate procurement with transportation execution for continuous improvement
Companies that want to benefit from more cost-effective shipping operations across a global supply chain need more than a traditional transportation management system to capture and analyze data on rates, carriers, and other partners involved in multi-leg, multi-mode transportation. They need a system that manages transportation spend across their global network, from running the procurement cycle through to routing compliance and invoice auditing. On a network platform, bid events for global shipping lanes can be managed in the cloud, based on data that’s standardized across carriers, non-vessel operating common carriers (NVOCCs), local currencies, units of measure; location identification, and asset and service types. Service providers are easily and accurately compared, and contract awards can be optimized based on “what if” analysis of different freight allocation scenarios. Later, managers can compare actual spend to original plans and adjust allocations or carrier mix accordingly. Optimize and manage the integrated lifecycle of freight rates and service on a network-based transportation management platform by:
- Using a collaborative, data-driven request for proposal (RFP) and allocation engine
- Managing contract and rate data centrally for all freight agreements
- Closing the spend control loop with integrated freight audit and payment capability
- Monitoring organizational compliance with performance analytics