Friday, April 26, 2019

How logistics sector can be a key differentiator of success for modern businesses

Improves Business Focus

Reduced Expenses: Outsourcing to organized 3PL players helps businesses to cut costs by eliminating the duplication of efforts, reducing paperwork, optimising resource, and enhancing efficiency

Renewed Customer Focus: Outsourcing frees up resources so businesses can re-align their focus and growth strategy to mirror customer demands, meeting their needs proactively

Enhanced Competitive advantage: Focus on core competency enhances performance, thus offering businesses to have a discernable edge, relative to competition

Improved performance indicators: With renewed focus key growth drivers and customer focussed strategies, key performance indicators can be improved, including sales, market share & profitability

Increased product/service quality: Resources previously engaged in logistics can now be focused on quality management, research, and innovation, leading to improved core offerings, thus driving growth and overall expansion of business

3PL firms today have developed competencies in the modern management of logistics processes, along with an extensive network of information and communication. Several 3PL and 4PL players are well equipped to offer extensive service to clients, including access to a pre-existing supply network which can be used across industries, along with automated supply chain offering services from inventory management to loading goods in the transporting vehicles for last-mile deliveries.

Friday, April 5, 2019

2019 Air Cargo Roundtable: Volumes and pricing gathering speed

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) maintains that it’s “cautiously optimistic” about the fortunes for the global cargo sector, but allows that with the persistence of trade tensions and protectionist actions by some governments there is a significant downside risk.
“To attract demand in new market segments, the air cargo industry must improve its value proposition,” says Alexandre de Juniac, IATA’s director general and CEO. “Enabling modern processes with digitalization will help build a stronger foothold in e-commerce and the transport of time- and temperature-sensitive goods such as pharmaceuticals and perishables.”
Our trio of prominent air cargo experts invited to participate in our annual Air Cargo Roundtable acknowledge this caveat; however, for the most part, they’re confident the industry will continue to trend upward. Joining us this year are Skip Dokker, a consultant with London-based Drewry Supply Chain Advisors; Brandon Fried, president of the Airforwarders Association; and Jos Nuijten, vice president, Network Integration Strategy for Descartes, an import/export trade database provider.
Logistics Management (LM): How may we best summarize the current state of the air cargo market? Does it continue to strengthen or has it plateaued?
Skip Dokken: In short, the market is strong. Not only are volumes good, but also the make-up of the whole market is solid. New and old carriers are providing the service to meet shippers’ needs, while forwarders are constantly improving in what they offer their clients and doing what they say. Integrators and new e-commerce carriers are evolving and growing, trying to meet their shipper’s specific requirements. So, I’d say that the market hasn’t plateaued at all, and we’ll continue to see new carriers come in and others exit. At the same time, we’ll see service levels continue to grow as technology continues to improve and provide new offerings.
Brandon Fried: I certainly agree with Skip. The past year was very robust, and at this point, we have not seen softening of demand in the market. We share some of IATA’s concerns, however, and also remain cautiously optimistic for the year ahead.
Jos Nuijten: When you look at the data, global shipping volumes are expected to surpass 100 billion parcels in 2020, which represents an 11% increase over 2016. These larger volumes have increased demands and costs in some trade lanes and spurred new service providers to enter the e-commerce and package distribution markets. This trend has also caused some e-commerce companies and retailers to review and reorganize their supply chains to allow products to be closer to the end consumer or enable them to move more rapidly to the end consumer through new transportation providers.
LM: What are the biggest macroeconomic drivers for the industry and how are they re-shaping air cargo market?


Fried: Consumer confidence is a significant driver because if buyers are not feeling comfortable spending, our economy feels the pain. We see this reflected in manufacturing, retail and e-commerce sales. Government actions around the globe including trade agreements, looming tariffs, security concerns with the U.S. and North Korea and civil unrest in Latin America and the Middle East have an adverse impact. Of course, tax policy here and abroad influences the economy as well.
Dokken: Good point, Brandon. In the “old” days, it wasn’t that difficult to model the air cargo industry using economic variables. But today’s environment is full of non-economic drivers that are mainly political and can’t be easily modeled by a computer. So, the biggest driver in terms of impact, not volumes, is uncertainty. Will old trade alliances break down and new ones pop up? Will the trend toward more nationalism and less globalization cause major shifts in trade flows? And will the political moves of countries provide more impact than the true economic changes of growing and declining economies?
LM: With all this in mind, where do you see air cargo volumes headed?
Dokken: Well, with all the uncertainly we just mentioned it’s tough to project futures volume trends. I’m sure that there will continue to be global growth, but the rates by geographic sector will move and shift as non-economic factors come and go.
Fried: If my crystal ball had that sort of clarity, I wouldn’t be sitting here today. But I can say that the fundamentals look strong. And as Skip just mentioned, it’s the wild cards that will keep air cargo stakeholders up at night.
LM: So, under this umbrella of uncertainty, where do we see rates going?
Fried: Airfreight is probably one of the purest forms of supply and demand pricing. If volumes increase, so will air cargo pricing. With that considered, fuel prices can move rates very quickly, regardless of demand.
Dokken: I always love to hear talk about rates. Each group tries to put forth what it hopes will be a self-fulfilling prophecy. Airlines tell shippers and forwarders that rates will be going up due to increased financial pressures. The forwarders in turn give their clients the heads up that rates will be going higher due to the squeeze by the carriers and operating costs. However, the shippers have their CFOs saying cut your budget by x% and then threaten to go out for bid if their rates aren’t lowered—it’s nothing new and will probably never change.
LM: Can you provide your assessment of global e-commerce airfreight volumes in relationship to the Amazon Air effect?
Dokken: We need to remember that a large portion of the current e-commerce volumes used to be volumes that moved to DCs and then to brick and mortar stores. So, e-commerce is definitely driving volume growth, but it’s not new volumes. It’s just a shift in distribution. But even as traditional volumes move to an expedited e-commerce mode, there will also be a segment of new growth that comes from people finding it easier to shop, buy and get rewarded using e-commerce.
I think the Amazon Air effect will be fun to watch. Seeing how FedEx and UPS respond to large amounts of Amazon business moving to Amazon Air can create a business school case study. However, more important is how Amazon deals with the huge expenses that come from flying airplanes. Have they done all their homework to profitably operate the fleet? Or will the direct and indirect costs of flying and delivering prove overwhelming?
Nuijten: All true, and these larger volumes have increased demands and costs in some trade lanes and spurred new service providers to enter the e-commerce and package distribution markets. It has also caused some e-commerce companies and retailers to review and reorganize their supply chains to allow products to be closer to the end consumer.
The “Amazon effect” has also changed customer expectations on shipment visibility and delivery time lines, which has caused traditional logistics service providers as well as air cargo carriers to have to review their delivery operations, system capabilities and customer-facing operations, as the end consumer is starting to expect the same shipping experience that they receive from Amazon today.
Fried: When you boil it down, large-scale firms operating proprietary fleets conceptually is not a new trend. After all, many have run their own trucking operations for years. This can be both good and bad news for our industry. Amazon Air removes freight volumes from traditional carriers, but also frees up capacity for lower volume competitors in the market. Operators are distracted because having their own fleets requires a “feed the beast” focus instead of searching for a more strategic, emerging opportunity vision.
LM: How will shippers and carriers overcome global cross-border e-commerce impediments?
Dokken: The only way for the world of e-commerce to survive and grow is to continue the path that has been blazed before them by carriers, forwarders and integrators—get rid of paper, connect all parties in the supply chain including governmental agencies, continue to move toward a common language for global trade, and work toward more open trade. The problem is that while we need to do the same things that we’ve done in the past the bar keeps rising as things like terrorism, hacking and protectionism grow.
Fried: Customs authorities around the globe have been agonizingly slow in adapting to changes in finished goods supply chains. This continues to be an ongoing challenge, although in the United States the minimum value of shipments requiring formal Customs clearance increased to $800, thus extremely decreasing the need for a vast majority of express shipments purchased online.
Nuijten: Many shippers have also started working with their logistics service providers to better streamline the declaration process for the import/export of goods across borders. This streamlining has often been in the form of better integration of data surrounding the shipment from purchase orders, origin of goods and goods classifications, along with enhanced declaration systems to process cargo security and Customs brokerage declarations with minimal or no data input. •

Source: https://www.logisticsmgmt.com/article/2019_air_cargo_roundtable_volumes_and_pricing_gathering_speed

Tuesday, April 2, 2019

Autonomous Robotic Vehicles Replicate the Uber Model for Warehouse Logistics

Logistics managers in manufacturing and fulfillment facilities are constantly challenged by the need to streamline their operational efficiency and reduce costs. Although automating certain aspects of an operation can help achieve these goals, many automated solutions are inflexibly designed and are unable to adjust when a change to the system is required. With these challenges in mind, innovative companies are taking a page out of Uber’s book to improve time and cost efficiency in their materials handling with fleets of responsive autonomous vehicles.
Most of us remember the days before Uber and Lyft when taxis were the global standard for personal transportation in major cities. The process of hailing a cab, however, was less than ideal, requiring users to find an available taxi directly near them and catch the attention of the driver. Not only did this make it difficult for riders to have their needs met, it also took time away from both drivers and riders who were unable to easily and efficiently locate each other.
In a traditional logistics system, resources such as parts, products, and factory maintenance are allocated reactively as they are needed. In these reactive systems, humans are required to recognize the problem—such as a resource running low—and then fill that need, taking time away from their tasks to do the work. Using humans to do this administrative work is not ideal because employees are a business expenditure and most valuable when used for tasks that require higher-level thinking skills.
Let’s consider another system cities put in place to move around their materials (people): buses. The bus method for materials movement is proactive—it delivers on a fixed schedule that creates large buffers of capacity waiting to be used because it doesn't react to demand but rather a fixed schedule. In this sense, a bus-style methodology is not ideal in manufacturing as it can create inefficient buffers of product and bottlenecks for productivity. Alternatively, taxis are reactive—they engage on-demand at the point of need—but their weakness is availability: they are looking, possibly aimlessly, for work to do with highly inefficient travel in the interim.
Ride share apps revolutionized this supply-demand structure by virtualizing the network of cars and ensuring that riders were always connected with the nearest available car.
So, if buses are pushing and bad for material delivery, and taxis are pulling, but inefficient in reconciling supply with demand, what is an ideal structure for optimizing efficiency? The answer is the middle ground that the rideshare model employs. This combines the efficiency of reactive pickups that taxi cabs employ while also removing of inefficient travel in between work by deploying available vehicles widely to meet needs where necessary.
This is precisely why manufacturing and fulfillment industries keen on improving industrial efficiency are deploying fleets of autonomous vehicles across factory floors the way Uber deploys drivers across cities around the world.
New automated systems—powered by AI and machine learning—have created the ability to streamline this identification-action framework through a network of automated vehicles that can find the closest available vehicle to fill demands as they arise without stopping other important functions within the production system. Companies are now using these systems to automatically identify a need, find the nearest available vehicle, assign it to the work, and monitor progress—all in a split second without human intervention. Vehicles can work in set patterns to backfill demand in off periods, and then they can be quickly redeployed to handle a time-sensitive request, creating an optimally productive industrial workforce that is flexible to changing needs.
Think of autonomous robotic vehicles in a manufacturing or fulfillment facility like a fleet of Uber drivers, making themselves available to produce results and improve the system’s overall efficiency. By replicating this proven system for autonomous pickup and dropoff with cutting-edge technologies, logistics and manufacturing facilities can make the most of its human workforce while continuing to drive down costs and increase efficiency with smart factory robotic systems.
source: https://www.inddist.com/article/2019/04/autonomous-robotic-vehicles-replicate-uber-model-warehouse-logistics