Type of Logistics
Type of Logistics
Abstract
In this article we will come to descript a part of supply chain cycle called
outsourcing. It shows the ways that well able to find best resources and manage
logistics activities between suppliers, shippers and customers according to our
strategies against provide our needs. we introduce service providers levels from
LSPs to 4PLs.
Key Words: Outsourcing, BPO (Business Process Outsourcing), LSP (Logistics Service provider),
3PL (Third-Party Logistics), LLP (Lead Logistics Provider), 4Pl (Fourth-Party Logistics)
1) Introduction
What Is Outsourcing?
Outsourcing, in general, has been a hot topic in worldwide business for the past
several years. And the debate only heats up when the outsourcing discussions start
focusing on supply chain functions.
One of the most important reasons why companies outsource their logistics
functions is the need to decrease the number of warehouses, vehicles and excess
inventories and to reduce shrinkage, and labor costs. Such moves bring down fixed
and working capital investment. Companies can therefore focus on their core
business activities and share the risks.
b) What to outsource?
Determining what to outsource requires detailed evaluation of IT outsourcing
opportunities across technologies, processes, functions and the entire organization.
In order to determine what to outsource we recommend a step-by-step approach
which ensures perfect fit with the overal corporate strategy, establishes the
necessary baselines and prepares the organization to effectively manage the entire
outsourcing process
During the process of determining WHAT to move offshore or outsource, one
should consider all and any parts of the value chain if it can be done better, faster,
more efficiently, cheaper, etc. by an external partner.
As a result of answering the following questions we shall have a clear view on the
process candidates to move offshore:
STEP 1: Simplify, Streamline and Consolidate your processes within your
organization before considering outsourcing Make sure it works!
STEP 2: Review your processes and make the first selection of candidates.
STEP 3: What are the processes which, under any circumstances, you DO
NOT WANT to outsource?
Do you have a strong case not to move a specific process offshore? What not to
move offshore? Usually:
-Core competences and/or processes which give a competitive advantage
-Functions which cannot be performed by a third party with equivalent
performance
The prioritization and the systematic approach to select what to move offshore
will help you determine:
-The right mix of internal and external supply of services or business functions
-The required capabilities of offshore vendors
-The key directions in negotiating the outsourcing deal, contracts, SLAs
STEP 7: Create a METRICS set
If you have a well developed metrics set in place, linked to your baseline, you
will be able to measure and manage the outsourcing process and relationship.
You can compare it to the established baselines (STEP 6.) and you will have a
guide to develop and manage the contracts, SLAs and the entire outsourcing
relationship. Proper metrics will provide an early warning tool to address
problems and negotiate changes. However, general guidelines to develop an
effective metrics program apply;
-The goal of metrics is better management not measurement. Keep it simple and
focus on a small set of important metrics
-Each metric must be directly related to a management issue to be addressed
-If the information isnt current, it is at best, worthless.
-Monitor trends, not just values
-Never take action based on a single metric
-Measurement should not be disruptive
c) How to outsource?
Do under steps one by one .
1- Perform Strategic Assessment
2- Decision To Form Relationship
3- Evaluate Alternative Options
4- Potential partner Capabilities & Company Needs & Priorities
5- Select Partner
6- Structure Operating Model
7- Implementation & Continuous Improvement
2) LSP
Several criteria for LSP choice have been discussed in the literature; typically,
these include cost, service quality and reliability, flexibility, responsiveness to
requests and financial stability. Some criteria are developed with specific client
needs in mind, while others are common for all circumstances. There is contrasting
evidence on the relative importance of price; some authors (van Laarhoven and
Sharman, etc. ) rank it as top criterion, while others argue that service performance
and quality requirements precede discussions about rates.
LSPs employ a variety of growth strategies. Important means of expansion include
mergers and acquisitions (M&As), joint ventures, strategic alliances, piggybacking
(i.e. following the client's expansion and establishing new operations in foreign
markets) and organic growth. Consolidation is the main feature of the industry and
large, multi-national firms start to emerge. Main reasons for M&As include
3) 3PL
The term "3PL" was first used in the early 1970s to identify intermodal marketing
companies (IMCs) in transportation contracts. Up to that point, contracts for
transportation had featured only two parties, the shipper and the carrier. When
IMCs entered the pictureas intermediaries that accepted shipments from the
shippers and tendered them to the rail carriersthey became the third party to the
contract, the 3PL. But over the years, that definition has broadened to the point
where these days, every company that offers some kind of logistics service for hire
calls itself a 3PL.
3PLs have led the way in logistics outsourcing. Drawing on its core business,
whether it be forwarding, trucking or warehousing, they moved into providing
other services for customers. Creation of a 3PL presented a way for a commodityservice logistics provider to move into higher margin, bundled services.
Customers, anxious to reduce costs, want what 3PLs have to offer. The potential
market opportunity for outsourced logistics service providers, whether domestic,
international and/or global is huge.
But something has happened on the yellow-brick road. The reasons are varied, but
the bottom line is many have failed at their own business transformation. Some
3PLs have not moved past their core commodity service to become true multiservice providers. Or international 3PLs have not understood how to provide
domestic services; or domestic ones have not succeeded at venturing into
international logistics services.
Others have failed to differentiate themselves against the competition. Certain
3PLs have not done a good job positioning and defining themselves in the
marketplace. Or the parent company has not given them the resources, especially
sales and sales leads, to penetrate even their existing customers. And, sundry have
commoditized their 3PL service, as a result undoing the very purpose of their 3PL.
These setbacks have slowed down the growth of some 3PLs in terms of both
customer retention, especially, and new customers. Fragmentation of the 3PL
sector reflects both the uncertainty of how 3PLs view themselves and the diversity
of customer needs.
4) LLP
The term LLP, or lead logistics provider, is probably the most transparent of the
three. As the name suggests, a lead logistics provider "takes the lead" in providing
some functions and subcontracting for others while providing one central control
point.
An LLP (lead logistics provider) serves as the client's primary supply chain
management provider, defining processes and managing the provision and
integration of logistics services through its own organization and those of its
subcontractors.
A lead logistics provider is a company that takes the full responsibility for
organizing the whole transport chain from producer to their customers, and it is
sometimes also called as door-to-door logistics. If both the producer and the
customer are located at the sea side and have their own terminals, only the sea
transport mode needs to be involved, but this is rather the exception than the rule.
In general, sea transport will be a part of an Intermodal transport chain which will
involve at least truck, inland waterways, or rail.
Among the existing lead logistics providers we find companies that originally were
shipping companies, rail companies, air freight and road haulage based. Today
these companies independently upon their starting mode will all use a combination
of these modes, but none of them own the transport means to operate all four
modes. Typically, they are sea-, rail-, air-, or truck-based, and then buy the other
transport services from operators of the other modes, even if certain companies
claim that they control transport means for all four modes. All these lead logistics
providers tend to prefer, when several options are available, the transport mode
they own themselves. This means that a key success factor and increased Short Sea
Shipping volumes will be the shipping lines ability to operate as lead logistics
provider.
5) 4PL
The term "4PL" has generated even more confusion. Andersen Consulting (now
Accenture) first defined the 4PL concept in 1997 when acting on behalf of a major
chemical company that had winnowed its forwarder base from 30 to three. The
company left the consultant with the responsibility of managing its remaining core
partners. Accenture described the 4PL (or fourth-party logistics provider) as an
integrator, but today consultants, software companies and even 3PLs lay claim to
being a 4PL. (And if Accenture decided to pursue every company that called itself
a 4PL in violation of its trademark, no courthouse would be large enough to
contain all the litigants.)
"The original 4PL concept was designed for businesses with large undertakings,
The 4PL concept has been around in a defacto sense for some time. Logistics
service providers such as Excel use subcontractors at different levels to manage
their operations" says Brooks Bentz, associate partner for Boston-based Accenture
Supply Chain Management.
A 4PL takes the lead on advising or making supply chain decisions on behalf of the
customer, but does not execute the result of that decision.
The idea of using a 4PL was slow gaining traction. Now, as a result of
globalization, 4PLs are fast gaining momentum.
The 4PL concept has necessarily followed the path of globe-trekking enterprises
exploring less expensive and more reliable sourcing and outsourced manufacturing
locations - as well as multiple logistics partners.
But equally significant, the concept has not remained static and the very nature of a
supply chain "management" partner continues to shift course with prevailing global
trends.
A 4PL can be paid a management fee or can act as a main contractor.
used the term 3PL for a long time. Then 4PL came into vogue. terms promoted by
Cliff Lynch: logistics service provider (LSP) and lead logistics provider (LLP). But
we're pretty relaxed about calling all of them 3PLs in conversational shorthand. So
the top triangle can turn to the two parts simply.
planning, steering and controlling of all logistic procedures, i.e. the flow of
information, material and capital by one service provider with long-term strategic
objectives. 4PLs understand build plans, supplier performance, demand planning,
inventory velocity and how all those fit into supply chain management. That
bundled capability is about moving products from suppliers to customers, whether
that is in stores or to customer warehouses in a timely, accurate, complete and lean
manner. Put another way, 4PLs see the forest, not just the trees.
3- Function Or Process.
When it comes to outsourcing, there are three questions and underlying issues.
One, do you outsource a function versus outsource a process? 3PLs target the
function. They want to handle containers/shipments/freight, not the transport
management process, for example. The true need is the process, which is what
the 4PL targets. Is there really a process in place--or a series of standalone
transactions? What is the present process? How does it work? Where does it
fail? Where are there gaps? Where are there redundancies? The supply chain
process crosses organizational lines. It runs horizontal in a vertical organization.
4PLs understand that supply chain management is a business process. It is
crosses departments and functions; it extends beyond the corporate boundaries
to customers, suppliers and logistics service providers. They also understand
technology as a vital process enhancer.
3PLs are transaction, not process, driven. They focus on the work of
shipments or orders. So it is difficult for 3PLs to create a value propositions
with a customer which, in turn, leads to turnover of customers and
relationships.
8) Conclusion
But as businesses migrate toward more complex levels of outsourcing, the scope
and detail of their supply chain has to change. As such, supply chain initiatives
require a different approach.
As a result, Some 3PLs have not fully stepped up to meet the exact needs of
customers. Some have become too focused on "managing" tasks, not processes and
on serving the parent company's core business, and have missed opportunities to
present value. The 4PL opportunity exists because 3PLs failed to meet the real
logistics/supply chain requirements of customers. There will not be a "model" (or
cookie cutter) for the 4PL. After all, he knows to customize to the needs of each
customer.
4PLs have become alternatives for business process outsourcing. These new BPO
logistics service providers enable firms to manage a critical part of their supply
chain by providing visibility and integration across multiple enterprises. They
manage with the three key elements of process, people and technology. Users of a
4PL can focus on core competencies and better manage and utilize company assets
and resources, as to inventory and personnel.
customers have had to compare apples and oranges in their RFP (Request For
Proposal) replies. Shippers share some accountability with an overemphasis on
cost reduction as the key metric and without a clear definition of their requirements
for services they need and how it will all work within their company. They looked
for silver bullets and quick answers to complex needs.
References:
1 - don't fumble that handoff - Estimates are that 25 to 50 percent of outsourcing deals fail, or at least fail to
meet expectations - By Art van Bodegraven and Kenneth B. Ackermn (2009)
2 - Business Case 3 "Shipping Lines as Lead Logistics Providers Case" - http://www.moses-eu-project.org/
(2009)
3 - Stick to Core Competencies http://logisticstoday.com/ (2009)
4 - Third party logistics: a literature review and research agenda - By Konstantinos Selviaridis, Department of
Management Science, Lancaster University Management School, Lancaster, UK & Martin Spring, Department of
Management Science, Lancaster University Management School, Lancaster, UK (2007)
5 - Outsourced Logistics: 4Ward Momentum - By Joseph O'Reilly (2007)
6 - name your terms - Ask a dozen logistics managers to define "4PL" and "LLP" and you're likely to get a
dozen different answers. We desperately need some standard definitions - By Clifford F. Lynch (2005)
7 - Outsourcing - 3PL / 4PL Challenges , Industry 2.0 Conference By Arif A. Siddiqui General Manager February 8, 2005
8 - Service Buyers: What to outsource? - http://www.euroitx.com/ (2004)
9 - Outsourcing-3PL Versus 4PL - By THOMAS CRAIG (2003)
10 - http://www.scmr.com/