C.4 Transportation
C.4 Transportation
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Chapter 4 Transportation—
Managing the Flow of the Supply Chain
Learning Objectives
After reading this chapter, you should be able to do the following:
❑ Explain the role transportation plays in the supply chain.
Transportation
involves the physical movement of
goods between origin and destination points.
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Role of Transportation in Supply Chain Management
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Challenges to Carrying out This Role
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Challenges to Carrying out This Role
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Modes of Transportation
◼ rail
◼ air
◼ water
◼ pipeline
◼ intermodal transportation
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Modes of Transportation
Modal breakdown:
◼ Trucking 80.0 % $635 billion
◼ Rail 06.7%
◼ Air 04.7%
◼ Water 04.6%
◼ Pipeline 01.2%
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Modes of Transportation
◼ Motor Carriers
widely used mode of transportation in the domestic supply chain
573,469 private, for hire, and other U.S. interstate motor carriers
Less-than-truckload (LTL)
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Modes of Transportation
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Modes of Transportation
Railroads
7 Class I railroads revenues in excess of $290 million
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Modes of Transportation
Water
Major facilitator of international trade
81% international freight movement
19% coastal, inland, and Great Lakes traffic
High variable and low fixed cost
Two primary carrier types
◼ Liner
◼ Charter
Options include
◼ Container ships
◼ Bulk carriers
◼ Tankers
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Modes of Transportation
Air Carriers
491 air cargo carriers
◼ Combination carriers
◼ Integrated carriers
◼ Nonintegrated carriers
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Modes of Transportation
Pipeline
◼ Trunk lines
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Modes of Transportation
Intermodal Transportation
Use of two or more different modes in movement
Greater accessibility
Product-handling characteristics
◼ Containerized freight
◼ Transload freight
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Modes of Transportation
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Functional Control of Transportation
◼ Procurement
◼ Marketing
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◼ Decision to Outsource Transportation
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Modal Selection
Accessibility
◼ Accessibility advantage: Motor carriage
◼ Accessibility disadvantage: Air, rail, and water
Transit Time
◼ Transit time advantage: Air and motor carriage
◼ Transit time disadvantage: Rail, water, and pipeline
Reliability
◼ Reliability advantage: Motor carriers and air carriers
◼ Reliability disadvantage: Water carriers and rail carriers
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Modal Selection
Product Safety
◼ Safety advantage: Air transportation and motor
carriage
◼ Safety disadvantage: Rail and water
Cost
◼ Cost advantage: The cost of transportation
service varies greatly between and within the
modes
◼ Cost disadvantage: Motor carriage and air
transportation
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◼ Modal Selection
Durability
Product value
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◼ Carrier Selection
Core carrier
◼ limited number of carriers
◼ leverage its purchasing dollars
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◼ Rate Negotiations
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Shipment Preparation
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◼ Freight Documentation
bill of lading
◼ originates the shipment
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◼ Freight bill
◼ consignee
◼ items
◼ total weight
◼ total charges
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Freight claims form
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Maintain In-Transit Visibility
visibility
tools must be linked to other capabilities and
processes to have an impact on supply chain event
management
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Monitor Service Quality
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◼ Transportation Metrics
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◼ Transportation Management Systems (TMS)
Critical applications include the following:
◼ Routing and scheduling
proper planning of delivery routes has a major impact on
customer satisfaction, supply chain performance, and
organizational success
◼ Load planning
effective preparation of safe, efficient deliveries
◼ Load tendering
◼ Status tracking
◼ Appointment scheduling
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Summary
Without question, transportation is a very dynamic activity and a critical
supply chain process. Not only is it the largest logistics cost component in
most supply chains, but it also directly impacts fulfillment speed and service
quality. By providing the physical links between key participants across
domestic and global supply chains, transportation facilitates the creation of
time and place utilities. Organizations with highly efficient and effective
transportation processes can differentiate their product in the marketplace
through lower landed costs and greater inventory availability.
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Summary (cont.)
Multiple planning activities occur prior to carrier and mode selection: who will
be responsible for managing the transportation function within the
organization, what terms of sale and payment will be used, and how goods will
be transported must all be determined with a strategic supply chain focus.
Most commercial freight moves under contractual rates that are negotiated
directly between freight buyers and transportation companies for specific
volumes of tailored services at mutually agreed-upon prices.
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Summary (cont.)
Shipment routing guides help organizations ensure internal compliance with service
contracts and maintain centralized control over freight tendering decisions.
Organizations must continue to manage freight after it has been tendered to carriers
by maintaining in-transit visibility of shipments and monitoring carrier performance.
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Summary (cont.)
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