Title: Transload Distribution Association
1Transload Best Practices
Vann Cunningham AVP Economic Development BNSF
Railway
- Transload Distribution Association
- Annual Meeting
- April 21, 2009
2Transload Study Objectives
- Drive capture growth in the BNSF transload
network. - Benchmark transloading activities at other Class
I railroads to answer the following questions - What ownership/organizational models are being
employed in the rail industry? - What best practices are evident in railcar
transloading? - What is the "healthiest" (sustainable/viable)
financial model? - Understand strategic issues, not develop detailed
data on transloading networks, operations and
facilities. - BNSF will use the results as input to developing
its overall transload strategy - Determine the best model for BNSF and how the
model will be implemented - Establish policies to enable consistent decisions
regarding transloading
3 Transload Business Model DimensionsWhere Do We
Want to Be?
Low Level of RR
Control High
RR Developed (for Megapolitan and Production
Markets)
Site Locations/ Focus
RR Mega Sites
Private Sites
RR Differentiated
Site Operator Quality
RR Controlled
RR Criteria/Investment
Transloader Dependent
Trucking Options
RR Vendors
Truck Neutral (for Bulk facilities)
Transloader Service
RR Sales/Promotion
Dedicated RR Sales
List of Sites
BD/Joint Selling
RR Leads to Oper
Billing/Other
RR Bundled (subsidiary or 3rd party provides
bundled billing)
RR Invoice Oper Charges
Unbundled
Oper TL Truck
BNSF Today
4Issues to Consider
- Is available transload capacity critical to
Industrial Products growth? - How significant is the risk that the private
market will not develop needed future capacity? - Does transloading generate adequate returns to
justify capital? - Does BNSF need more commercial control of
transload facilities?
5Study Findings - Best Practices
- Strategy is commodity and location specific
consider make/buy at each point control where
it matters for each commodity. - Double-breasted strategy is most effective
need to have RR-controlled facilities, designated
transloader sites, and private sites to cover all
growth channels. - Multi-commodity mega-sites are the wave of the
future, as long as you have the capital and
long-term view. - Neutral trucking is best customers want to
select their own truckers. - Joint selling with the transloader is most
effective.
6Business Model DimensionsSite Locations/Focus
Low Level of RR
Control High
Site Locations/ Focus
RR Mega Sites
Private Sites
RR Differentiated
RR Developed
Recommendation Develop Transload Capacity in
Megapolitans and Select Rural Surge Markets
- CONS
- Business case for incremental volumes usually
does not support development of complete new
facility. - Owning the site does not provide commercial
control without additional criteria.
- PROS
- Many sites are small, operating at or near
capacity and have significant operating issues. - 2-3 year lead time needed for new facility
development is too long to capture immediate
opportunities. - Few greenfield sites are being developed by
transload operators. (Majority of existing sites
are recycled properties.) - Lack of compatible sites in megapolitan areas
waiting could result in non-competitive transload
locations.
BNSF Today
7Business Model DimensionsSite Operator
Quality
Low Level of RR
Control High
Site Operator Quality
RR Criteria/Investment
Transloader Dependent
RR Controlled
Recommendation Establish criteria for a network
of facilities to gain consistency, quality and to
ensure BNSF has flexibility to capture
Railroad-desired business.
- PROS
- Provide network consistency for large customers.
- Creates a transload product BNSF can sell.
- CONS
- Staff and monitoring resources.
- How do we address lack of alignment between
transload operator revenue and Railroad- desired
business?
BNSF Today
8Business Model DimensionsTrucking
Low Level of RR
Control High
Transloader Service
Truck Neutral
RR Vendors
Trucking Options
Recommendation Move toward truck neutrality in
bulk facilities.
- CONS
- BNSF does not control the majority of facilities.
- Transloaders indicate trucking is more profitable
than transloading.
- PROS
- Customers prefer options - BNSF will have the
opportunity to capture business from customers
with truck fleets or customers with existing
trucker contracts. - Creates a more competitive trucking environment.
BNSF Today
9Business Model DimensionsSales Promotion
Low Level of RR
Control High
RR Sales/Promotion
Dedicated RR Sales
BD/Joint Selling
List of Sites
RR Leads to Oper
Recommendation Create a joint marketing and
sales process with Transload operators.
- CONS
- Resource requirement is unclear.
- PROS
- Leverage transload operator knowledge of
destination market and BNSF relationship with
shippers. - Increase internal BNSF knowledge of transload
network constraints.
BNSF Today
10Business Model DimensionsBilling/Other Services
Low Level of RR
Control High
RR Bundled (subsidiary or 3rd party provides
bundled billing)
Pricing
Unbundled
Oper TL Truck
RR Invoice Oper Charges
Recommendation No change to bundling. Offer
door-to-door service where appropriate.
- CONS
- Does not address simplified billing.
- PROS
- Bundled pricing adds administrative complexity to
transactions.
Less than 3 of moves today utilize bundled
pricing.
BNSF Today
11Next Steps
- Sites
- Review BNSF-owned facilities to maximize
efficiency. - Evaluate opportunity to expand existing
facilities (Premiers). - Identify land for future greenfield facilities.
- Identify potential partners willing to commit
capital. - Operators
- Reevaluate and expand premier network.
- Identify criteria to improve quality and
throughput of network. - Consider RFP for group of BNSF-owned facilities.
12Next Steps
- Trucking
- Explore options to move toward truck neutrality
in bulk facilities. - Sales
- Create a joint marketing and sales process with
Transload operators. - Billing/Other Services
- Introduce BNSF Logistics for door-to-door
opportunities.