Title: The Structure of Freight and Distribution
1The Structure of Freight and Distribution
- Several issues and trends of importance when
considering the patterns of freight movement - The relative importance of road freight
transport. - The perceived and actual relative limitations of
rail freight and its restricted role in domestic
distribution. - The change in the nature of traffic and total
ton mileage sent by road and rail over the past
two decades. - The change in the nature of the services offered
by public hauliers towards a total distribution
service.
2Trends in transport and Logistics in Europe
- Steady economic growth has increased demand for
transport - Uniform increase in passenger freight transport
(tonnes/km) over the last 2 decades - Increase in international trade relations due to
liberalisation of world trade geographical
specialisation of production - Forecasts predict that if the rate of European
integration continues as planned then - freight traffic will double by year 2010 i.e.
from 120,000 vehicles/day (in two directions
added together) - Approx 75 of this will be between London-Milan
corridor - Lost travel time in Germany (main road freight
transport country in Europe) is estimated around
275 million Euros/year. - Some governments keen to levy a specific road
freight tax
3Logistics Trends in Europe
- Decisions concerning logistics can be divided
into - the structure of the supply chain (i.e. the
location and size of production or processing
plants, storage sites - trends towards increased
centralisation of inventory at larger
geographical scale - Single European Market -
means increase in transport distance) - the alignment of supply chains (i.e. the
breakdown of the chain into different processing
segments, the number location of supplies and
the ultimate destination of the product - firms
focus on core competencies hence increased
sourcing leading to increased freight transport -
see strategic positioning matrix) - the scheduling of the product flow (i.e. the
frequency of delivery, the mode of ordering and
delivery) - the management of logistics resources (i.e. the
size of vehicles used, types of handling and
storage system and their effectiveness of use)
4Strategic positioning of leading European
logistics operators (Peter 1999)
High
Schenker
PO Trans European
Exel Logistics
Kuhne Nagel Danzas
TNT Logistics
Tibbett Britten
Royal Nedloyd
TDG
Ryder PLC
Hays Distribution
Geographical Coverage
GEODIS Logistics
Christian Salvessen
BTL AB
TecnoLogistica
ASG AB
McGregor Cory
BOC Distribution
Frans Maas
Stok Inter Penske
Wincanton Logistics
Logistique Logistics Europe
DFDS
Low
High
Contract logistics focus
Low
5Scheduling of the product flow
- Emergence of new management principles such as
- JIT, quick response, lead-time management, lean
logistics, agile logistics, efficient consumer
response etc. - Numerous developments in process pipeline
mapping techniques to analyse eliminate slack
time and non-value adding activities - Pressure to time compress logistical systems
6Consumer service requirements
7Types of Services
- The market for road freight is divided between
own-account (where a manufacturer, retailer
etc., operates its own freight vehicles) and
hire-and-reward (professional - public haulage
carriers) operators. - The background to this structure is the
development of the licensing system for road
freight. From a legal point of view there is
little difference between own account and
hauliers.
8The Haulage Market
- Dominated by small operators.
- Smaller hauliers tend to offer less specialised
service (though not necessarily poor quality
service). - Hauliers tend to operate their business in an
ad-hoc fashion which might mitigate against a
total distribution service. - Hauliers may sub-contract.
9Outsourcing
- ..is the act of moving firms internal activities
decision responsibility to outside provider - Several reasons for outsourcing (see attached
list from Chase, Aquilano Jacobs, Ops
management, 9th ed 2001) - Firms able focus on core competencies to secure
competitive advantage whilst reducing costs - Dramatic growth in outsourcing Logistics function
i.e. Third-party logistics
10What is Outsourcing?
Defined
- Outsourcing is defined as the act of moving a
firms internal activities and decision
responsibility to outside providers
11Reasons to Outsource
- Organizationally-driven
- Improvement-driven
- Financially-driven
- Revenue-driven
- Cost-driven
- Employee-driven
12Benefits of Third-Party Logistics
- Holistic service provision (i.e. managing the
complete cycle from packaging, collection,
loading, unloading and delivery etc.) - Improved delivery speed reduced risk unreliable
of transportation of goods - Usage of latest freight tracking technology (EDI,
satellite to keep customers informed about
drivers deliveries) - This is important when delivery window may be 30
minutes as in JIT - These days tracking technologies linked through
the internet thus customers able to follow
delivery arrival times - Disadvantages
- Reduction in workforce
13Transport Modal Choice
- Freight transport is not a single homogeneous
product. - Different transport services (e.g. different
carriers in the same mode) offer different
qualities of service. - This is also true for different transport modes
(e.g. road or rail, air or sea). - Modal choice is likely to be dependent upon
- Delivery Speed
- Delivery Dependability Reliability
- Cost
- Quality
- Route Flexibility
- Customer communication etc.
14Volume/value determinants of transport mode
High
Air
Road
Rail
Value
Water
Pipeline
Low
High
Low
Volume
15The relative performance of each mode of transport
Key 1 Best performance, 5 Worst performance
16Rail versus Road
- Rail considered more efficient for high volume,
low value materials and/or for longer distance
consignments (say gt200 miles). - Road haulage still popular choice for most
distributors including those to Europe. This is
despite a number of technical and/or marketing
initiatives undertaken by Rail companies.
17International Air Freight Transport
- Typical characteristics are its
- a) Speed of delivery - reduced inventory
investment. - b)Reliability of delivery - reduced inventory
investment due to lower safety and buffer stock. - c)Environmental Impact - less requirement for
packaging due to lower probability of damage and
reduced likelihood of pilferage (?)
18Advantages of Air Freight Distribution (compared
to surface freight)
- Lower Inventory costs - less need to hold large
inventories due to speed and improved certainties
of deliveries. - Lower Packaging costs - but from airport to the
final destination will require packaging. - Local Distribution costs - often airports closer
to the points of origination destination than
the depot of surface modals. - Lower Material handling costs - due to smaller
packages, which are easier to handle. - Lower Insurance costs - low incidence of loss,
damage pilferage. - Lower Administrative costs - due to greater
efficiency. - Reduced Vulnerabilities of non-performance - due
to less strikes.
19Disadvantages of Air Freight (compared to surface
freight)
- High freight cost of air distribution.
- Rates are much higher than for surface modes
20Air Freight Distribution and Management
- Air cargo rates are higher than other modes but
often total distribution costs can be lower
(reduced costs of inventory, insurance,
warehousing, packaging lead-times etc.- leading
to competitive advantages). - Often managers unable to overcome the
psychological barriers of air freight. - Managers need to conduct a trade-off analysis.
- Distribution of Traditional perishable goods
and emergency shipments by air are being
supplemented by more conventional consumer and
industrial goods.
21The Psychological Problem
- Increasing costs of distribution make reductions
increasingly worthwhile. As management
sophistication increases, this becomes more
widely accepted. - Air. However, awareness of the total
distribution systems concept will enable
management to identify situations when air
freight will minimise total distribution costs
and give marketing advantages. The problem is
psychological. These cost advantages are not as
obvious as the more direct advantages of high air
cargo rates. - Air Freight can reduce total distribution costs.
Freight rates will be higher than other modes.
Other costs, notably inventory, insurance and
packaging will be lower. - Upon which mode of transport or minimum total
costs - trade-off analysis.
22Characteristics of Air Freight
- Modern air freight was established in the early
1950s as a widening of cargo types. - Traditional perishable goods and emergency
shipments are being supplemented by more
conventional consumer and industrial goods -
routinely distribution by air. The trend towards
unit load devices in air freight is increasing
the types of cargo being handled (Equipment such
as the container, which comes in types and sizes
from the igloo to the 40 x 8 unit carried on
the B747F).