Parcel - April 2008 - (Page 18) LOWERING YOUR PARCEL SHIPPING COSTS Eight critical questions to ask ith supply chains becoming tighter and order sizes becoming smaller, more companies are turning to parcel shipping in an effort to meet their customers’ expectations at a price point they can afford. As a result, the parcel shipping industry has enjoyed doubledigit growth for the past several years. But even with its growing popularity, this mode of transportation has often been “under the radar” of professional logistics management. It has not received the same level of scrutiny and optimization that the more traditional modes like LTL, TL and rail have. Consequently, according to a recent survey by Aberdeen Consulting, 28% of the companies surveyed were planning on moving to a more effective solution — a multi-carrier manifesting system. The reason for this level of interest is clear: Companies using best-of-breed multi-carrier parcel manifesting systems are able to save a great deal of money by automatically taking the lowest rate, choosing the correct level of priority for delivery, and consolidating shipments for zone skipping. For example, after implementing such a system from Precision Software, Emerson Process was able to save 7.4 million Euros in just two and a half years by consolidating multiple parcel shipments going from Asia to Europe (and the US) into a single air shipment, then dis-aggregating them on arrival. Along with these kinds of savings, companies using such systems are able to serve their customers better with real-time rate quotes and status checks. For companies shipping to markets outside their own borders, tier-one solutions already have denied party screening and international documentation capabilities built into the system. Using such automated document preparation capabilities allowed Elizabeth Arden to cut overtime 25% for the group responsible for preparing international shipments, in spite of a 25% increase in shipping volume. Cutting costs and improving performance in production shipping environments like Emerson and Elizabeth Arden is only part of the story. There is another type of parcel user that is 18 Spring 2008 W By Bill Petersen more likely to work in an office or research lab, and that is the non-production or desktop shipper. More and more companies are beginning to look at desktop shipping and ask themselves if there might be better ways to manage this often uncontrolled source of transportation spend. Companies wishing to lower their parcel shipping costs will want to ask themselves eight critical questions: 1. Carrier selection: Are you accessing the rate tables of multiple carriers so that each shipment is being made with the lowest-cost provider that will satisfy your customer’s needs? 2. Priority: Is the shipment being made at the appropriate level of priority? Does it really need to be delivered overnight? 3. Consolidation: Are multiple shipments to the same region being consolidated, or are they being handled individually? 4. Data entry: Is any information that is already digitally available being manually keyed into any system? Or is the same information being manually entered more than once? 5. Compliance: Is the addressee of every shipment being checked for being on any denied party list? Are all international documents being prepared automatically by the system? 6. Auditing: Is the amount actually charged by the parcel carriers being compared to the amount that was expected? Are accessorial charges being checked to ensure that they are actually warranted? 7. Availability: Is the system available to every authorized employee across the company, regardless of location or position? 8. Contract Management: How many parcel contracts are in effect? Are you leveraging the rates that you were able to negotiate for your production shipments to cover your non-production shipments as well? Lowering costs while increasing the level of service that they can offer is what is allowing companies like Emerson to distance themselves from the competition. Bill Petersen is VP of Business Development at Precision Software. He can be reached at bill.petersen@precisionsoftware.com or 361-779-8195. ■ www.PARCELindustry.com http://www.PARCELindustry.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Parcel - April 2008 PARCEL - April 2008 Contents Editor's Note Moving Forward Recycling for Safety’s Sake Want Some Good News? Negotiations Have No Finish Line... Lowering your Parcel Shipping Costs Meeting Industry Challenges New Pricing, New Opportunities Time to Track It’s Scan-tastic! 10 Recycling Facts The New USPS Law Changes New Law, New Opportunities for Package Shippers A Diamond in the Rough Seven Shipping Trends for 2010 ...and Beyond The Move Update Changes A Simple Shipping Solution A Case Study in Efficiency New Products and Services Industry News Advertiser Index Parcel - April 2008 Parcel - April 2008 - PARCEL - April 2008 (Page 1) Parcel - April 2008 - PARCEL - April 2008 (Page 2) Parcel - April 2008 - PARCEL - April 2008 (Page 3) Parcel - April 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Parcel - April 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Parcel - April 2008 - Editor's Note (Page 6) Parcel - April 2008 - Editor's Note (Page 7) Parcel - April 2008 - Moving Forward (Page 8) Parcel - April 2008 - Moving Forward (Page 9) Parcel - April 2008 - Moving Forward (Page 10) Parcel - April 2008 - Moving Forward (Page 11) Parcel - April 2008 - Recycling for Safety’s Sake (Page 12) Parcel - April 2008 - Recycling for Safety’s Sake (Page 13) Parcel - April 2008 - Want Some Good News? (Page 14) Parcel - April 2008 - Want Some Good News? (Page 15) Parcel - April 2008 - Negotiations Have No Finish Line... (Page 16) Parcel - April 2008 - Negotiations Have No Finish Line... (Page 17) Parcel - April 2008 - Lowering your Parcel Shipping Costs (Page 18) Parcel - April 2008 - Lowering your Parcel Shipping Costs (Page 19) Parcel - April 2008 - Meeting Industry Challenges (Page 20) Parcel - April 2008 - Meeting Industry Challenges (Page 21) Parcel - April 2008 - New Pricing, New Opportunities (Page 22) Parcel - April 2008 - New Pricing, New Opportunities (Page 23) Parcel - April 2008 - Time to Track (Page 24) Parcel - April 2008 - Time to Track (Page 25) Parcel - April 2008 - It’s Scan-tastic! (Page 26) Parcel - April 2008 - It’s Scan-tastic! (Page 27) Parcel - April 2008 - 10 Recycling Facts (Page 28) Parcel - April 2008 - 10 Recycling Facts (Page 29) Parcel - April 2008 - 10 Recycling Facts (Page 30) Parcel - April 2008 - 10 Recycling Facts (Page 31) Parcel - April 2008 - The New USPS Law Changes (Page 32) Parcel - April 2008 - The New USPS Law Changes (Page 33) Parcel - April 2008 - New Law, New Opportunities for Package Shippers (Page 34) Parcel - April 2008 - New Law, New Opportunities for Package Shippers (Page 35) Parcel - April 2008 - A Diamond in the Rough (Page 36) Parcel - April 2008 - A Diamond in the Rough (Page 37) Parcel - April 2008 - Seven Shipping Trends for 2010 ...and Beyond (Page 38) Parcel - April 2008 - Seven Shipping Trends for 2010 ...and Beyond (Page 39) Parcel - April 2008 - The Move Update Changes (Page 40) Parcel - April 2008 - The Move Update Changes (Page 41) Parcel - April 2008 - A Simple Shipping Solution (Page 42) Parcel - April 2008 - A Simple Shipping Solution (Page 43) Parcel - April 2008 - A Case Study in Efficiency (Page 44) Parcel - April 2008 - A Case Study in Efficiency (Page 45) Parcel - April 2008 - New Products and Services (Page 46) Parcel - April 2008 - New Products and Services (Page 47) Parcel - April 2008 - Industry News (Page 48) Parcel - April 2008 - Industry News (Page 49) Parcel - April 2008 - Advertiser Index (Page 50) Parcel - April 2008 - Advertiser Index (Page 51) Parcel - April 2008 - Advertiser Index (Page 52)
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