Logistics Industry
Overview
Customers of logistics services are
seeking greater reliability at lower total cost consistently –
whether across the globe or in one sub-continent. But as
higher performance from greater end-to-end integration,
supported by better visibility tools, becomes more attainable,
the approaches of providers are diverging.
More customers are recognizing that
to realize the full value of the potential trade-offs from
outsourcing, they need to broaden their span – from purchasing
many piecemeal transportation and warehousing services, to
fewer, bigger contracts with much wider scope.
In response, the Logistics Provider
industry has been evolving to offer greater scope and more
complex solutions. However, for the more demanding customer
segments – those seeking greater integration and higher
degrees of process conformance – there is often a gap between
buyer needs and provider capabilities. Often, providers market
and represent capabilities that they have not yet implemented,
so they over promise and under deliver.
The business model of most
providers traps them because of their inability to scale
offerings, thus failing to generate returns which will allow
them to meet the expectations of high process conformance
buyers. High process conformance, in this context, is the
ability to deliver end-to-end supply chain integration and
synchronization repeatedly for many customers, establishing de
facto process and technology standards.
For the more demanding customers,
the provider model must be reinvented. So providers
increasingly must choose between serving a large commodity
segment and the growing, but more demanding, high process
conformance segments.
The journey toward value starts
with having strategic clarity about the market segments in
which to participate (see Figure 1). It involves an
overlapping sequence of activities to develop enhanced
provider capabilities, including:
- Strategic clarity – Rigorously align target market
segments and value propositions with organizational culture,
business model, core competencies, asset planning and
performance measures.
- Standardization and integration – Proactively sell
the value of standardized and integrated global processes and
shared user services – internally and externally.
- Componentization – Provide customized solutions from
a set of standardized – but configurable – process,
information, work flow and value-added components.
- Global governance – Improve global deal consistency
by moving such contracts to global Profit and Loss statements
(P&L's) and reserving traditional country P& L's for
narrow scope activities.
- Service innovation – Invest in new capabilities
(such as visibility, supply planning and control; dynamic
synchronization and optimization of business processes; a
virtual supply chain information platform).
- Teaming capability – for the emerging "Synchronized
Providers" – Invest in teaming skills in the new era of
"co-opetition," where the value and breadth of services
offered to their customers will amplify as the service
provider's network of partners grows.
No provider today can complete this
transformation as a "single project." It is a strategic
journey. The journey will need to be broken into manageable
chunks of initiatives which can be realized in well-defined
timelines and at relatively low risk. Where any one provider
begins will depend upon its own business goals, market
pressures and the maturity of existing capabilities. The
future Logistics Provider industry will be more global, more
concentrated, more segmented around customer types and
universally better at execution.
Business processes will be
standardized and systems integrated. There will be better
visibility of end-to-end supply chain information and
integration with partners and customers. The industry will
have effective, shared metrics to continuously measure
performance and handle exception management more easily
through event monitoring linked to business rules. And at long
last, providers will have a single view of their larger global
customers. To read the full report or an executive summary
version, download a PDF file at the top of this page.
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