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Freight Mobility

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The money, time, and effort spent to fulfill customer requirements is also seen ... Shippers spend nearly $ 1 Trillion annually on logistics ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Freight Mobility


1
Freight Mobility
  • A Shippers Perspective
  • Mississippi Valley Conference
  • Of State Highway and Transportation Officials
  • July 18, 2002
  • Ron Dvorak
    The Dvorak Group

2
Background
  • The Paper Forest Products Industry is the 3rd
    largest freight commodity group in the USA
  • The value of shipments originating in the
    Mississippi Valley States are in excess of 75
    billion annually
  • It utilizes just about every transportation mode
  • It is Global
  • It has had to re-invent itself to meet customer
    requirements - it learned what the term pull
    means

3
Four Points
  • A healthy economy depends on Mobility
  • Freight Mobility Personal Mobility are closely
    linked
  • Shippers pay the bill
  • Shippers are concerned

4
Consider What a Shipper Does
  • They are in the order fulfillment business
  • They are customer driven
  • Their economic success is achieved by meeting
    certain metrics
  • Service Level
  • Time
  • Total delivered cost

5
MobilityTodays Reality
  • Customers demand predictability and seamless
    execution whether they are buying something or
    going somewhere in their car
  • Customers expect the right product, in the right
    place, at the right time, in the right amount,
    and at the right price
  • Goods today are rarely produced in the market
    (let alone the same country) they are consumed
  • Nearly 10 of our GDP is spent by shippers to
    meeting customer needs

6
Freight MobilityThe Conundrum
  • A fundamental disconnect exists in our personal
    understanding of what is required to meet our
    needs as a customer and what is required by a
    shipper to meet those needs
  • The money, time, and effort spent to fulfill
    customer requirements is also seen as a nuisance
    and a major constraint on our personal mobility
    by the very same customer
  • Yet shippers know that if they fail to meet those
    requirements, the customer will go somewhere
    else, and the shipper will loose the business

7
Shippers Pay the BillThe True Stakeholder
  • Shippers spend nearly 1 Trillion annually on
    logistics
  • Shippers invest another 1.5 Trillion in
    inventories to service their customers
  • Shippers fear logistics costs in the future will
    far outpace all other operating expenses
  • Regulatory actions
  • Existing capacity constraints, projected
    double-digit growth rates, and no definitive plan
    to address it

8
Shippers are Concerned
  • The expectations of customers to get what they
    want, when they want it, and at the right price
    will only continue to rise
  • Failure to respond is lost business customers
    will continue to substitute to get what they want
  • Shippers see their logistics cost rising
  • Every day low pricing will put further pressure
    on margins
  • Concern over the inflationary impact of a strong
    economy on logistics costs
  • Shippers traditionally relied on government
    planning agencies to figure it out when it
    comes to transportation planning
  • Today, shippers cannot see a light at the end of
    the tunnel
  • They fear agencies will attempt to regulate
    their way out
  • They are reliant on a political process that
    doesnt understand their needs
  • They characterize the risks as significant
    without fundamental change

9
Shippers are ConcernedWe need to find a new
approach to an old problem!
  • In the 1950s the public and elected officials
    considered highway congestion the main urban
    transportation problem.
  • Consequences of the Development of the
    Interstate Highway System for Transit National
    Research Council Report 1997

10
Moving Forward
  • Shippers feel that we do have a productive
    transportation network that generally supports
    our existing customer driven process
  • It is competitive and it does work
  • It is our perceived inability to grow this
    network to keep pace with demand that deeply
    concerns everyone

11
Moving Forward
  • Freight planning, and specifically the need to
    understand freight movements, needs to be a
    required part of any transportation plan
  • An ongoing freight movement review process needs
    to be in place to monitor system performance,
    identify trends, and inform the public
  • Start by focusing on regional corridors. It can
    jump-start the freight planning process and serve
    as a foundation for the future
  • Utilize industry representation as a way for
    shippers to work with regional planning agencies

12
Moving Forward
  • Avoid the temptation to regulate various freight
    modes as a tool to gain short-term relief to
    personal mobility issues. Absent of a decline in
    demand, it will only make the over-all problem
    worse
  • Find ways to fast track the transportation
    planning process to allow for substantive changes
    and the necessary infrastructure investment to
    occur in a more timely manner
  • We need a measurement system to track system
    performance over time and to better inform the
    stakeholders (public)
  • A full-time commitment by all stakeholders to the
    process is important right now. Shippers are
    optimistic that we can find effective solutions
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