The Oceania Times

Top Menu

  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • Cookie Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

Main Menu

  • Australian Economy
  • Brokers
  • Commodities
  • Currencies
  • Financial Market
  • Gold and Precious Metals
  • Investment
  • Stock Shares
  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • Cookie Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

logo

The Oceania Times

  • Australian Economy
  • Brokers
  • Commodities
  • Currencies
  • Financial Market
  • Gold and Precious Metals
  • Investment
  • Stock Shares
  • Boral Shares Surge, Brokers Remain Cautious

  • UPDATE 1-Yellen touts battery investments, supports Europe’s plans for competing subsidies

  • Daiichikosho Shares Rise Sharply After It Posts 75% Rise in Nine-Month Net Profit

  • Setting Australia’s space priorities | The Strategist

  • When All That Glitters Is Not Gold

Brokers
Home›Brokers›Shippers take note: Brokers lead the FreightTech charge

Shippers take note: Brokers lead the FreightTech charge

By Megan
May 31, 2022
67
0
Share:

Legacy trucking companies, once at the forefront of innovation, have fallen behind in the FreightTech arms race in recent years. Freight brokerages are now the trailblazers.

By implementing the latest visibility technologies, brokerages like Loadsmith are now confidently competing with the largest asset-based carriers.

“Digital freight matching and real-time rating and visibility — the greatest advancements in [freight] technology over the last five years — have not been developed by your traditional trucking companies,” said Loadsmith CEO Brett Suma.

Things have only gotten worse for such carriers as capacity has become scarce to the point that shippers are finding difficulty in committing freight with preferred carriers, even with larger trucking companies.

For this reason, Suma urges shippers to shake the notion that asset-based trucking companies are first and brokerages second in the pecking order for contractual freight.

“Customers [shippers] don’t look at brokers the same as they do asset-based brokers,” Suma said. “I think that’s a mistake because brokerages such as Loadsmith have a tremendous amount to offer.”

Brokerages like Loadsmith, Suma said, view relationships with the customer through the same lens as a trucking company in terms of wanting to build out its freight networks and lane density.

But Loadsmith is not a typical brokerage. Its value propositions include capacity, service and price — with an additional carve-out for real-time visibility.

“Ninety percent of our freight’s contractual — that’s unheard of for a brokerage with the growth trajectory of Loadsmith,” Suma said. 

In fact, Suma doesn’t think the title of brokerage applies. “I don’t call Loadsmith a brokerage. In our mind, we’re not a brokerage,” he said. “Do we broker freight? Yes. Most asset-based trucking companies broker freight. … We’re no less a trucking company than the largest out there, it’s just that our assets are independently owned and operated.”

Further distinguishing Loadsmith is its unwavering goal of optimizing its freight network with greater consistency and lane density. 

“The more consistent we are, the more efficient we make the carrier,” Suma said. “The higher our reuse rate, the more capacity that we provide our customers.”

It’s not that asset-based trucking companies are willfully ignorant of innovation, it’s just that they can’t afford the freedom that 3PLs and brokerages like Loadsmith can. Suma explained how the messy business of driver recruiting and retention is proving to be an obstacle holding back many trucking companies from tech exploration.

“[We have] an advantage in the marketplace for drivers because we’re not trying to hire employees to come drive for us; we’re working directly with business owners that drive,” Suma said. “And because of that, we’re able to focus on the future of truckload transportation instead of having to hire, retain and manage thousands of driving employees.”

Freedom from such constraints has allowed Loadsmith to aim for an autonomous future. Suma outlined Loadsmith’s plans with FreightWaves last month — namely, to fully automate trucking’s middle mile by 2024.

“Autonomy thrives in repetitive tasks, so it fits right into our capacity-as-a-service platform because of the density of our freight networks,” he said, explaining that a high-density corridor with moderate and predictable weather and route conditions, such as between Dallas and El Paso, Texas, is the perfect testing ground for the company’s autonomous plans.

A recent partnership with autonomous driving technology company TuSimple will give Loadsmith 350 self-driving trucks to exclusively run middle-mile logistics when the technology is fully operational. Loadsmith looks to be on the right track: Earlier this month it selected Mastery Logistics’ MasterMind TMS to power its capacity-as-a-service network.

Although Suma aims for Loadsmith to become the first driverless trucking company, he’s made it clear that drivers will still play a crucial role. With a power-only middle mile, drivers will still be needed for first- and last-mile duties. He said this not only guarantees them work in the future, but that its more regional routes will provide drivers more opportunities to be home each night.

“The future is a mode-agnostic middle mile,” Suma said. “Our autonomous middle-mile trucks will operate any mode needed, whether it be a flatbed moving one direction, then a van moving the other; it could be a third-party trailer going one way and an ocean container in the other. Mode agnosticism allows us to really focus on optimization.”

Click for more FreightWaves content by Jack Glenn.

More from Loadsmith:

Loadsmith’s capacity as a service to help launch autonomous future

Loadsmith aims to fully automate middle mile by 2024

Source link

Previous Article

Insurance broker Acrisure touches $23 bln in ...

Next Article

Insider Buying: Donegal Group Inc. (NASDAQ:DGICA) Major ...

0
Shares
  • 0
  • +
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Megan

Related articles More from author

  • Brokers

    CBRE Brokers Sale of The Ridge at Rockrimmon Apartments in Colorado Springs

    July 25, 2022
    By Megan
  • Brokers

    Santander makes improvements to broker platform

    December 6, 2022
    By Megan
  • Brokers

    Brokers Predict The Aaron’s Company, Inc. Earnings in FY2022 (NYSE:AAN)

    October 28, 2022
    By Megan
  • Brokers

    Brokers Set Expectations for SVB Financial Group’s FY2022 Earnings (NASDAQ:SIVB)

    July 30, 2022
    By Megan
  • Brokers

    $17.5 Million Construction-to-Permanent Financing Secured by Lev Brokers in Chesterfield, Michigan

    July 28, 2022
    By Megan
  • Brokers

    Researchers find access brokers focused on US targets

    February 25, 2022
    By Megan

Leave a reply Cancel reply

You may interested

  • Gold and Precious Metals

    Triple Flag Precious Metals (NYSE:TFPM) Sees Large Volume Increase After Analyst Upgrade

  • Gold and Precious Metals

    Edelweiss Gold & Silver NFO: Can precious metals add glitter to your portfolio?

  • Brokers

    Broker Spotlight: Don Langdon, Douglas Elliman Palm Beach, Wellington And Jupiter

  • LATEST REVIEWS

  • TOP REVIEWS

Timeline

  • February 9, 2023

    Boral Shares Surge, Brokers Remain Cautious

  • February 9, 2023

    UPDATE 1-Yellen touts battery investments, supports Europe’s plans for competing subsidies

  • February 9, 2023

    Daiichikosho Shares Rise Sharply After It Posts 75% Rise in Nine-Month Net Profit

  • February 9, 2023

    Setting Australia’s space priorities | The Strategist

  • February 9, 2023

    When All That Glitters Is Not Gold

Best Reviews

Latest News

Brokers

Boral Shares Surge, Brokers Remain Cautious

This story features BORAL LIMITED. For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: BLD Despite consensus-beating earnings in the first half, brokers remain wary around pricing and costs for Boral. -First half earnings ...
  • UPDATE 1-Yellen touts battery investments, supports Europe’s plans for competing subsidies

    By Megan
    February 9, 2023
  • Daiichikosho Shares Rise Sharply After It Posts 75% Rise in Nine-Month Net Profit

    By Megan
    February 9, 2023
  • Setting Australia’s space priorities | The Strategist

    By Megan
    February 9, 2023
  • When All That Glitters Is Not Gold

    By Megan
    February 9, 2023
  • Recent

  • Popular

  • Comments

  • Boral Shares Surge, Brokers Remain Cautious

    By Megan
    February 9, 2023
  • UPDATE 1-Yellen touts battery investments, supports Europe’s plans for competing subsidies

    By Megan
    February 9, 2023
  • Daiichikosho Shares Rise Sharply After It Posts 75% Rise in Nine-Month Net Profit

    By Megan
    February 9, 2023
  • Setting Australia’s space priorities | The Strategist

    By Megan
    February 9, 2023
  • Boral Shares Surge, Brokers Remain Cautious

    By Megan
    February 9, 2023
  • Australia’s economy: boom or bust?

    By Megan
    September 9, 2019
  • Australian economy suffers virus symptoms

    By Megan
    February 10, 2020
  • Australian economy likely already slowing in Q2 before Delta downturn

    By Megan
    August 30, 2021

Trending News

  • Brokers

    Boral Shares Surge, Brokers Remain Cautious

    This story features BORAL LIMITED. For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: BLD Despite consensus-beating earnings in the first half, brokers remain wary around pricing and costs for Boral. -First half earnings ...
  • Investment

    UPDATE 1-Yellen touts battery investments, supports Europe’s plans for competing subsidies

    (Adds comments on European clean energy incentives) By David Lawder SPRING HILL, Tenn., Feb 8 (Reuters) – U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen touted clean energy investments on Wednesday at a ...
  • Stock Shares

    Daiichikosho Shares Rise Sharply After It Posts 75% Rise in Nine-Month Net Profit

    Published: Feb. 8, 2023 at 8:36 p.m. ET By Kosaku Narioka Daiichikosho Co. shares rose sharply Thursday morning after the Japanese karaoke company posted a 75% rise in nine-month net ...
  • Australian Economy

    Setting Australia’s space priorities | The Strategist

    Australia is an Indo-Pacific country with a democratic ethos. Its role in shaping the discourse on strategic policy—in areas such as representative governance structures, the rules-based international order and responsible ...
  • Gold and Precious Metals

    When All That Glitters Is Not Gold

    When the Covid lockdown happened back in March 2020, it accelerated shifts that were already in progress in the movie industry. Fewer people were seeing films in theaters, and streaming ...
  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • Cookie Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
© Copyright The Oceania Times. All rights reserved.

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Get our latest downloads and information first. Complete the form below to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.