What rates can be used in
a 'Rate Comparison System'?
"Bureau Rates" - Bureau rates can be thought of as the
'average rate' for that shipment.
(+) The rates do not favor any
carrier.
(-) Added
expense to purchase rate base. Reduces carrier's ability
to creatively discount.
'Single Carrier Rate Base' -
Used when a customer's priority is to compare 'Apples to
Apples'
(+) Low/no
cost to obtain rate base.
(-) Gives huge advantage to that one carrier.
Reduces all other carrier's ability to creatively
discount. (This method can be thought of as you having
to charge your customers based on your competitors cost,
not based on your costs)
'Multi-carrier Rate Bases' -
Each carrier is allowed to use the rate base of their
choice, the same rate base as they would do without a
rate comparison program.
(+/-) Depending on the rate comparison system
selected, obtaining the rates can range from low/no cost
to hundreds or thousands of dollars per rate
base.
(+) Customer
can take advantage of each carriers lane pricing, which
can be YOUR LARGEST AREA OF COST SAVINGS. Carriers spend
thousands of dollars a year analyzing freight lanes,
forcing those carriers onto either a single or bureau
rate base removes their ability to offer you the
advantage of their lane pricing. Also, carriers can be
the most creative with discounting when using the
carriers own rate base.
(-) Not all comparison systems can handle more
than one rate base, but will the savings of purchasing a
'single rate base' system offset the saving LOST due to
loss of lane pricing.
What types of rates can
the shipping system handle?
Most systems handle CWT /
hundred weight rates. LTL carriers sometimes offer Skid
/ Pallet, Lineal and cube pricing.
Who maintains the carrier
rate bases?
The system provider can
either as maintain carrier rate bases as maintenance or
on a 'per fee basis' or they can be maintained by the
customer.
What types of discounting
/ pricing can the shipping system handle?
The two main kinds of
discounting are percent and FAK / Freight All Kinds.
Carriers can also offer pricing applied per zip code,
per service type (direct / inter-line), per direction
(inbound / outbound), per terms (Pre-paid / Collect /
Third Party). Most can handle the basic FAK and percent,
but does the system allow those types of pricing per
freight class? Can the system handle your current
carrier tariffs?
How does the shipping
system allow for Fuel Surcharges?
When fuel goes over $1, most
carriers start charging a surcharge. While the surcharge
is based on a government weekly average, the
similarities stop there.
The fuel surcharge varies by
the day of the week the surcharge is implemented, the
amount that is charged, whether or not the surcharge
applies to accessorials.
How does the shipping
system allow for Accessorial Charges?
Not all accessorials can be
calculated prior to shipment, such as 'per hour'
charges. Charges that can be calculated prior to
shipment are done so either as a flat charge, a per
hundredweight charge or as a percent of base
charges.
Who maintains discounts,
fuel surcharges and accessorials?
The system provider can
either as maintenance or on a 'per fee basis' or they
can be maintained by the customer.
Does the system include
carrier service standards?
Current carrier service
standards are important both in finding the fastest
carrier and also for calculating carrier rates. Carrier
pricing is often dependent on if a shipment is direct or
interline or via a partner carrier. Having no service
files or outdated service files can greatly affect the
accuracy of your rates.
Who maintains the carrier
service files?
The system provider can
either as maintenance or on a 'per fee basis' or they
can be maintained by the customer.
What features and services
are included in the price and what items are
extra's?
On some systems, even basic
items such as the Bill of Lading is listed as an extra
(for an extra price). Some of the older and more basic
systems on the market can only rate one freight class
per shipment.
What is the basic function
of this system?
There are accounting,
warehouse, small package and complete business systems.
And there are shipping systems. And there are LTL
shipping systems. Can these systems do anything more
than create a Bill of Lading? Can they even create a
Bill of Lading? Even if you are looking at something
that is only a shipping system, was it designed for
Truckload, Rail, Logistics or LTL?
What are the requirements
for printing?
Will you need to purchase
specific printers? Will you need to purchase pre-printed
forms, and from whom? Will you need to purchase
additional software report software? Is there an
additional charge to create the Bill of Lading
form?
Is the system windows or
DOS based?
While both may function fine,
this could be a good indicator of how current the
software is, and how long it will continue to be
supported before 'support is no longer
available.'
Do you need your system
interfaced? Can it be? And at what cost?
What are the reasons you need
your system interfaced? Are those reasons worth the
cost? Some systems are only designed to work with one or
two accounting systems. While (just about) anything can
be done for a price, what is the estimate to connect to
YOUR system?
For more
information please contact us at
Phone:
877-277-5904
Fax: 952-345-0577
E-mail: mailto:[email protected]