One of the world’s largest automotive parts manufacturers improved inbound transportation, reducing carbon emissions and logistics costs. The key was optimizing transportation planning across the enterprise and supplier base, and this case study explains how they did it.
The company is a multinational corporation based in Canada, with 347 manufacturing facilities in 28 countries. Like many manufacturers, it relied on ERP software (SAP) and used call-off orders to manage supplier shipments.
ERP software rarely includes transportation details in its production and supplier ship dates calculation. Consequently, ERP demand dates drive supplier shipping without regard for their impact on transportation, and it’s not unusual for half-empty trucks to deliver orders.
In this case, the number of partial trucks delivering supplier shipments presented an attractive opportunity to the company for cost savings and shrinking its CO2 footprint.
The opportunity was a luscious piece of fruit at the top of the tree - visible but only reachable with help. Optimizing inbound transportation is one of the most difficult challenges in the supply chain for several reasons:
While the factory could not control supplier shipping processes, it did control production and call-off dates in its ERP system governing supplier shipments. The ability to adjust shipping and production dates to enable better transportation capacity utilization would achieve the objectives of reducing cost and emissions without compromising reliability.
The company began to search for a dynamic leveling solution that would more effectively utilize truck capacity to minimize cost and carbon footprint by adjusting demand-based production planning and supplier ship dates.
The company selected flexis Transportation Planning & Scheduling (TPS) solution to meet the abovementioned customer requirements.
Here’s a synopsis of how the new process works:
flexis TPS gives the customer enterprise visibility to incoming parts from suppliers and allows daily monitoring of inbound logistics activities such as:
TPS is operational in over 12 plants, and with more sites ramping up, fewer trucks are on the road and crowding loading docks. Visibility to incoming freight and logistics metrics is increasing. The manufacturer’s enterprise process is also growing more robust with a more agile, capable solution phasing out the legacy system.
While this case highlighted how a multinational manufacturer radically improved inbound transportation from suppliers, flexis Transportation Planning & Scheduling is doing the same for delivery operations of all sizes in other industries.
If you want to learn more get your Guide to Logistics 4.0
In this Guide you will learn:
Why a strategic process in transportation planning is a top priority for digitalization
What megatrends will increase supply chain volatility
How to manage it
Download our presentation and learn:
How can transports be planned quickly and yet flexible so that CO2 savings are verifiable?
How do you make optimal use of a multimodal transport network that maintains supply in both the short and long term?
How can you more easily realize a modal shift when disruptions occur? And how do you keep a grip on your CO2 emissions in doing so?
flexis and BigMile present a Use Case of a modal shift and show that network optimizations and sustainability often go hand in hand.