The Hidden Costs of Not-So-Friendly Ghost Lanes

Firms’ (shippers’) procurement of truckload (TL) transportation services is a costly, time-intensive process. The result of these months-long procurement events is typically thousands of contracts between the shipper and transportation service providers (carriers) covering each of the shipper’s la...

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Main Authors: Acocella, Angela, Caplice, Chris
Format: Working Paper
Language:en_US
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/143780
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author Acocella, Angela
Caplice, Chris
author_facet Acocella, Angela
Caplice, Chris
author_sort Acocella, Angela
collection MIT
description Firms’ (shippers’) procurement of truckload (TL) transportation services is a costly, time-intensive process. The result of these months-long procurement events is typically thousands of contracts between the shipper and transportation service providers (carriers) covering each of the shipper’s lanes (origin-destination pairs) over which it distributes products. Due to TL supply and demand uncertainty, shippers often adopt a coverage strategy to ensure contracted capacity is secured on combinations of lanes on which demand is expected. However, this strategy leads to unnecessary costs and inefficiencies.We find that a large percentage of shippers’ lanes never end up being utilized. We refer to contracted lanes on which no business materializes as ghost lanes. In this study, we characterize ghost lanes to help shippers identify which lanes need not be contracted in the first place to reduce existing startup costs. When none of the expected business on ghost lanes materializes, this disrupts carriers’ network balance and operating efficiencies and impacts service levels to other customers. We empirically demonstrate how the disruptions from ghost lanes from a shipper in one year factor into carriers’ performance and pricing decisions the following year. Moreover, for the lanes that are characteristically ghost lanes but that do materialize, carrier rejection rates are high as are contract prices relative to spot market prices - in other words, shippers are overpaying anyway. We conclude by recommending that firms reconsider their coverage approach to TL transportation procurement by excluding lanes with high probability of becoming ghost lanes (in particular, new lanes) from the traditional annual procurement process.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1437802022-07-16T03:38:03Z The Hidden Costs of Not-So-Friendly Ghost Lanes Acocella, Angela Caplice, Chris Freight procurement Truckload Empirical research Firms’ (shippers’) procurement of truckload (TL) transportation services is a costly, time-intensive process. The result of these months-long procurement events is typically thousands of contracts between the shipper and transportation service providers (carriers) covering each of the shipper’s lanes (origin-destination pairs) over which it distributes products. Due to TL supply and demand uncertainty, shippers often adopt a coverage strategy to ensure contracted capacity is secured on combinations of lanes on which demand is expected. However, this strategy leads to unnecessary costs and inefficiencies.We find that a large percentage of shippers’ lanes never end up being utilized. We refer to contracted lanes on which no business materializes as ghost lanes. In this study, we characterize ghost lanes to help shippers identify which lanes need not be contracted in the first place to reduce existing startup costs. When none of the expected business on ghost lanes materializes, this disrupts carriers’ network balance and operating efficiencies and impacts service levels to other customers. We empirically demonstrate how the disruptions from ghost lanes from a shipper in one year factor into carriers’ performance and pricing decisions the following year. Moreover, for the lanes that are characteristically ghost lanes but that do materialize, carrier rejection rates are high as are contract prices relative to spot market prices - in other words, shippers are overpaying anyway. We conclude by recommending that firms reconsider their coverage approach to TL transportation procurement by excluding lanes with high probability of becoming ghost lanes (in particular, new lanes) from the traditional annual procurement process. 2022-07-15T19:47:56Z 2022-07-15T19:47:56Z 2022-07-04 Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/143780 en_US SCALE Working Paper Series;2022-mitscale-ctl-03 application/pdf
spellingShingle Freight procurement
Truckload
Empirical research
Acocella, Angela
Caplice, Chris
The Hidden Costs of Not-So-Friendly Ghost Lanes
title The Hidden Costs of Not-So-Friendly Ghost Lanes
title_full The Hidden Costs of Not-So-Friendly Ghost Lanes
title_fullStr The Hidden Costs of Not-So-Friendly Ghost Lanes
title_full_unstemmed The Hidden Costs of Not-So-Friendly Ghost Lanes
title_short The Hidden Costs of Not-So-Friendly Ghost Lanes
title_sort hidden costs of not so friendly ghost lanes
topic Freight procurement
Truckload
Empirical research
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/143780
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