Bohemia, NY –
TransportGistics, the leading provider of simpler is better logistics solutions
has just released its latest version of RoutingGuides.com. The new “friendly”
technology improves and speeds up communications between shippers, carriers, and
consignees, and enables users to post, manage and distribute carrier assignments
and rules of engagement with immediate communications to vendors. It enables
customers to measure vendor compliance and make sure they are shipping products
correctly and most importantly, RoutingGuides.com presents a clear choice of
carriers, a clear understanding of how to use those carriers and a clear
understanding of whom to contact (and a method to contact them) in the event a
problem arises.
Specific improvements to
RoutingGuides.com include:
More
finite inquiry –
enabling vendors to more easily locate the information they require to comply
with their customers requirements including weight and service parameters.
Improved routing guide administration features– enabling compliance and logistics managers to more easily manage,
change and add carrier assignments and rules of engagement
Improved reporting features
– providing more comprehensive and insightful access to vendor activities
Enhanced communication features
– closing the communication gap between vendors and customers.
According
to Alan Miller, president and CEO of TransportGistics, “The upgrade process was
transparent to our customers; they are already enjoying the benefits. Because of
the way our technology is deployed, all our customers and their vendors were
able to immediately engage the improvements without any negative impact.”
Routing
guides are a primary transportation management tool. They enable shippers to
ensure that their vendors and customers are using the carriers, rates and
services that shippers negotiated. The guides also enable shippers to maintain a
manageable number of delivering carriers to maximize efficiencies of the freight
receiving process. However, until remote computer access through
RoutingGuides.com was introduced to the transportation industry more than two
years ago, the War and Peace –sized printed routing manuals were
universally considered a headache by shippers who had to update, print, and
distribute them, and by vendors who had to look up each shipment in every
shipper’s unique guide in order to comply with their complicated instructions.
Now, changes can be made in real time and full compliance to shipper
instructions is assured.
“If a
standard route assignment has not been issued for an extraordinary shipment,
vendors and customers can fill out a route request form that will automatically
direct the shipment parameters to a routing desk via email or the RoutingGuides
desktop management tool,” explained Miller. “Through this medium, shippers
eliminate untimely, interruptive phone calls allowing them to manage their time
more effectively and maintain an electronic
file of requests and responses.”
RoutingGuides.com simplifies the entire compliance process and concurrently
leverages all shipment volumes to drive down transportation costs. It identifies
a shipper’s choice of carriers to be used for shipments of merchandise varying
in weight and service, and it identifies all shipping, packing, marking, and
communications requirements as well. RoutingGuides.com also provides transit
times, delivery requests and links between shipping and inventory.
RoutingGuides.com is a
product of TransportGistics, Inc., a handpicked team of international
transportation and logistics experts with roots that reach into all aspects of
the Global Supply Chain. It specializes in “simpler is better” tools that help
companies manage transportation services and customer delivery.
TransportGistics products address the inefficiencies in transportation
management, reduce freight expense, simplify the functions to be executed, make
transportation information immediately visible to all parties involved in the
transaction process, improve communications, improve performance, lower costs,
and increase productivity without sacrificing investments in existing
technologies.
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