Tucker Blog
Showing posts with label Freight Forum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Freight Forum. Show all posts
Thursday, August 31, 2017
GLOBAL TRADE MAGAZINE LEADING 3PL HONOR
Global Trade Magazine Names Tucker Company
Worldwide among America’s Leading 3PLs for 2017
Tucker Company Worldwide was thrilled
to be chosen as one of Global Trade Magazine’s Leading 3PLs – an annual list
that honors 100 of the best, biggest and brightest 3PLs based on a year’s worth
of study that includes industry reputation, innovation and exceptional
operational excellence.
Tucker Company Worldwide is featured by Global
Trade Magazine as a “Specialty Cargo” focused 3PL: reflecting our dedication to
all types of difficult freight. “Oversized, delicate, high value,
hazardous… each of these freight types is wildly different,” said Jeff Tucker,
CEO of Tucker Company Worldwide, “however - they have one thing in common: all
require the utmost care, and must be handled by competent professionals and
carefully designed procedures. At Tucker, we’ve spent over 56 years perfecting
our approach.”
We are grateful to Steve Lowery, Senior Editor of Global Trade
Magazine for this recognition!
ISO 9001:2015 CERTIFICATION
TUCKER CERTIFIED FOR NEW ISO 9001:2015 STANDARD
Part of
Tucker’s differentiation in the transportation market has always been our focus
on excellence. And whether it’s in our industry, or within our company or
service offerings, we feel that nothing worth doing is easy. In late 2007, we
put our company through an expensive and rigorous 9-month training program to
become certified to the international quality Standard known as ISO 9001, a
disciplined quality management system designed to ensure that companies
consistently meet and exceed the needs of customers and other stakeholders. To
stay certified, firms must undergo annual on-site audits by independent third
party firms. Tucker has been ISO 9001 certified continuously since 2008.
This
past June, the annual audit was particularly challenging because we were being
audited against the newest ISO Standard issued in 2015. Though the deadline for
compliance to the new 2015 Standard is September 2018, we are so very pleased
to report that we’re now ISO 9001:2015 compliant - and over a year ahead of
time!
“As a risk management focused company, I
particularly appreciated ISO 9001:2015 for its higher emphasis on performance
monitoring, and the introduction of a more disciplined approach to engage in
risk-based thinking in everything we do. As an intermediary that serves the
needs of so many parties in every single movement, the 2015 Standard really
complements and enhances the way we operate the business,” said Jim Tucker,
president and COO.
Tucker
is proud of our team for putting in the extra hours, and the hard work it took
to learn a new Standard and earn this prestigious certification.
INBOUND LOGISTICS' TOP 3PL DISTINCTION
TUCKER AWARDED INBOUND LOGISTICS' TOP 3PL DISTINCTION IN 2017
Inbound
Logistics editors informed Tucker that we’ve once again earned a spot on their
“Top 100 3PL” list in 2017. This marks 17
years of consistently being ranked among the top. In an industry with
nearly 16,000 licensed 3PLs, that’s some rarified air.
From
Felecia Stratton, Editor, Inbound Logistics: “Tucker Company Worldwide continues to provide the logistics,
transportation, and supply chain solutions Inbound Logistics readers need to
achieve the visibility and control that drives successful supply chains. Tucker
is flexible and responsive, anticipating customers’ evolving needs. Tucker
deserves recognition for providing the innovative solutions empowering
logistics and supply chain excellence in 2017.”
On
behalf of our company and all of our tremendous staff, our CEO Jeff Tucker
thanked Ms. Stratton and the editors at Inbound Logistics, as well as our
customers and carriers who value what we do. As our company evolves from a
traditional transportation service provider to a data-centric, organizational
behavior modifying 3PL, we appreciate the recognition of our team’s hard work.
CAPACITY WOES
CAPACITY'S TIGHT
So
tight, in fact, that large trucking firms are turning away hundreds of
loads per day. One of our carrier friends is turning away hundreds of EDI
tendered loads (typically, contract rates and lanes) per week. So what’s going
on? There are more causes than you can shake a stick at, but here are just a
few:
- We’re 4 months from the USDOT’s ELD mandate, expected to remove 5-10% of capacity from an already tight marketplace.
- We’re 4 months into the FDA’s Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA), which is shuffling the deck of carriers that food shippers risk using—shifting from owner operators to more sophisticated fleets. ATA reported in 2016 that only about 5% of the nation’s products move in temperature controlled equipment. With much of that typically being moved by owner operators, the shift to more advanced outfits, coupled by higher rates, are seriously impacting temp control markets. Making things worse for trucking - but good for our farmers - 2017 was largely a more “fruitful” growing season, further straining capacity.
- Major retailers who are trying to catch Amazon have instituted very aggressive new compliance fees, penalizing suppliers for things like late deliveries, rescheduled appointments, early deliveries, and so on. A vendor can get dinged for its carrier being late, and again for rescheduling a delivery. You can’t argue the need to pace Amazon, but restricting flexibility during a time of tight capacity - which is only expected to worsen - spells missed sales, huge fees, unhappy consumers, and a nightmare for retail suppliers’ customer service teams.
Typical reactions to capacity tightening involve shippers using
more intermodal, but maybe not this time. The nation’s third largest railroad,
CSX is having a heck of a time right now as it seeks to revamp its network
toward higher productivity. According to Cowan & Company, “more than 80% of
respondents to a CSX Service Quality survey say they’ve experienced service
issues,” since the switch, and “67% of respondents have transferred freight to
a trucker.” Other reports indicate Jacksonville, Memphis and Atlanta are among
the hardest hit areas. Coincidentally, those markets have been toughest on
truck capacity!
ELD ROULETTE
ELD Roulette: “I’m not worried: my carriers are compliant and the mandate will
probably be delayed!” Not so fast!
A challenge to delay the ELD mandate failed in the U.S.
Supreme Court in June. A bill was introduced in the House of Representatives
(HR 3282) which is designed to delay the mandate. The bill does not have
support of house or committee leadership, and there’s no support in the Senate.
To put it simply: it’s doomed to fail. Planning a business around a delayed ELD
mandate is a fool’s game.
If
you’re not worried, you should be. Even if all of your carriers really are
compliant, they will still be fielding a gold rush of calls from other shippers
whose carriers aren’t. In brief: the ELD
Mandate requires all commercial motor vehicles to be equipped with technology
which tracks drivers’ hours of service before December 18, 2017. ELDs replace
paper logs, which are fraught with errors. Despite having 3 years notice, many
experts estimate that nearly 50% of all commercial motor vehicles still haven’t
met the ELD requirement, a mere four months from the mandate. Every buyer of
freight will be impacted if even a small portion of those currently
noncompliant carriers choose to leave the industry. And compliant carriers lush
with load offers will likely give their trucks and drivers to the highest
bidders.
When the mandate takes effect, two things are certain.
First, many carriers won’t be ready, and will be placed out of service until
they become compliant. That means other shippers and brokers will pay top
dollar to steal your carriers and your capacity from you. Secondly, experts who
are studying the impact of converting paper logs to ELDs find some fleets are
driving 100-120 additional miles per day! That’s nearly 20% excess/illegal
hours. If 50% of fleets lose 20% of miles, it’s as if 10% of the nation’s
capacity disappears. Even if it’s only 5%, it’s a heck of a lot worse of an
impact than the 2003-2004 crisis, when hours of service were reduced.
Friday, March 1, 2013
JEFFREY TUCKER SPEAKER AT GSA TRANSPORTATION FORUM
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
JEFFREY TUCKER SPEAKER AT GSA TRANSPORTATION FORUM
Cherry Hill, NJ USA, March 1, 2013
On February 20, 2013, in Washington, DC, Jeffrey Tucker,
CEO, Tucker Company Worldwide was an invited speaker at the General Services
Administration’s (GSA) third annual Transportation Forum. Mr. Tucker provided
an overview of transportation brokers and forwarders, and their value
proposition to shippers and carriers; as well as their impact on the
environment, by lowering emissions. Tucker’s remarks started with the
regulatory basics; and moved to characteristics of better brokers; myths and
facts; and finished with best and emerging practices for the largest shippers
to manage complex logistics programs.
Tucker stated, “I’m honored and humbled to be asked to
speak again to the GSA and its partner agencies in Washington. What GSA is
doing with its new transportation management system, is uniquely harnessing the
power of the marketplace, and driving savings and efficiencies. It’s a forward
thinking, innovative effort that should be admired by logisticians, and
appreciated by taxpayers.”
The third annual GSA Transportation Forum was held at the
Ronald Regan Building in Washington, DC February 19th – 20th. The Forum
is an annual meeting of government and industry transportation professionals
that serves as a touch point for education and discussion.
Tucker Company Worldwide, Inc. is America’s oldest
privately held freight brokerage, and is based in Cherry Hill, NJ. Tucker
specializes in arranging shipments of high value, high security, climate
controlled and otherwise sensitive materials for some of the world’s best known
brands. Tucker is active in its trade association and serves on a select
committee reviewing motor carrier safety for the U. S. Department of
Transportation. Tucker has been a first responder supporting the government
with trucking of relief supplies for most of the nation’s natural and manmade
disasters in the last 30 years.
Contact: Jeff Tucker, CEO; jefft@tuckerco.com (mailto:jefft@tuckerco.com) ; 856-317-9600
ext. 122; mobile: 856-498-5361 ###
Tucker Company Worldwide | 900 Dudley Ave, Cherry Hill,
NJ 08002 | 856.317.9600
Labels:
Freight Forum,
GSA,
Jeffrey Tucker,
Press Releases
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