Larry Chaplin speaks at TMW's Transforum on the rise of outsourced maintenance. Photo: Master Fleet

Larry Chaplin speaks at TMW's Transforum on the rise of outsourced maintenance. Photo: Master Fleet

NASHVILLE -- Third-party logistics companies set a template in the transportation industry that has guided the rise of third party maintenance providers, according to Larry Chaplin, president of Master Fleet LLC, a Wisconsin-based maintenance provider.

Speaking at a session on outsourced maintenance at TMW Systems’ Transforum user conference here on Sept. 23, Chaplin noted that 3PLs were able to succeed because of they were able to meet the needs of both shippers and carriers and to do so more efficiently than either entity could on its own.

Chaplin said third-party logistic providers were able to drive billions of dollars in costs out of the supply chain because of five key reasons:

  • They invested in superior technology.
  • They recruited and hired superior, experienced supply chain experts.
  • They were able to aggregate volume by using technology to take thousands of loads, put them in a basket and find the right carriers for each one.
  • 3PLs have developed best practices and benchmarking because they were able to take the best solutions and practices from the shippers and carriers they work with and put them to work.
  • And finally, they “stuck to the knitting” and focused on their core competencies.

They were able to cut supply chain costs because they eliminated waste within the supply chain. Shippers did OK, carriers did OK, it was “truly a win-win-win solution,” he said.

There are similar forces at work in the outsourced fleet maintenance sector now, he said. Building a maintenance facility is a huge cost for a fleet, and the question has always been, where to put them, he noted. Should they be at the terminal, along a company’s major lanes, or somewhere else?

But there have been huge changes in trucking in recent years. Freight lanes change, there’s more intermodal freight, retailers and manufacturers are moving their distribution centers closer to population centers.

“There are constant changes where you need maintenance support as the distribution patterns change,” he said.

These changes mean fleets need flexibility in where they have their trucks serviced, and outsourcing that maintenance to third-party providers gives them that flexibility. Instead of spending millions on a facility that may not meet their needs down the road, fleets are instead moving those costs off their balance sheet onto the third-party service provider’s balance sheet, he said.

In this scenario, carriers are essentially sharing the cost of shops. “If they don’t need maintenance [today], they don’t pay. If the next day they have 10 trucks show up, there are people there to handle them,” he said. Fleets have taken a big fixed cost (their maintenance shop) and made it a flexible cost.

As with 3PLs, third-party maintenance providers enjoy volume efficiencies. They can spread their overhead around. They can use technology to make sure there is a demand and capacity match. Outside shops have extended hours of coverage.

Many third-party logistics providers have grown into huge businesses, and the same is true of maintenance providers, Chaplin said, with some companies operating hundreds of service locations. As with drivers, there is also a shortage of trained truck mechanics. While that is a problem for all types of maintenance operations, Chaplin said small shops have a harder time getting people, as the larger outfits are going straight to the tech schools and getting the “cream of the crop” by offering internships, tools and other incentives to go to work for them when techs finish their training. And the larger operations have developed a career path for the young people joining their firms.

Other advantages the larger operations have include being able to afford the various diagnostic tools required to work on trucks from different OEMs and the ability to invest in maintenance management technologies and software systems. “In a small shop, they can’t do that,” he said.

Large providers can work on their customers' trucks when and where needed, whether that means using mobile units to work on them in a customer’s yard or working on the vehicles at night and weekends. And they provide web access so their customers can check on the status of their vehicles at any time and from anywhere.

About the author
Jim Beach

Jim Beach

Technology Contributing Editor

Covering the information technology beat for Heavy Duty Trucking, Jim Beach stays on top of computer technology trends from the cab to the back office to the shop, whether it’s in the hand, on the desk or in the cloud. Covering trucking since 1988.

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