Long known for working diligently to squeeze every mile possible out of a gallon of fuel, Mesilla Valley Transportation also aims to wring costs out of every facet of its operation, including its back office.
Mesilla Valley was launched in 1981 by Royal Jones, then an owner-operator and now the CEO, president and majority owner. The fleet started out hauling refrigerated freight and by the early ’90s had begun expanding its service offerings. It now ranks as one of the largest full-service truckload carriers based in the Southwest and operates nationwide as well as internationally.
Unsettled by the amount of manual intervention required by an electronic billing and settlement system — despite it being dubbed “paperless” — the fleet began looking for a more streamlined way to handle the process.
Robert del Plain, Mesilla Valley’s director of information technology, explains that the existing system lacked integration with the carrier’s back office setup. As a result, billers were “spending time manually reviewing every bill and then they had to get the right documents to the right people.”
Determined to cut out that inefficiency, Mesilla Valley opted to implement the SHIPS billing and settlement solution. The provider, EBE, promised that SHIPS would integrate robustly with the fleet’s systems and that its automated decision-support applications would improve the workflow for the billers.
After implementing the new system, Mesilla Valley gained a one-day reduction in its billing cycle and recorded a significant uptick in billers’ productivity.
“In the months since we deployed EBE, we have been able to free up more than a million dollars in working capital while improving productivity,” says del Plain.
He says that with SHIPS up and running, billers were able to finish their work in six hours rather than eight, as they no longer needed to manually check the accuracy of documents. In addition, the EBE system integrated in such a way that it let Mesilla Valley take full advantage of its other systems. What’s more, billers reported a 35% reduction in the amount of time spent processing invoices.
“These process improvements and higher productivity stretched across the entire organization,” del Plain says, “as the filing and approval of documents became streamlined.”
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