Trimble said its acquisition of Kuebix will allow it to break down the silos in the supply chain. 
 -  Graphic: Trimble Transportation

Trimble said its acquisition of Kuebix will allow it to break down the silos in the supply chain.

Graphic: Trimble Transportation

Trimble Transportation says its latest acquisition will allow it to transform the supply chain – not by “uberizing” it, but by creating a single TMS that will allow true visibility and collaboration between shippers, carriers, and intermediaries.

Trimble is acquiring Kuebix, a transportation management system (TMS) provider that has created a large connected shipping community. Trimble Transportation will bring together its network of fleet customers, which represent more than 1.3 million commercial trucks in North America, with Kuebix’s more than 21,000 shipping companies, into a new platform for planning, execution and freight demand-capacity matching.

“Our mission is to transform the way the world works,” said James Langley, senior vice president for Trimble Transportation, in a conference call with reporters. He pointed out the deep penetration the company has in the industry, with Trimble technology on more than 85% of the top 200 trucking companies in the U.S.

“We have high penetration, but really the end game is how we really fundamentally change the way real people do real work,” he said, by connecting the digital and the physical world.

Dan Clark, founder and president of Kuebix, explained that his company was founded on the vision of “transparent connectivity between the shipper and the carrier.

“We’ve been able to build a community of shippers of over 20,000 companies participating on our TMS, working with carriers on daily basis managing logistics operations.”

Bringing this large number of shippers, carriers, and intermediaries together in the same platform, company officials explained, will allow shippers to get better capacity, carriers to get more freight, accelerate the supply chain and reduce inefficiencies.

“We think it’s going to transform the industry over time,” Clark said.

Beyond Visibility

By extending the Kuebix multi-tenant, cloud TMS platform to carriers and intermediaries, Trimble said, it will enable a more connected experience to optimize the logistics process – from order management to financial settlement.

Plenty of money has been poured into efforts to transform the supply chain with technology, Langley pointed out. But it tends to be in silos, he said, with people trying to make one part of the supply chain more efficient, whether that be the carrier, the shipper, the warehouse manager, etc.

“Quite frankly, over $19 billion has been dumped into the transportation technology space in the last three years. Why? Because there’s a ton of inefficiency in this industry.” He pointed out that the average driver only uses about 7 hours of his 11-hour driving clock each day. Many trailers are still going down the road empty, or only three-quarters full. “How do you solve those problems if you can’t see outside of your four walls?” he asked.

Trimbe believes with the Kuebix acquisition, it can help everyone in the supply chain address those problems.

“A lot of people come in and say they want to Uberize the industry,” Langley said. “But you’re finding a lot of medium to large carriers are looking for a trusted technology partner that brings a value to them as well. There’s got to be a win-win. We just want to enable all parts of the supply chain to just do business more efficiently and effectively.”

Kuebix said it provides a transportation management system (TMS) that powers North America’s largest shipping community. 
 -  Photo: Trimble Transportation

Kuebix said it provides a transportation management system (TMS) that powers North America’s largest shipping community.

Photo: Trimble Transportation

This will go beyond the visibility offered by players such as 10-4 and Macropoint, he said, which have helped shippers know where their loads are and when trucks are going to arrive late – especially since the electronic logging device mandate forced more trucks to get connected.

“Shippers said, ‘I got a taste of this visibility, and I like it. But now I want actionability. I don’t want to just see the truck or where it’s going to be late; I want to dynamically change the supply chain to meet my customers’ needs.’”

Accelerating the Supply Chain

Among other things, the new TMS will change the way the bidding process works, Langley said.

“Quite frankly the way it works today is painful – 80% of business is done through an Excel spreadsheet for committed contract freight. We go through this process to make one or two year commitments and then 20 percent falls over to the spot market. The vision is as we have more deep granular data… I think you’ll see decision-making is going to accelerate. As opposed to two-year contracts in Excel spreadsheets, I think you’ll get a more seamless process. The supply chain now moves too fast, it’s hard to commit out two years in advance what you’re going to do. I think that procurement process will be much easier both on contract and spot market freight.”

In short, broad digital 'platforms' are becoming the place where supply chain business is conducted in the 2020s.

“We are seeing today good examples of the supply chain moving to the digital world,” Langley said. “The innovation here is we have access to all this data, we have access to very rich data, and we have it in almost real time. Decisions have to be made faster because of the velocity of the supply chain, because of the digital aspect of the supply chain. We need to make decisions faster and with more data,” he said, so both the physical movement of freight in the supply chain and the financial aspect, the transfer of money, happens faster.

“The agility of the supply chain has to accelerate, and the only way you’re going to do that is to connect and collaborate.”

The transaction is expected to close in the first quarter of 2020, subject to customary closing conditions. Financial terms were not disclosed.

About the author
Deborah Lockridge

Deborah Lockridge

Editor and Associate Publisher

Reporting on trucking since 1990, Deborah is known for her award-winning magazine editorials and in-depth features on diverse issues, from the driver shortage to maintenance to rapidly changing technology.

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