Shipping & Freight
Manufacturers of all types from apparel to pharmaceuticals and high tech to machinery suppliers require shipping and freight logistics to bring their products to market and use all modes of transportation — light freight (UPS and FedEx parcels), heavy freight (full truckload, less-than-truckload), containerized overseas and air cargo. Some transportation companies themselves rely on final segment delivery using UPS and FedEx distribution networks while most fulfillment houses, media (printing and publishing) companies, medical/dental labs (blood and tissue samples; prosthodontia and cosmetic devices) and retailers (customer service returns, catalogue and store orders) manage carriers’ route, load, rate and surcharge complexities. Our experts offer clients help with carrier contract negotiations, freight bill payment and audit services, supply chain optimization, logistical advice and much more.
Benefits:
- Our partner is a highly experienced auditing and cost containment specialist — not a freight forwarder or a transportation company
- Our auditing and consultation services are contingency fee based — no out of pocket expense
- Our partner works with our clients’ existing carriers and rarely offers alternatives — no risk Supply Chain Optimization maintains current logistics while improving operational performance
- Our licensed freight bill payment and audit software analyzes invoices to ensure accuracy, identifies duplicates and overcharges, allows for customized trending graphics and dashboards
- We guarantee late delivery refunds; we identify and claim packages manifested but not shipped
- We save our clients shipping expenses, staff time to manage, review, process and pay invoices
Contact Me About:
SUCCESS STORY

Consumer Electronics Company
One of our experts' clients has built its reputation by manufacturing and shipping the highest quality, state-of-the-art consumer electronics equipment and accessories from international manufacturing plants to retail centers throughout the world. With a global supply chain logistical network, the challenges of coordinating inbound and outbound shipping, meeting production plans and retail replenishment requirements, and keeping transportation costs as low as possible required additional resources not readily available.
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