Transport Market Research

Showing posts with label Transport Market Research. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Transport Market Research. Show all posts

Friday 5 September 2014

Logistics & Transport Market Research Technique by Tech guru


Transport and Logistics

The need to move goods is as old as the hills. In the 1930s road transport overtook rail as the main means of transporting goods around the country and it is big business – there are around 400,000 heavy goods vehicles on UK roads today. Yet, the term “road haulage industry” is outdated. This is an industry that has remodeled itself and now promotes itself as purveyors of logistics and supply chain solutions. But have things really changed?

Logistics market research

Road haulage has always been an industry with hundreds, if not thousands, of operators. The bedrock of the industry is small family firms with trucks that are at the customers’ behest if they need something moving. Being local to the source of whatever needs moving is important because it means that there are trucks close to base and the source of business. If the return journey of the truck is empty, so be it; the cost of the movement is borne by the single load. Without being too cruel about it, the small family firm is not the most sophisticated operator and it is our contention that their focus on price when selling their services does not serve them or the market very well.

The requirement to shift a load from A to B still dominates. However, there is also a more sophisticated need to provide a solution for goods storage, managing supply and moving products in a very tight time window. This change has taken place over the last four decades. Yet, despite these developments, there is still an unhealthy focus on price. This limits innovation, it stymies added value services and it reduces the amount of personal service that is offered.

You can’t blame the people who need haulage for wanting a bargain. A good price is an obvious and easy thing to measure and it is no surprise that it is a strong metric for decision making. But in this respect, hauliers are their own worst enemy as many still see themselves as delivery men. They still believe that a low price is the best and easiest way to win business and as a result they sell on price. It is about time that hauliers opened their ears and listened to their customers. Logistics market research and transport market research can help them do this.

Transport market research

Examples of our logistics market research and transport market research experience include: - b2binternational.com
  • Flight guide software
  • Freight forwarding
  • In-car telematics
  • Train refurbishment
  • Train test centre market assessment
  • Hauliers' propensity to bundle oil products (i.e. fuels, lubes) plus associated services (cards, fleet management, oils analysis application support, etc.)
  • Concessionaire relationship research (retail, financial services, car parks) throughout most major UK airports (Heathrow, Gatwick, Stansted)


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