Archive for the ‘global positioning’ Category

GPS and Freight logistics software

Monday, January 24th, 2011

Global Positioning System (GPS) provides reliable location and time information of any GPS navigation device. There should be an unobstructed line of sight from the device to at least four GPS satellites which helps to track the device irrespective of the location and weather. There are 30 satellites on its orbit, which track the various GPS devices all over the world and pass information to them. The entire system is maintained by the Government of United States of America and the system can be accessed by anyone with a GPS navigation device, without any cost.

The information passed between the satellite and the device contains the timestamps as well asthe exact location of the device. GPS navigation is used for military as well as civilian purposes. Any civilian with a GPS navigation device (Mobile phones with GPS capability, Handheld GPS devices etc.) can use the service. Ordinary phones, Smartphones and Androids now have GPS facility in them. The technological advancements and developments has reduced the cost to a greater extent and hence GPS integrated mobile phones are available in India at a rate of USD 100 (INR 5,000). The major GPS device brands include Garmin, Magellan, Leica, Holux etc.

Even though GPS is in its growing stage in India, many industries and sectors have been using the system for a while. One major industry which can gain a lot by implementing GPS is the transport sector. Many clients of transport companies are insisting on installing GPS devices in the trucks, which enables the client to keep a track on the movement of their goods. Hence more transport firms are going ahead by implementing a GPS navigation device in their vehicles and a GPS control room to track them and process the data.

SA-F.M.S has a module which can be integrated with the vehicle tracking system (GPS). Various details regarding the vehicle location, distance covered, time taken can be tracked live using this module. The various advantages of implementing the GPS module in SA-F.M.S Freight Logistics ERP include

  • Control over the extra distance covered by drivers
  • Reducing fuel pilferage
  • Tracking of vehicles and goods
  • Trustable data on current location
  • Avoiding the misuse of fuel

Logistics Management Solutions

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

The Indian Road Goods Transport Industry

The Road Goods Transport Industry (RGTI) has played a pivotal role in trade and commerce in India especially in the past few decades. Its rising share in relation to the railways is an indication of its popularity. A recent study (Deloitte) observed that the share of the road made in total freight movement has been increasing over the past 3 decades – the share having been estimated to have increased from 34.5 per cent in 1970-71 to around 63 per cent in 2001-02. During the period 1991- 92 to 1998-99, road freight is supposed to have grown at a compounded annual growth rate of 11.9 per cent while rail freight movement grew only at about 1.5 per cent. However, in the past few years, the shift to road transport has been slower with the road share having only increased gradually from 59 per cent in 1995-96 to 63 per cent in 2001- 02- indicating a slowdown in the growth of road transport market share over the rail share. However, it is expected that this share would go up, albeit gradually, to stabilize around 85 per cent.

Though emerging as a dominant mode, the industry has not been able to emerge out of the traditional unorganized framework, being as it is (still) dispersed in terms of a large number of small operators. In other words, the dominant feature even today is that a significant part of the vehicle fleet is under Small Road Transport Operators (SRTOs). According to a study conducted in the late 1990s, almost 77 per cent of the fleet was under operators who owned up to a maximum of 5 trucks while about 10 per cent was under those who owned between 6 to 10 trucks. Further, 4 per cent were under those owning 11 and 15 vehicles while 3 per cent belonged to truckers with 16 to 20 trucks. Only about 6 per cent of the vehicles were with operators owning more than 20 trucks. The situation has apparently changed when we compare the situation in the late 1980s when it was claimed that 95 per cent of the vehicles belonged to those operators who had less than 5 vehicles (UN Mission). The large number of operators constituting a fairly large unorganized proportion of the trucking industry (in terms of supply) has traditionally been the result of lower capital requirements, ease of obtaining truck driving licenses and permits, low mental skills as compared to physical abilities and easy availability of freight.

The organised component of the industry consisting of the fleet operators is small in number and has a fleet with varying payloads. The fleet is primarily used for general goods transportation with the operators working on the basis of a hub and spoke distribution model. The unique ownership profile in the industry has created middlemen who act as liaison agents for small trucking operators who do not have the geographical reach to tap business on a continuous basis and hence are forced to rely on these middlemen. With transportation companies (big fleet operators) gradually moving from an asset based to a non-asset based model, it is widely recognized that dependence of small fleet operators and small operators on brokers is expected continue to have an impact on the physical as well as the financial performance of these operators.

Profitability of truck operations depends on the following factors:

a) Capacity utilisation

b) Number of trips made

c) Fuel Prices

d) Other operating costs

In order to maximize their profitability, truck operators can:

1. Increase their revenue by overloading the vehicles, in general, and

2. Maintain a suitable vehicle mix according to payload capacity of the vehicles based on the freight availability, type of freight carried and long term contracts with customers.

However, it has been noted that profitability has been declining in the past decade due to a variety of factors including falling capacity utilisation, rising price of diesel etc. On the other hand, freight rates have gone up very gradually.

Freight Management System for India, Africa and the Middle East

A bundle of economic benefits for transporters and logistics operators

# Technology -SA-FMS Logistics ERP had a distributed three tier architecture for local and remote branch connectivity that worked on low bandwidth (128 kbps)

# Product updates – Regular updates protected the client with regulatory changes and technology obsolescence.

# Document management – Manual documents have to be retained for 10 years at the head office. The documents included invoices, proof of delivery, lorry receipts, contracts and a maze of documents. Typical document retrieval took 10 – 20 minutes for a clerk.

# SMS – A two way SMS gateway that talks to the database for enquiries. Effective communications saved at least two clerks for head office. Calls from customers and branches flood the office from morning till evening. Sometimes the queries are pertaining to a year old consignment took hours to fetch. Here all the user had to do was to SMS the waybill number to the designated mobile ID.

Direct cost of back office clerk

# Claims. Effective tracking of consignments from various locations would reduce the current claims by 50%. Typical transport companies pay 2 – 3% of revenues on claim settlement.

# Billing – Monthly billing for regular customers is cumbersome. POD (Proof of Delivery) is mandatory for all consignments and one missing would mean the entire payment being held up.

Each customer had different format for submitting billing. Some clients for example had mandatory SAP interface for submitting invoices. The billing team had 3 full time accountants and if FMS were to be implemented, two of them could be used for productive jobs such as account management and payment recovery.

# Route optimization – FIFO method of loading and route management helped faster dispatches. A wrong dispatch would result in re-routing the consignment with higher transaction cost. Each branch had a traffic controller who spent 2 – 3 hours tracking wrong dispatches.

# Statutory needs – Each truck had to copy multiple documents including sales tax declarations, vehicle manifests, octroi statements and loading and unloading sheets.

# Vehicle tracking – Provision for integrating FMS to GPS (Global Positioning System)

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