But there’s a blind spot hiding in plain sight: inbound freight.
Inbound transportation often represents one of the largest and least optimized cost centers in the supply chain. While companies invest in sophisticated TMS platforms, carrier scorecards, and parcel analytics for outbound freight, inbound shipments frequently remain fragmented, unmanaged, and reactive.
Here’s why inbound freight is commonly overlooked and what companies can do to take control.
1. Inbound Freight Is Often Vendor-Controlled
In many organizations, inbound freight operates under “prepaid” terms, meaning suppliers select the carrier and manage the shipment. While this may seem convenient, it creates several challenges:
2. Limited Visibility Creates Operational Blind Spots
When inbound freight isn’t actively managed, operations teams often don’t know:
This lack of real-time visibility leads to:
Inbound freight affects warehouse operations, inventory planning, and overall supply chain performance.
3. Data Fragmentation Prevents Strategic Optimization
Outbound freight typically flows through a centralized TMS with detailed reporting and KPIs.
Inbound freight? Often tracked in spreadsheets, vendor emails, or siloed systems.
Without clean, structured data, companies can’t:
If you can’t measure it, you can’t optimize it.
4. Accessorials and Compliance Costs Go Unchecked
Inbound shipments frequently accumulate unnecessary charges, including:
When vendors control carrier selection and routing, these fees often pass through without scrutiny. Over time, these incremental costs add up significantly.
Organizations that implement inbound freight auditing consistently uncover avoidable spend.
5. No Formal Inbound Strategy
Many companies have detailed outbound routing guides, carrier contracts, and service standards.
Far fewer have:
Without a defined inbound freight strategy, transportation decisions are made transactionally instead of strategically.
The Financial Impact of Inbound Freight Mismanagement
Inbound freight typically represents 30–50% of a company’s total transportation spend. Yet it often receives a fraction of the attention.
Common consequences include:
Even modest improvements in inbound optimization can generate meaningful cost savings and service improvements.
How to Optimize Inbound Freight
Companies looking to take control of inbound transportation should consider the following steps:
1. Take Control of Routing
Shift from prepaid to collect terms when possible so you control carrier selection, rates, and performance standards.
2. Establish a Vendor Routing Guide
Create clear expectations around approved carriers, booking procedures, and compliance requirements.
3. Centralize Data and Visibility
Consolidate inbound freight data into a TMS or reporting platform to track spend, performance, and consolidation opportunities.
4. Audit and Optimize Continuously
Review accessorial charges, benchmark rates, and monitor carrier performance to eliminate avoidable costs.
Inbound Freight Is a Strategic Opportunity
Inbound freight is often the least optimized part of the supply chain, not because it lacks importance, but because it lacks ownership. Yet companies that take control consistently gain better visibility, lower costs, stronger vendor compliance, and more predictable operations.
FreightSmith helps shippers bring inbound transportation under control — delivering visibility, data-driven routing, and proactive freight management that turns inbound from a blind spot into a competitive advantage.
It’s time to put inbound freight to work for your business.