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LCL: Norfolk Southern gets it..

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LCL: Norfolk Southern gets it..
Posted by Ulrich on Thursday, September 9, 2021 4:37 PM

Overshadowed by all the hype surrounding the CN/CP - KCS merger proposal is NS's foray into LCL (almost front page news in the latest Trains issue). Finally someone gets it! As most manufacturers are small(ish) most don't pump out truckload or carload volumes.. most ship in 1 skid to 5 skid increments, a market that the railroads have all but ignored now for 50 plus years.

Maybe the next step is the purchase of a large LTL carrier. We've done it in Canada a couple of years back with CN's purchase of TransX. Imagine Norfolk Southern buying a well run and well managed LTL outfit like Old Dominion.. the sky would be the limit. And maybe that would be better and faster than attempting to grow that business organically. 

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Posted by MP173 on Thursday, September 9, 2021 8:31 PM

Union Pacific tried it in the 80s with purchase of Overnite Express...a very well run LTL carrier.  It didnt work out.

The NS LCL program really intrigues me.  Would like to know more about it.  I called NS and left a voice mail...no reply.  

Ed

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Posted by Ulrich on Thursday, September 9, 2021 9:02 PM

MP173

Union Pacific tried it in the 80s with purchase of Overnite Express...a very well run LTL carrier.  It didnt work out.

The NS LCL program really intrigues me.  Would like to know more about it.  I called NS and left a voice mail...no reply.  

Ed

 

I knew Overnite would come up as it always does in this type of discussion. But that was 40 years ago, and Overnite wasn't a top notch carrier . The Wright Brothers also crashed their Flyer numerous times before finally achieving a sustained flight..yet we fly today. 

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Posted by Backshop on Friday, September 10, 2021 1:38 PM

MP173

Union Pacific tried it in the 80s with purchase of Overnite Express...a very well run LTL carrier.  It didnt work out.

The NS LCL program really intrigues me.  Would like to know more about it.  I called NS and left a voice mail...no reply.  

Ed

 

UPS couldn't make Overnite (UPS Freight) work, either.  Maybe the company has been "sick" for a long time?

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Posted by tree68 on Friday, September 10, 2021 7:31 PM

When UPS was young, that was how you sent stuff that had to be there in a couple of days - much faster that the post office could do it.

FedEx was for stuff that had to be there tomorrow.

Nowadays, they're all about the same.  

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Posted by BaltACD on Friday, September 10, 2021 9:02 PM

tree68
When UPS was young, that was how you sent stuff that had to be there in a couple of days - much faster that the post office could do it.

FedEx was for stuff that had to be there tomorrow.

Nowadays, they're all about the same.  

Post Office under DeJoy is slower by 3 days to a week.

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Posted by greyhounds on Friday, September 10, 2021 10:33 PM
LCL in boxcars is great.
 
I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again.  The US railroads didn’t abandon LCL service, they were driven out of it by the idiot government regulators.  Railroads such as the New York Central tried very hard to keep their LCL business but they were thwarted by the regulators.   And that’s a fact that I can back up with all kinds of research and data.
 
There are different ways to handle LCL/LTL.  But in this case, they’re using local trucks to pick up several smaller shipments from several shippers and bring them to a consolidation center.  At this center the shipments are sorted (“Cross Docked”) into a rail car going toward the destination on an expedited train.   At the destination terminal the rail car is unloaded into local delivery trucks.   This method works well.  A boxcar used in this service is essentially an intermodal car.  The truckers generally have to gather and cross dock too.
 
A boxcar used this way has an advantage on an over the road truck because it can handle much more volume and weight.   And hanging a boxcar or two on a train has very low marginal costs. If the railroad provides consistent, reasonably fast service they should have an advantage.
 
The main problem I see is that they are going into competition with a major customer.   FedEx is the largest LTL carrier in the US by revenue.  They ship a lot by rail.  You’ve got to think about it big time before you go into competition with a major customer.
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Posted by Ulrich on Friday, September 10, 2021 11:17 PM

greyhounds
LCL in boxcars is great.
 
I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again.  The US railroads didn’t abandon LCL service, they were driven out of it by the idiot government regulators.  Railroads such as the New York Central tried very hard to keep their LCL business but they were thwarted by the regulators.   And that’s a fact that I can back up with all kinds of research and data.
 
There are different ways to handle LCL/LTL.  But in this case, they’re using local trucks to pick up several smaller shipments from several shippers and bring them to a consolidation center.  At this center the shipments are sorted (“Cross Docked”) into a rail car going toward the destination on an expedited train.   At the destination terminal the rail car is unloaded into local delivery trucks.   This method works well.  A boxcar used in this service is essentially an intermodal car.  The truckers generally have to gather and cross dock too.
 
A boxcar used this way has an advantage on an over the road truck because it can handle much more volume and weight.   And hanging a boxcar or two on a train has very low marginal costs. If the railroad provides consistent, reasonably fast service they should have an advantage.
 
The main problem I see is that they are going into competition with a major customer.   FedEx is the largest LTL carrier in the US by revenue.  They ship a lot by rail.  You’ve got to think about it big time before you go into competition with a major customer.
 

That's a good point. But FedEx like the other true LTLs, becomes less competitive on the heavier LTL business... 5000 lbs and up, and also the ugly freight..longer than 20 ft..oddly shaped etc. And having a supplier who is also a competitor is pretty much par for the course in this industry..FedEx itself hires competitor carriers  on a regular basis.

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Posted by Backshop on Saturday, September 11, 2021 10:31 AM

I think building up the needed infrastructure would be cost prohibitive.  All the freight houses, team tracks and even sidings have been razed or pulled up.  That's a lot of money that would need to be spent to figure out if "build it and they will come" will work in this case. Railroads biggest advantage over other types of transportation is in heavy and bulk items.  They should concentrate on that.

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Posted by Ulrich on Saturday, September 11, 2021 10:51 AM

Backshop

I think building up the needed infrastructure would be cost prohibitive.  All the freight houses, team tracks and even sidings have been razed or pulled up.  That's a lot of money that would need to be spent to figure out if "build it and they will come" will work in this case. Railroads biggest advantage over other types of transportation is in heavy and bulk items.  They should concentrate on that.

 

As common carriers they need to be open to serving a broad base of customers with diverse needs. The STB has recently made that very point..i.e. that railroads need to take their common carrier responsibilities more seriously or risk reregulation. Cherry picking bulk freight and refusing freight that doesn't yield a 58% OR is not an option.

There's no need for "build it and they will come"..best way to go about it would be to buy into it by purchasing an LTL carrier (or carriers). Instead of spending 33 billion on a railroad merger, buy one or more regional or even national LTL carriers.

I think  NS is on the right path although they have to move faster. The pace of change has accelerated..Amazon and Tesla were nowhere a decade ago..that's the pace it needs to move at. They've got to make this happen in months not years or risk becoming completely irrelevant.

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Posted by Overmod on Saturday, September 11, 2021 11:51 AM

Any sort of LCL service on the old Railway Express Agency model is DOA for railroads; the valid point Backshop made being only one reason.  Even some of the LTL 'specialists' restrict service to the relatively 'granular' endpoints of 'terminals' or crossdock facilities (the latter effectively being used as 'cross dock' from LTL provider to the client picking up).

What NS is doing is, to me, little different from what UP stopped doing with the cold service to Rotterdam:  getting enough aggregate LTL loading from various originating points to make up economic carload moves, then releasing the carload at one or more established crossdock facilities to whatever LTL or other providers will do 'last mile' (which of course may be considerable actual 'miles') most cost-effectively.  

While it's complicated to figure out exactly what service reliability and 'precision scheduled' timing is necessary for various carloads in transit, and there's some fun looking at Amazon-style ways to decrease cost and to automate handling in the necessary transloading operations, I don't think it is rocket science to determine potentially profitable niches or to design services to fulfil them.  More specifically I can see how even assigning multiple dock stops to single cars might be practical in assisting 'local' LTL providers at either end of an overall trip, especially if more and more emphasis on day drayage trips and 'home every night' becomes observed.

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Posted by greyhounds on Saturday, September 11, 2021 4:05 PM

Overmod
Any sort of LCL service on the old Railway Express Agency model is DOA for railroads; the valid point Backshop made being only one reason.  Even some of the LTL 'specialists' restrict service to the relatively 'granular' endpoints of 'terminals' or crossdock facilities (the latter effectively being used as 'cross dock' from LTL provider to the client picking up). What NS is doing is, to me, little different from what UP stopped doing with the cold service to Rotterdam:  getting enough aggregate LTL loading from various originating points to make up economic carload moves, then releasing the carload at one or more established crossdock facilities to whatever LTL or other providers will do 'last mile' (which of course may be considerable actual 'miles') most cost-effectively.  

They are unlikely to be using the Railway Express model for this business.  This isn’t express, it’s freight.  There is a difference.
As far as Backshop’s contention that the railroads should just stick to bulk commodities; Why?  If you can put money on the bottom line by hauling pink lilies, then haul pink lilies.   I don’t believe the NS went into this with the idea of loosing money.  I don’t know what kinds of terminal facilities they are using for the cross-dock operations.  Do you?
I am very tired of this “It won’t work, don’t even try, attitude.”  The railroad needs to do the market research and analysis as much as is reasonable.  If that shows promise, then try it.  If you never fail, you’re not trying hard enough.
This is absolutely nothing like the Union Pacific’s attempt at cold service to Rotterdam.  Absolutely nothing like it.  The UP went through a stupid time when they tried to shove everything into unit trains.  Perishables don’t belong in unit trains.  It takes way too long and way too much trucking to get a unit train of perishables together.  And the food is going to various destinations.  It just wasn’t unit train business.
The NS is not trying to create LCL unit trains.  They’re just adding a boxcar or two to an existing schedule.  That’s a huge difference from what the UP did.
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Posted by Backshop on Saturday, September 11, 2021 4:09 PM

What would be the value added by actually purchasing an LTL carrier vs just hauling LTL trailers for others?  It adds a business, that while similar, is different.  While FX made Freight work, UPS failed, and their business model is a lot closer to freight trucking than a railroad's is.

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Posted by Ulrich on Saturday, September 11, 2021 4:44 PM

Backshop

What would be the value added by actually purchasing an LTL carrier vs just hauling LTL trailers for others?  It adds a business, that while similar, is different.  While FX made Freight work, UPS failed, and their business model is a lot closer to freight trucking than a railroad's is.

 

 

The value would be in the ability to combine both for maximum benefit. And from a customer's standpoint, they would be dealing with an asset based carrier than can provide transportation using both truck or rail. You would have a transportation provider verses a trucker or a railroad. By purchasing an existing LTL carrier, a railroad would in effect be buying its way into the market verses growing it organically, which takes a much longer time. 

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Posted by Overmod on Saturday, September 11, 2021 4:52 PM

I have tried to answer a couple of dubious-logic points multiple times, but with the increased speed of the site now come increased resets of posting without warning, so I see I have to be even quicker about posting sentence by sentence.

Making some nominal distinction between express and freight in response to Backshop's points is a red herring at best, even if we make allowance that he was probably referring to named divisions of FedEx in shorthand; I'm sure you're well aware that the reference to REA  was operational and not historical, relating to widely duplicated ground facilities as necessary to transloading between truck and fixed-body railcars.

Even very limited facilities for superior forms of intermodal transfer have failed to thrive -- massively and consistently in my view -- when inadequate volume is involved.  Any of the small ramp facilities built with the advent of piggyback haven't contributed anything cost-effectively salable to shippers, and that would likely be true even if they didn't involve expensive switching and dwell time to use.  Concentrating the rail move into the right number of transload or crossdock facilities in the right 'area' locations -- which of course is why I brought up Rotterdam as an example, not so you could show off your knowledge of failure -- is going to be essential, and starting with a minimal number of fixed bases to prove the concept is likely preferable to trying to 'open nationally' before you can prove your execution works.

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Posted by zugmann on Saturday, September 11, 2021 6:35 PM

greyhounds
I am very tired of this “It won’t work, don’t even try, attitude.”  The railroad needs to do the market research and analysis as much as is reasonable.  If that shows promise, then try it.  If you never fail, you’re not trying hard enough.

Make this work.  Of course you won't get any extra jobs, crews, or engines, and if it fails you'll be lucky if we keep you around to to be the thrid trick relief terminal trainmaster in an armpit city, but hey - give it a go! 

Besides, that popular operating plan strategy that's so the rage can barely serve half of what it has now. 

It's been fun.  But it isn't much fun anymore.   Signing off for now. 


  

The opinions expressed here represent my own and not those of my employer, any other railroad, company, or person.t fun any

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Posted by SD60MAC9500 on Saturday, September 11, 2021 8:24 PM
 

To the comments above between Greyhounds and Backshop. Greyhounds is correct about the difference. Freight and Express are not the same. One difference. Express is handled by a single asset provider (prime example FedEx express moves goods entirely within FedEx distribution channels from origin to destination. REA did the same with its own assets). While freight moves amongst various logistic providers. 

Ulrich

best way to go about it would be to buy into it by purchasing an LTL carrier (or carriers). 

No need to take on the cost of buying and operating an LTL Carrier. Along with their associated networks. The margins are better by rail using boxcars. As stated above the cost are marginal adding a few boxcars to a premium IM serivce lane. You'd be better off vertically integrating an existing FM/LM provider. It would be cheapr to buy an operate FM/LM LP. 

 
 
 
 
Rahhhhhhhhh!!!!
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Posted by SD70Dude on Sunday, September 12, 2021 1:23 AM

Backshop

I think building up the needed infrastructure would be cost prohibitive.  All the freight houses, team tracks and even sidings have been razed or pulled up.  That's a lot of money that would need to be spent to figure out if "build it and they will come" will work in this case. Railroads biggest advantage over other types of transportation is in heavy and bulk items.  They should concentrate on that.

Constructing brand new rail served warehouses specifically for this type of service probably wouldn't be a profitable venture at this point, certainly not for a couple cars each day.   

But there are still a lot of older buildings with rail loading docks in existence.  Some are very close to current intermodal terminals.  If it's already there why not try to use it?

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Posted by Backshop on Sunday, September 12, 2021 9:18 AM

SD60MAC9500
 

To the comments above between Greyhounds and Backshop. Greyhounds is correct about the difference. Freight and Express are not the same. One difference. Express is handled by a single asset provider (prime example FedEx express moves goods entirely within FedEx distribution channels from origin to destination. REA did the same with its own assets). While freight moves amongst various logistic providers. 

 

 
Ulrich

best way to go about it would be to buy into it by purchasing an LTL carrier (or carriers). 

 

 

No need to take on the cost of buying and operating an LTL Carrier. Along with their associated networks. The margins are better by rail using boxcars. As stated above the cost are marginal adding a few boxcars to a premium IM serivce lane. You'd be better off vertically integrating an existing FM/LM provider. It would be cheapr to buy an operate FM/LM LP. 

 
 
 
 
 

Incorrect.  Notice that I capitalized "Freight".  I was specifically referring to Fedex Freight and the late UPS Freight, which were the LTL divisions of their respective companies.

Transloading LTL cargo from a truck to a boxcar just adds an unnecessary step.  That's why I said it would be better to just make it a TOFC or COFC load.  Transloading takes labor, which is a major cost.

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Posted by Overmod on Sunday, September 12, 2021 12:12 PM

Ulrich
The value would be in the ability to combine both for maximum benefit.

charlie hebdo has also made the point, repeatedly, that it brings end-to-end revenue for a convenient and marketable solution completely 'in-house' for the railroad while allowing the subsidiary to attend to all the various difficulties and requirements of running and scheduling an effective truck line with distinctive competence.  (I am mindful of some of the ways Branson differentiated this in building the initial Virgin "empire" -- he was very careful to consider where separate legal departments (for example, those involving the music business) were better than merged ones that could share assets or minimize cost of professional employees...)

The question is whether the railroad is capable of operating the subsidiary (or allowing it to operate) effectively, rather than imposing micromanagement or wacky PSR ideas on them or performing the usual Chainsaw-Al kind of control over expenses and fear-based employee control to "minimize expenses" to improve the trucking equivalent of OR.

Personally, I think the idea of NS 'accepting' LTL brought to a purpose-designed crossdock facility and then 'providing' carload to be reloaded as LTL to whatever range of subdistribution or customers is a model that makes greatest sense for a railroad designing a service using fixed railcars.  A system that used TOFC instead would have a very different operating model, and very different criteria for either acquiring or creating LTL 'partner' organizations to handle traffic at any transfer point of a rail lane...

It might be interesting for someone like greyhounds who has done this for a living to compare the economics of a carload LTL transfer with its equivalent in TOFC... the latter with the further assumption that the "LTL" comprising the individual "TOFC" trailer loads would be aggregated for a particular stop's distribution area, and that one-stop hookon would then produce full "LTL" service to all customers for the freight in that particular trailer. 

Such a model would require LTL providers to do careful truck loading, and presumably any prep for the rail link, and either to serve the origin/destination pair area with sufficient volume or to make arrangements with destination drayage providers {probably including O/Os and small contract providers) to handle all the area deliveries at suitable cost and performance.  On the other hand, it would provide nearly identical opportunities for low dwell and quick intermodal transfer with controlled on-site storage conditions that a full railroad-owned TOFC operation would, and could be nearly seamlessly co-conducted with one. 

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Posted by Overmod on Sunday, September 12, 2021 12:14 PM

.

I see that with increased speed and increased blanking of posts in progress, we also have accelerated doubling of posts...

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Posted by greyhounds on Monday, September 13, 2021 11:34 AM
I have to say that I’m flummoxed by some of the posts on this topic.
 
The NS is trying to develop new business in a new market and some people are upset about it.  Why?
 
The NS can move the LCL/LTL in either a container, a trailer, or a boxcar.  They’ve chosen boxcars to start out with.  If there are problems with using the boxcars, they can change over to containers or trailers.  The important thing is that they’re trying to develop new business in a new market.
 
The NS can also operate a mixed system for LCL/LTL.  They can use boxcars where appropriate and containers/trailers where appropriate.  I think using boxcars in an intermodal system is a great concept.  But if it doesn’t work out it’s not an existential threat to the NS.
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Posted by Backshop on Monday, September 13, 2021 12:49 PM

greyhounds
I have to say that I’m flummoxed by some of the posts on this topic.
 
The NS is trying to develop new business in a new market and some people are upset about it.  Why? 

This is rich!  You of all people.  You're forever complaining that companies are doing stuff wrong and they should listen to you.  Now, that some others have doubts about something, you don't understand it.

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Posted by BaltACD on Monday, September 13, 2021 2:42 PM

Why do I get the feeling that this LCL 'program' is being 'developed' by some senior excecutive's progeny or progeny in law that graduated with 'high honors' from some Ivy League college and he/she has been given this 'project' as their 'Doctors Thesis' in being the newest 'Wiz Kid' attempting to get the 'priority groove' to the NS Board Room. 

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Posted by Ulrich on Monday, September 13, 2021 3:48 PM

BaltACD

Why do I get the feeling that this LCL 'program' is being 'developed' by some senior excecutive's progeny or progeny in law that graduated with 'high honors' from some Ivy League college and he/she has been given this 'project' as their 'Doctors Thesis' in being the newest 'Wiz Kid' attempting to get the 'priority groove' to the NS Board Room. 

 

 

It's possible that someone or a group of people with personal ambitions is behind this. Good for NS if they're able to attract Princeton/Harvard/Yale people.. 

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Posted by greyhounds on Monday, September 13, 2021 4:27 PM

Backshop
This is rich!  You of all people.  You're forever complaining that companies are doing stuff wrong and they should listen to you.  Now, that some others have doubts about something, you don't understand it.

I deny being rich, although the Lake County tax collector seems to think I am.
 
What I’ve “Forever complained about” is the weakness of US railroads in marketing, market research, and market development.  They just don’t do those things well enough.  That’s it.  I certainly don’t expect them to listen to me.  But I can express my thoughts.
 
The NS LCL system is an attempt at market development.  Good!  The freight movement is there, so find a way to make money hauling it.
 
The attempt has a chance of failure.  What doesn’t?  But, as I said, if you never fail, you’re not trying hard enough.
 
Most new product introductions do fail.  Most business start-ups also fail.  But that does not mean there should be no new products or business start-ups.  You’ve got to take some risks to be successful.  Managing the risk is part of being a good businessperson.
 
The NS seems to be introducing its new LCL service in a well-managed, low risk, manner.  There aren’t a lot of incremental costs involved with adding some boxcars to an existing schedule.
 
I’m sure that the LCL service will evolve and change.  That’s the way things go.  But at least they’re trying to do some market development.  And that’s a very good thing.
 
What I strongly object to is people such as yourself who are critical of the NS even giving it a try.
 
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Posted by BaltACD on Monday, September 13, 2021 4:36 PM

Ulrich
 
BaltACD

Why do I get the feeling that this LCL 'program' is being 'developed' by some senior excecutive's progeny or progeny in law that graduated with 'high honors' from some Ivy League college and he/she has been given this 'project' as their 'Doctors Thesis' in being the newest 'Wiz Kid' attempting to get the 'priority groove' to the NS Board Room.  

It's possible that someone or a group of people with personal ambitions is behind this. Good for NS if they're able to attract Princeton/Harvard/Yale people.. 

All large organizations work to attract 'superstars' from the educational community.  Some that they attract have sufficient chutzpah to propose 'out of the box' projects and the follow through to get given a small budget to attempt to bring it to reality.  Railroads attempt to attrack more than just Community College drop outs. 

Over the course of time - some projects succed by failing and other projects fail by succeding.  Superstars, can sometimes develop their own solar systems and other times they explode into super novas and collapse into black holes.

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Posted by MP173 on Monday, September 13, 2021 5:49 PM

I have been away for a few days and am glad to see this conversation is drawing healthy discussion, from mainly people with transportation / railroad backgrounds.

My first 13 years of my adult life was in LTL in the Chicago / NW Indiana market.  This stage of my worklife ended in 1990 as I moved into a far more lucrative and enjoyable sales career (often selling to LTL and TL carriers).  Therefore, while I do not have diesel fuel running thru my veins, I know a little bit about the LTL industry.

Balt hit on what I was thinking....someone at NS told a summer intern, perhaps from Northwestern or another Transportation or Supply Chain school to investigate possible LTL movements within the NS system.  That information is out there.  

Here is where I think NS is going with this, or where I would take it.  Contact the the leading Local and regional LTL carriers in Chicago and Atlanta, not YRC, FedXFreight, Holland, and others but companies such as Moran, Double D, or Monroe...that service that Chicago area like a glove.  These carriers often have relationships with other similar LTL carriers in areas such as Twin Cities, Kansas city, St. Louis, etc.  They market those areas as direct service and run a line haul unit(s) to each market and swap loads.  Thus, ABC in St. Louis meets XYZ from Chicago nightly somewhere near Lincoln, Il and swaps out trailers.  Next day freight is delivered.  These carriers do not necessarily compete with the major LTL carriers, but provide great service to their customers...who do not want to deal with a number of LTL carriers.

So, NS should contact these LTL carriers in both markets and offer the line haul service.  Let these carriers use their sales and marketing forces to reach out and find the freight....and they will.  Cross dock at the LTL carrier terminal and send a trailer to Calumet Yard in Chicago where it is loaded on a boxcar.  Same thing in Atlanta.  Probably drop and switch trailers, so driver time in minimized.  Split the revenue with originating and delivering carrier picking up 30% each and NS getting 40% for the line haul.

Meanwhile NS turns that portion of Calumet Yard into sort of a transload facility.  Yes, there is plenty of room there.  This LTL program is perhaps the first seed planted into that concept.  As it develops, then add more regional LTL carriers, such as LaPorte Transit from Indiana and perhaps a Wisconsin based carrier.  Grow the LCL business by partnering with those folks who understand teh LTL markets....BTW, lots of Chicago business crossed the borders into Indiana and Wisconsin to escape.

No way NS can go head to head against ABF, XPO, Saia, Old Dominion, et al. Their sales and marketing is based on wholesale...LTL carrier reps are in front of customers (given COVID restrictions) frequently. BTW, those carriers are at capacity now anyway.  The timing is perfect for NS to dive into this.  LTL service is running slower as capacity issues are a factor.  The market is disruptive and can use capacity.  Interesting that NS is startign with Chicago - Atlanta lane.  I would expect, if they have patience...and they should as carload and coal are on the decline and new business is required. 

Ulrich...BTW Overnite Transportation was a beast in LTL prior to selling to Union Pacific.  They had the lowest operating ratio and premier service blanketing the Southeast, Eastern Middle Atlantic, and into the Midwest.  Everything changed when UP purchase them, then continued with UPS.  I not only worked with OVNT but also owned shares.

If this works, what would be next?  Probably Chicago - Pittsburgh (NS 22W drops off TOFC en route to Rutherford).  The key would be to merge the LCL with existing  movements with premium UPS or LTL  TOFC drops.  The Chicago - Harrisburg would be another candidate, as would Chicago - Baltimore.  Perhaps even Kansas City/Decatur, Il to Harrisburg with perhaps a drop in Cleveland.  And what about the New Jersey carriers?  Chicago to Jersey would be attractive.

Ed

  • Member since
    August 2003
  • From: Antioch, IL
  • 4,371 posts
Posted by greyhounds on Monday, September 13, 2021 9:39 PM

MP173
Balt hit on what I was thinking....someone at NS told a summer intern, perhaps from Northwestern or another Transportation or Supply Chain school to investigate possible LTL movements within the NS system.  That information is out there.  

That would be great.  If an intern or a young rookie new hire from a good business school did come up with this plan, he/she should be rewarded with praise and adulation.  Along with a nice monetary bonus. 
 
In fact, anyone who developed the concept and backed it up with research and analysis should be so rewarded.
 
 
"By many measures, the U.S. freight rail system is the safest, most efficient and cost effective in the world." - Federal Railroad Administration, October, 2009. I'm just your average, everyday, uncivilized howling "anti-government" critic of mass government expenditures for "High Speed Rail" in the US. And I'm gosh darn proud of that.
  • Member since
    February 2018
  • 299 posts
Posted by adkrr64 on Tuesday, September 14, 2021 9:09 AM

greyhounds
 That would be great.  If an intern or a young rookie new hire from a good business school did come up with this plan, he/she should be rewarded with praise and adulation.  Along with a nice monetary bonus. 
 
In fact, anyone who developed the concept and backed it up with research and analysis should be so rewarded.

 
I have heard numerous anecdotal stories over the years about how the operations side of the RR business can torpedo new business ideas from marketing because the new ideas don't fit into the current/ preferred operational paradigms. Having to add even a few cars to a train that did not have them before is more work for someone. Is this a potential thorn in the side of this plan, or are we talking about such an inconsequential amount of work so as not to be an issue?
 
Also - seeing numerous references to box cars - would the existence of box cars potentially slow down an intermodal train due to speed restrictions on box cars vs. intermodal equipment?

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