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Headlines about the freight market can create a significant disconnect between leadership's expectations and the reality of your carrier RFP. When your C-suite expects double-digit savings, but you’re aware of current rate trends, navigating your carrier RFP can quickly become a challenge. This misalignment can undermine your strategy before it even starts.
The solution is to build a data-driven strategy that aligns stakeholders and sets realistic goals from the beginning. A successful carrier RFP isn’t just about the final award—it’s about executing a data-driven end-to-end process. By following four key steps, you can navigate the market and guide your organization toward a procurement event that delivers measurable value.
Leverage clean, shipper-transacted data to inform every decision in your carrier RFP.
Use unbiased, credible market forecasts to set realistic goals, ensuring your strategy remains insulated from short-term headlines.
Engage leadership and cross-functional teams early and often to ensure strategic alignment and buy-in.
Share data with carriers to build credibility and support for round negotiations.
Executing a successful procurement event requires a disciplined, four-step approach to setting expectations. This framework helps you build credibility, align stakeholders, and create a plan grounded in market realities.
The foundation of any good decision is clean, shipper-transacted data. Before you begin your carrier RFP, you need to move beyond your organization's historical information and tap into a comprehensive dataset. A robust dataset provides the necessary context to understand peer performance, market trends, and realistic savings opportunities.
For example, Breakthrough's shipper-transacted dataset processes over $35 billion in transportation spend and 46.5 million annual shipments. This scale provides a clear, unbiased view of the market that helps shippers ground their strategy in facts, not assumptions. By starting with a strong data foundation, you can make informed decisions at every stage of the RFP process.
Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future outcomes, especially in a dynamic transportation market. Relying on news headlines or gut feelings can lead to flawed strategies and unrealistic goals. As one Breakthrough expert noted, it is important to "be cautious with news headlines. It's crucial to validate what you're seeing with a trusted data source and then be patient before making drastic changes."
Listen to market experts that provide unbiased, historically accurate forecasts. This allows you to anticipate market shifts and build a proactive strategy that accounts for potential market movements and positions your network for long-term stability.
Do not wait for your leadership team to ask about expected RFP results. Bring them into the conversation early. Proactive communication allows you to frame the narrative with data and manage expectations.
This engagement should also extend to cross-functional partners in finance, operations, and other key departments. When you involve all stakeholders from the start, you build consensus and create a unified plan. This collaborative approach ensures everyone is bought into the strategy and understands the reasoning behind your recommendations, which is critical for smooth execution and post-bid compliance.
Throughout the carrier RFP process, share regular market education, key data points, and actionable recommendations with stakeholders to demonstrate your subject matter expertise. This consistent communication builds credibility and fosters a deeper understanding of market complexities across the company.
Presenting regular status updates makes it easier to gain approval for your next step and ensures that final award decisions are viewed as strategic choices rather than just cost-cutting measures.
A successful carrier RFP in today's market is defined by strategic planning, not just the pursuit of unrealistic savings. By grounding your approach in these four steps—leveraging data, using unbiased forecasts, engaging leadership early, and providing consistent progress updates—you can build a credible and effective procurement strategy. This approach aligns your entire organization and positions your transportation network for results that deliver real, sustainable value.
Breakthrough’s RFP services are designed to help shippers take a strategic, data-driven approach to procurement. With credible market insights trusted by industry-leading shippers and unbiased forecasts, we empower organizations to align their transportation networks with real market conditions. Our process emphasizes collaboration and consistency, ensuring your procurement strategy delivers measurable results. To learn more about how Breakthrough can elevate your next RFP, visit our RFP services page.
A carrier RFP (Request for Proposal) is a formal event where shippers invite carriers to bid on hauling their freight. During this process, carriers provide proposals outlining their pricing, service capabilities, and other key details. Shippers evaluate these bids and go through an award process to select carriers that best meet their logistical and operational requirements. Once the awards are made, contracts are established to outline the agreed-upon terms, including rates, service levels, and other conditions for hauling the shipper's freight over a specified period. This structured process helps shippers build a reliable and cost-effective transportation network.
A successful carrier RFP is built on a foundation of realistic, data-driven expectations. It involves leveraging comprehensive datasets, applying unbiased market forecasting, and engaging leadership early to align on strategy. The goal is to develop a plan that balances cost savings with service quality and strengthens strategic carrier partnerships for long-term network stability.
A freight forwarder and a carrier serve different roles within the logistics and transportation industry. A carrier is a company or individual responsible for the physical transportation of goods from one location to another. Carriers own and operate the trucks, vessels, airplanes, or trains used for the actual movement of freight. Freight forwarders act as an intermediary and logistics expert, acting on behalf of shippers. Freight forwarders coordinate with multiple carriers to ensure the efficient and seamless transit of goods. Essentially, carriers are the transport providers, while freight forwarders manage the overall logistics and planning.
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