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Don't
Mess with Estes
It's
not easy growing 15 to 20 percent a year in a
mature industry like less-than-truckload trucking. The
secret at Estes Express Lines is using information technology
to keep operations lean and nimble.
By
James A. Bacon
When
the remains of Hurricane Gaston blew over Richmond, Va.,
in
August 2004, it dumped a foot of rain on the city.
Basements that had remained dry for decades were
flooded. At the Estes corporate headquarters on West Broad Street, water rose waist high in the
bottom floor. That
was a very big problem: The data center for the less-than-truckload
(LTL) trucking company was housed in the basement. Water fried the data center, threatening to paralyze the
carrier's vast logistical network. Responding to the
emergency, Estes terminals around the country reverted
to manual systems for billing and tracking freight, but
there was no way that truck drivers and dock workers
could keep the system going for long without critical
technology. The system had
become too finely tuned and interdependent. A mishap in
one spot could ricochet unpredictably around a system
that encompassed dozens of
terminals and thousands of trucks in finely meshed
schedules for thousands of customers. Thanks
to the round-the-clock exertions of the Richmond IT
staff and beyond-the-call-of-duty efforts of vendors
like IBM, Estes managed to restore its computer
system within a few days. Nuno Valentine, the executive in charge of the company's IT operations,
actually looks back upon the crisis with equanimity.
Employees rose to the occasion, he says. "It was a
bonding experience." As a benefit, he grins, the
company replaced the old gear with cool,
state-of-the-art equipment.
Estes'
edge in the trucking industry: information technology Rather
than being traumatized by the near catastrophe, Estes
has built upon it. The trucking company now equips its
truck drivers with hand-held communication devices,
embeds computers in its forklifts, runs sophisticated
algorithms to help make incredibly complex scheduling
and routing decisions, and is integrating its system
with those of customers and partners. "If
this dies, we die," says Valentine dramatically,
gesturing to the racks of servers and IBM
memory banks holding some 20 to 30 terabytes of data. He
says that, knowing it will take a lot more than a
hurricane to disrupt operations again. The data center
in Richmond has a sister site in Arizona. Every bit and
byte is backed up and redundant. If something happened
to the Richmond center, operations would seamlessly
shift to Arizona. Says Valentine: "We can jump back
and forth at will." To
the general public, which equates the trucking industry
with the tractor-trailers that roll down the
highway, the business doesn't appear terribly different
from the days the teamsters began hauling freight across
the nation's nascent highway system in the 1930s. But
the spread of information technology into every nook and
cranny of the economy has made no exception for trucks. IT has made the industry far
more efficient. Estes
Express fancies itself an industry leader in the
application of IT. "We develop our technology to
make us efficient, proficient and enhance the customer
experience," says COO Billy Hupp. "It's almost
as important to deliver information to the customer as
it is to deliver freight."
The
company got its start in 1931 when W.W. Estes purchased
a used Chevrolet truck and set up a local trucking
business hauling farm produce and supplies in Southwest
Virginia. With no driver's seat or windshield glass,
W.W. ran his first load "sitting behind the
steering wheel on an upturned crate and looking through
a discarded window," recounts the company's
history.
By the time W.W. died in 1971, the company had
moved to Richmond and grown to 650
employees and $10 million in revenue. Under the
leadership of W.W.'s son Robey W. Estes, and his grandson, Robey W. Estes,
Jr., the company has grown to 13,000 employees and a
fleet of 30,000 trucks. With a network of almost 200 terminals, the company focuses on less-than-truckload
shipments, primarily in next-day deliveries, although it
is competitive in two-day deliveries and is leveraging
its customer relationships into service anywhere in the
United States and into international deliveries.
Two years ago, Estes Express generated $1.5 billion
in revenues, says Hupp, a 30-year veteran who has run
sales, operated terminals and rose through the ranks to
the number two position in the company. Revenues took a
hit last year, partly due to a deliberate refocusing,
and partly due to the housing downturn, he said, but he
expects the company to recoup this year. Other than last
year's
stumble, the company has been growing by 15
percent to 20 percent a year, he says.
That's pretty
impressive for an industry where, according to the
American Transportation Institute, shipping volumes have
increased only 6 percent a year since 1985. The economy
has slowed this year, but in March the company was
confident enough to open 13 new
terminals in the Upper Midwest, allowing it to provide full
service to every state in the United States. Meanwhile,
Estes Express is investing in its air freight operation
and making a bid for international freight business.
"Estes is
a great Richmond success story," says Gene Winter,
senior vice president of the Greater Richmond
Partnership. "The company epitomizes the innovation
emerging from the transportation sector here in the
Greater Richmond region. The reason we're one of the
main logistics centers of the East Coast owes as much to
the creativity of the businesses located here as to the
conjunction of highways and railroads."
In an
industry as competitive as trucking, says Hupp, it's not
easy finding an edge. "We all do pretty much the
same thing. Everybody in the business is good at picking
up and delivering freight. They wouldn't be around if
they weren't."
Estes' business has gotten far more
complex as the
company has grown, offering a wider array of services
and appealing to a wider variety of clients. The Estes
mission is to provide personalized service and
to be highly responsive to customer needs. "We have
to be quick, spontaneous and flexible," says Hupp.
"We try to make the experience a positive
one."
As a practical matter, Estes'
edge in the marketplace is the quality of its IT systems that
help it run its schedules a little tighter, manage its
routes more productively, pack its trucks more
efficiently, optimize on fuel and manpower, and reduce
irritants like billing errors. To build and maintain the
system, the
company supports an IT staff of roughly 100 employees.
The challenge of
juggling thousands of employees, tractor-trailers and
customers over a nationwide system is formidable. "It's a huge jigsaw puzzle and the pieces
change every day," Hupp says. "The more pieces
you have left over at the end of the day, the more
failures you have."
Consider, for instance, the challenge of higher
fuel prices. "Things that make sense at $2 per
gallon don't make sense at $4.50 per gallon," Hupp
says. So, instead of running three trucks from Richmond
to Emporia, the company might adjust schedules to pack
the same amount of freight in only two and still deliver
on time. Similarly, the company might alter its
load patterns, loading freight through a more direct
Pulaski route instead of a more round-about Atlanta
route, but reducing frequency means changing time
schedules.
Another option: Trucks can improve mileage by
one mile per gallon by driving 10 miles per hour slower.
When the truck is getting 6.5 miles to the gallon, that
savings is not insignificant -- diesel fuel is now the
biggest cost of running a truck, more than hiring the
driver or paying for the truck itself.
All these trade-offs are made immensely more
complicated by the fact that Estes consolidates
less-than-truckload shipments at its terminals, runs a
truck from one terminal to the next, then reshuffles
loads for the final leg of the trip. Not only do dock workers try to maximize the use of space in a trailer,
they must balance light freight with heavy -- too much
weight in a truck can trigger fines.
Compound those
complexities with the fact that the system is always
adding new customers -- and losing a few -- and the fact
that customers rarely have the same needs every day.
There are a mind-numbing number of variables to juggle.
If people don't get it right, it's very easy to wind up,
as Hupp says, "with 18 guys in Orlando when you need them
in Atlanta."
"You start out every day and you don't know what
you're going to get," says Valentine.
Most big trucking companies build their systems to
optimize either long-haul shipments or short-haul.
"We have a system that allows us to be proficient
at both," says Hupp. That capability, he adds, is one of the company's
great competitive strengths.
Estes management gives loads of credit to the team of
truckers and dock workers who actually move the freight
- the company enjoys very low turnover for the industry, and
employees carry a lot of knowledge about how to
get things done. But the system has gotten so complex that
men in the front lines inevitably would leave a lot of
jigsaw pieces on the table without those servers, hard
drives and software algorithms backing them up. Says
Hupp: "There's no room for error anymore."
-- July 30, 2008
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