How to Ensure a Successful 3PL Implementation

Third-Party Logistics (3PL) refers to the practice of outsourcing logistics services to a specialized third-party provider. These services can include warehousing, transportation, inventory management, and freight forwarding. By partnering with a 3PL provider, companies can offload the complexities of logistics, allowing them to focus on their core competencies.

Over the past few decades, the 3PL industry has evolved significantly, offering a wide array of logistics services to businesses across various sectors. Specific to warehousing, operating your own warehouse can be expensive and challenging so many companies decide to leave it to a 3PL provider to conduct these services. Integrating warehouse operations with a 3PL provider offers several advantages for supply chain management, like efficiency improvements, cost savings, flexible labor, scalability, access to specialized expertise, and enhanced customer service.  To achieve these improvements, it is imperative that the right partner is selected.

When using a 3PL, the process of selecting and implementing your partner is pivotal but can be a daunting task for businesses. It is essential to have a focused internal or external group driving the selection and integration process. In situations where internal resources are limited or time is constrained, leveraging external expertise can be an optimal path forward. At Establish, we follow a detailed 5 step approach when selecting and integrating a new 3PL provider.

  1. Defining Operational Goals and Requirements: Understand your business objectives and organizational needs. What are you aiming to achieve through 3PL integration?

  2. Partner Selection and Evaluation: Choosing the right 3PL partner is critical. What are the deciding criteria? (Cost, experience, culture?)

  3. Mapping Integration Points for Systems and Data: Seamlessly align your existing systems with the 3PL provider’s infrastructure. Integration points matter.

  4. Transition Management + Go-Live: Execute the transition smoothly. Minimize disruptions during the critical go-live phase.

  5. Ongoing Management + Continuous Improvement: Sustaining success requires initiative-taking management and continuous refinement.

In another blogpost (How to Choose the Right 3PL Partner — Establish Inc.), we talked about the importance of defining operational goals and requirements (step 1) and the need for thorough partner selection and evaluation (step 2). While choosing the right partner is important, the integration and go live process is critical to ensure success. In this blogpost, we will put the last three steps in the spotlight.

Step 3: Mapping Integration Points for Systems and Data

After the 3PL partner selection has been finalized and contract is awarded, it is time to begin the implementation process. One aspect of the transition is designing the system integration. In the collaborative design process, organizations work together to establish seamless connections between their systems. Having the support of third-party resources here helps to keep the project focus, bring in best practices, align business needs between you and the 3PL rather than completely redesigning what is in place, and maintain an efficient integration timeline by managing internal resources effectively. Here is how the system integration typically unfolds:

  1. Designing Data Flows: Teams map out how data moves between different systems. This involves identifying data sources, transformation points, and destinations. Considerations include real-time data exchange, batch processing, and data synchronization. Usually a decision between an EDI, API or more manual integration has to be taken.

  2. Operational Procedures: Collaborators define operational procedures for handling data. This includes data validation, error handling, and exception management. Standardizing procedures ensure consistency and reliability.

  3. Workflow Hand-Offs: Workflow hand-offs occur when one system completes its task and passes relevant data to the next system. Clear documentation and communication are essential to avoid bottlenecks or data loss during hand-offs.

  4. Reporting Integrations: Reporting systems need access to relevant data. Integrations ensure that reporting tools can pull data from various sources. Customized reports, dashboards, and analytics enhance decision-making.

  5. Tailoring to Existing Infrastructure: Organizations adapt integrations to fit their existing technology stack. This involves assessing compatibility, security, and scalability. Legacy systems may require additional connectors or middleware for seamless integration.

By collaboratively addressing these aspects, organizations create robust end-to-end connections that enhance efficiency and drive business success. 

 

Step 4: Transition Management

While system integration is a key milestone in the 3PL integration process, it is important to plan and manage the operational and physical transition with the new partner. To ensure a smooth transition, it is essential to focus on the following areas:

  • Phased Approach: For larger implementations (multiple sites, business units, or sales channels), considering the benefits of a phased rollout is key. By breaking down the implementation into manageable phases, organizations reduce the risk of large-scale disruptions. For example, for multi-site implementations, every warehouse, partner, or region can have a specific and different go-live-date.  Each region becomes a testing ground, allowing adjustments before full-scale deployment. Moreover, phased rollouts provide valuable insights. Organizations learn from early adopters, refine processes, and adapt to regional nuances. Additionally, concentrating on one region at a time ensures efficient resource allocation, and it prevents strain on personnel, infrastructure, and support systems.

 

  • Communication and Training: Another important pilar is to establish a plan for communication, training, and testing. Transparent communication with stakeholders is crucial. Inform employees, customers, and partners about the upcoming changes, timelines, and expected impacts in adherence to contractual agreements and operational considerations. Next, it is important to provide comprehensive training to the affected teams. Address their concerns and ensure they feel confident using new systems and offer ongoing support during the transition. From a system and operations perspective, a best practice is to run existing and new systems in parallel, just like exiting partners and entering partners. This minimizes disruptions and allows for gradual adjustments.

 

  • Exit Strategy: If there are existing 3PL partner(s) that are losing business, effectively managing the transition away from them can be challenging, but there are strategies to keep them engaged during this critical phase. First and foremost, timely and clear communication is essential. Regular touchpoints and checkpoints should be maintained throughout the entire process. Aligning expectations—both legally and operationally—is highly important. Providing well-defined instructions and thorough documentation facilitates a professional transition. Additionally, keeping a close eye on costs and systems ensures a smooth exit. Given the complexity of this task, it’s often advisable to conduct on-site visits to manage expectations and gain a comprehensive overview of current stated operations.

  • Be Proactive: When navigating the complexities of a 3PL integration and transition, it is important to be as proactive as possible. Best practices consist of appointing change champions within each region or group – they advocate and promote adoption, address resistance, and encourage positive attitudes. This establishes a feedback loop to capture user experiences and identify pain points. Proactive management involves addressing issues promptly, so it is important to set up the right fora to hear these voices. Setting up a new warehouse comes with challenges and glitches, so it is important to anticipate them and proactively address bottlenecks, technical glitches, and unforeseen obstacles – ensuring the continuous improvement journey to start from the beginning.

 

Step 5: Ongoing Management and Continuous Optimization

The journey doesn’t end with the go-live event; it extends into the post-implementation period. First, it is key to explain the need for continuous optimization after the initial launch. This involves ongoing assessment, optimization, and a commitment to continuous improvement. An industry best practice is making use of an issue tracker meeting to keep track of open items that need follow up. After go-live, a lot of additional ideas and change requests will come up to help better the operation and add to the scope; it is important to capture and prioritize these correctly.

Once at a steady state, it is also important to discuss governance models, track KPIs and monitor performance. These KPIs will often be defined in the Service Level Agreement (SLA) and summarize the performance of outbound operations, inbound operations, and inventory accuracy. Taking the time to audit the 3PL invoices and ensure their accuracy is also paramount. It provides a sense check that correct rates are being billed as well as accurate operational volumes being billed. Occasionally, there could be systematic errors in the billing function which could be overlooked.

In the end, it is the 3PL’s job to deliver an effective solution for your business, but you can help to facilitate a successful integration and promote continuous improvement by utilizing a consulting partner, like Establish, who will ensure you take the correct steps and set up an effective post go-live structure.

 

In this blogpost, we have explored the critical steps necessary for a seamless 3PL integration. By partnering with a consulting company like Establish, you can strategically align your operational goals and requirements, ensuring a successful launch and ongoing optimization. Remember, successful 3PL integration isn’t just about technology—it’s about people, processes, and collaboration. With the right approach, you will unlock efficiency gains, cost savings, and improved customer satisfaction.

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How to Choose the Right 3PL Partner