Convoy, J.B. Hunt and Uber Freight Eye API Standards Across Freight Shipments
December 5, 2022

New Scheduling Standards Consortium to establish industry standard that
simplifies scheduling, improving automation for businesses and generating
industry-wide efficiencies
Convoy, J.B. Hunt Transport and Uber Freight formed the Scheduling Standards
Consortium (SSC) which aims to solve transportation scheduling challenges by
establishing the freight industry’s first formal set of appointment scheduling
application programming interface (API) standards. Complex, pervasive,
industry-wide challenges such as this require collaborative, industry-wide
solutions; the makeup of the SSC’s founding members underscores the need to
standardize how information is exchanged around scheduling shipments.
Today, scheduling system and interface fragmentation is a point of friction
amongst carriers, brokers, and shippers. As the industry turns increasingly to
an integrated network of providers and solutions to manage the end-to-end
lifecycle of each shipment, it has become increasingly important to define and
share a consistent data architecture and API standard for the distribution of
scheduling information.
The SSC’s objectives are to define an API standard for sharing scheduling
information, implement those standardized interfaces to enable integrations in
existing systems, and advocate for the standard across the industry. The
standard will bring more cohesion and resiliency to the movement of goods,
making it easier to book and manage appointments, optimize processes for
drivers, shippers and receivers, and drive operational efficiencies for the
industry at large.
Adoption is critical for the effort to succeed. The SSC aims to sign on other
brokers or third-party logistics service providers, transportation management
system and warehouse management system vendors, and others to help shape the
future of supply chain efficiency. Initial SSC standards and documentation,
starting with full truckload freight, will be available as early as Q1 2023.
On the formation of the SSC, executives for the founding members said:
“One of the most complicated and consequential things about being efficient in
freight is setting up pickup and drop-off appointments. Every year the industry
sets approximately 1.5 billion appointments, and scheduling inefficiencies slow
everything down and create a lot of waste. Freight runs 24/7, and, for most
situations, every hour counts,” says Dan Lewis, Convoy’s CEO and co-founder.
“Scheduling is a tech problem at the end of the day. When all the trucks are
plugged into a digital network, the industry can better orchestrate freight
needs with data-informed systems. A Standard API-based approach allows companies
to access the latest data and make smart decisions to increase efficiency,
reduce empty miles and waste, lower costs, and improve service outcomes. This is
the future of freight.”
“Technology
has ushered in a new era for transportation – new players, new apps, new
platforms, new services. Yet, our industry remains extremely fragmented,” said
Spencer Frazier, executive vice president of sales and marketing at J.B. Hunt.
“We want to change that, starting today with the three of us and hopefully many
more providers in the coming months. We want to create an open exchange of data
so that the numerous TMS and digital freight platforms can communicate at a
level where we can help one another when needed. The voice of our customers is
clear – collaboration will drive progress. Our challenge is to make the systems
they use daily work together to generate greater value and efficiency for their
supply chains.”
“Logistics is rapidly evolving to be more realtime and intelligent at every
point of execution. The implementation of APIs to simplify execution of manual
tasks like scheduling is revolutionizing how shippers and carriers plan, manage,
and execute shipments,” said Bill Driegert, co-founder and head of operations at
Uber Freight. “We are at a critical inflection point of adoption, and if we
don’t align on standards, we will create more work for everyone in the coming
years. Everyone wins if we can align on common ways of interfacing. In doing so,
we minimize operation friction and fragmentation and unlock a more fluid and
optimized market for shippers and carriers to move goods.”