Freight Market Research: A Strategic Guide | SIS

Freight Forwarding Market Research

Pesquisa e Estratégia de Mercado Internacional da SIS

Para compreender melhor os benefícios da Pesquisa de Mercado de Frete, é preciso primeiro entender o que é frete e por que ele é crucial.

O que é frete?

Frete é o transporte e distribuição de mercadorias a granel por meio de caminhão, trem, navio ou aeronave. O transporte adequado de mercadorias é crucial para o sucesso da economia global – permitindo a distribuição mundial de bens manufaturados, alimentos, recursos naturais e muito mais.

Os avanços no transporte de carga permitiram que as empresas estabelecessem cadeias de abastecimento intercontinentais, reduzindo efetivamente os níveis de inventário e agilizando o atendimento de pedidos. O comércio eletrônico, os negócios internacionais e o transporte rápido foram possíveis graças à evolução do setor de frete.

Freight Market Research: How Leading Shippers Convert Freight Forwarding Into Competitive Advantage

Freight market research has shifted from rate benchmarking into a strategic instrument for capacity assurance, margin protection, and network design. The shippers winning right now treat forwarders as commercial intelligence assets, not procurement line items. They run continuous market surveillance, decompose carrier P&Ls, and price risk into every lane decision.

The opportunity is structural. Ocean alliances are reconfiguring. Air capacity has rebalanced as bellyhold returned. Cross-border e-commerce keeps redrawing the parcel and global express maps. Buyers with sharper market intelligence are locking in better contracts, shorter dwell times, and higher service levels while peers absorb spot exposure.

What Freight Market Research Actually Measures

Freight market research at the enterprise level is not a quarterly rate index. It is a structured read on capacity, pricing power, and forwarder economics across five distinct segments: global forwarding (cross-border air and sea), domestic freight (LTL, FTL, parcel, multi-modal), global express under 30 kg, contract logistics (warehousing and inventory management), and project logistics for defense, mining, and heavy industry.

Each segment has its own margin structure, concentration profile, and contract cadence. Global forwarding margins are thin and volume-driven, dominated by Kuehne+Nagel, DSV, DHL Global Forwarding, and Sinotrans. Contract logistics carries higher EBIT margins but ties revenue to multi-year commitments. Confusing the two distorts vendor selection and total cost of ownership modeling.

The credible research questions are specific. What is the true buy rate on the Shanghai-Rotterdam corridor net of GRI and BAF? Where does a forwarder’s gross profit per TEU sit relative to peers? Which 3PL has spare capacity in Jebel Ali this quarter? Generic market reports do not answer these. Primary intelligence does.

Where the Margin Opportunity Sits

SIS International Research has consistently found that shippers running structured forwarder benchmarking against decomposed carrier financials capture meaningful rate improvements on managed lanes versus those relying on annual RFP cycles alone. The gap widens further when buyers integrate freight rate benchmarking with installed-base analytics on their own shipment patterns.

Three levers drive the opportunity. First, forwarder gross profit per shipment is observable through public filings and disciplined expert interviews, which means buyers can negotiate against a known margin floor rather than a quoted price. Second, mode shift economics on transpacific and Asia-Europe corridors have changed as ocean reliability improved and air rates normalized. Third, contract logistics pricing remains heavily negotiable on activity-based costing, particularly slotting, value-added services, and minimum volume guarantees.

The buyers who execute on these levers run continuous intelligence, not annual studies. They know which forwarders are over-indexed on a given trade lane and therefore willing to discount to retain volume share.

The Five-Segment Freight Intelligence Framework

A practical structure for enterprise freight market research separates intelligence by segment economics rather than by geography. Geography matters second. Segment economics determine how negotiation actually works.

Segment Primary Cost Driver Negotiation Lever Intelligence Priority
Global Forwarding Buy rate plus surcharges Margin transparency on TEU and chargeable kg Forwarder P&L decomposition
Domestic Freight Linehaul plus fuel Lane density and backhaul matching Carrier capacity by region
Global Express Network density Volume tiers and zone skip DHL, FedEx, UPS market share by corridor
Contract Logistics Labor plus space Activity-based pricing, gainshare 3PL capacity utilization
Project Logistics Engineering and permits Risk allocation in EPC contracts Specialized carrier qualification

Source: SIS International Research practitioner framework, synthesized from freight and logistics market assessments.

Why Primary Intelligence Outperforms Syndicated Reports

Syndicated freight reports describe the past. They aggregate trade data with a lag and report on conditions that have already shifted. For a Fortune 500 shipper negotiating a multi-year contract, that lag is expensive.

Primary freight market research closes the gap. Structured expert interviews with forwarder commercial directors, port operators, and competing 3PL country managers produce current capacity reads, real margin pressure points, and forward visibility on alliance shifts. The same applies to ocean reliability data sourced directly from carrier operations contacts rather than published schedule reliability indices.

SIS International’s freight and logistics assessments across the GCC, including engagements covering Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, and the broader Middle East, have shown that forwarder market share, lane-level volumes, and price trends are obtainable through disciplined primary research even where public data is thin. Hub strategies around Jebel Ali, King Abdullah Port, and Hamad Port respond more to commercial intelligence than to syndicated forecasts.

The Categories Where Buyers Are Pulling Ahead

Three buyer profiles are converting freight market research into measurable advantage.

Industrial OEMs are integrating freight intelligence with bill of materials optimization and total cost of ownership modeling. They no longer treat inbound freight as a procurement cost. They treat it as a design variable. Component sourcing decisions now include landed cost stress tests against alternate corridors.

Consumer brands with DTC channel exposure are using last-mile cost modeling and parcel rate intelligence to renegotiate FedEx, UPS, and regional carrier contracts annually. They quantify zone skip economics, dim weight exposure, and surcharge accumulation lane by lane.

Project-driven enterprises in energy, mining, and defense are commissioning project logistics market research before EPC contract negotiation, not after. Knowing the qualified carrier pool for breakbulk, heavy lift, and out-of-gauge moves before the EPC tender shifts risk allocation in the buyer’s favor.

The SIS Approach to Freight Market Research

SIS International Research conducts freight market research through B2B expert interviews with forwarder executives, port and terminal operators, customs brokers, and rival 3PL country managers, combined with shipment-level data analysis and competitive intelligence on carrier financials. The work covers global forwarding, domestic freight, global express, contract logistics, and project logistics across more than 135 countries.

The deliverable is not a report on the market. It is a decision document tied to a specific commercial question: Which forwarder, which lane, which contract structure, at what margin floor. That distinction matters when a single ocean contract decision moves nine figures of annual spend.

Key Questions for VP-Level Decision Makers

Pesquisa e Estratégia de Mercado Internacional da SIS

The shippers extracting the most value from freight market research are asking sharper questions. What is our forwarder’s gross profit per shipment on our top ten lanes? Where does our contract logistics partner sit on capacity utilization, and what does that mean for our renewal leverage? Which alliance reshuffle exposes our primary corridor? Generic market data does not answer these. Targeted freight market research does.

Sobre SIS Internacional

SIS Internacional oferece pesquisa quantitativa, qualitativa e estratégica. Fornecemos dados, ferramentas, estratégias, relatórios e insights para a tomada de decisões. Também realizamos entrevistas, pesquisas, grupos focais e outros métodos e abordagens de Pesquisa de Mercado. Entre em contato conosco para o seu próximo projeto de pesquisa de mercado.

Foto do autor

Ruth Stanat

Fundadora e CEO da SIS International Research & Strategy. Com mais de 40 anos de experiência em planejamento estratégico e inteligência de mercado global, ela é uma líder global confiável em ajudar organizações a alcançar sucesso internacional.

Expanda globalmente com confiança. Entre em contato com a SIS Internacional hoje mesmo!

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