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More Logistic Firms to Chase Bulky Home Deliveries: Augusto Beato

February 26, 2019 – – Augusto Beato of Ice Break Shipping anticipates more logistics operators to invade the bulky home delivery segment, which is worth about $9 billion.

He was reacting to a report by Logistics Trends & Insights that increasingly consumers are ordering things like exercise equipment and household appliances online and extend their expectations for small parcel deliveries to this segment, requiring fast transit times and flexible scheduling options.

“While home deliveries of bulky items are costly, time-consuming and usually require two drivers and may require assembly of the items, its huge money generating potential could not be ignored,” said Beato, who is also the CEO of Portland SEO.

To learn more about how Portland SEO can help you with your e-commerce deliveries, click here.

This year has seen a rush of large players into this segment: on January 9, trucking and intermodal giant JB Hunt announced it was acquiring New Jersey-based Cory’s First Choice Home Delivery for $100 million.

John Roberts, President and CEO of JB Hunt, called the acquisition “a strategic investment that will further advance our final-mile delivery capabilities of ‘big and bulky’ products to consumers and expand our expertise in furniture delivery.”

While Parcelforce is not targeting bigger bulky items, on Wednesday it launched a next-day service for parcels of up to 2.5 meters in length, with a maximum combined limit of five meters for length and width and weight up to 30kg.

FedEx has started trials of full-service home deliveries of items like washing machines, exercise bikes and sectional sofas in six areas in the US through FedEx Freight, the company’s LTL arm. It is expected that UPS may follow.

The two integrators have long resisted home deliveries of bulky items, imposing surcharges designed to discourage customers And last year, UPS raised its levy for oversize parcels from $500 to $600 and added a ‘shipping charge correction audit fee’. In addition to raising its surcharge, FedEx also introduced a ‘peak oversize charge’ for the busiest season of the year.

Despite these disincentives, Cathy Morrow Roberson, founder and head analyst of Logistics Trends & Insights, was not surprised by the FedEx trials and believes UPS will move in the same direction.

“I think both companies have been thinking about doing this for a while,” she said, adding that it was unclear at this point how far they will go down this road.

Given the expertise required to assemble such items, most logistics companies that have embraced home deliveries in this segment have struck up partnerships with local providers active in this area, Ms. Roberson noted.

The acquisition of Cory gives JB Hunt a network of 14 warehouses across the US, but no home delivery capability as such. Cory uses more than 1,000 independent contractors, carriers and delivery drivers for more than two million annual deliveries.

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