Freight forwarding companies are signaling a shift away from a long-standing industry software platform as concerns escalate over pricing changes and the direction of the wider logistics technology ecosystem. Once the default choice for large and mid-sized forwarders, the platform’s recent commercial model updates have prompted forwarders to reevaluate their technology strategies.
For more than a decade, a unified transport management system has been central to the operations of many global freight forwarders due to its comprehensive workflow coverage and global customs footprint. However, new pricing structures have caused confusion and raised cost concerns, particularly under bundles designed to simplify billing but which industry users describe as increasing total expense and reducing transparency.
The evolving commercial strategy has also drawn broader industry scrutiny. Analysts and software vendors warn that the shift toward a more closed technology ecosystem could marginalise third-party integrations and slow innovation within the 3PL and freight tech landscape — potentially limiting forwarders’ ability to tailor solutions to their unique operational needs.
This environment is encouraging many forwarders to explore alternative technology stacks and software partners. Emerging transport management systems and freight automation tools are gaining interest for features such as simplified subscription pricing, enhanced user experience, and modular capabilities that align more closely with mid-market and leaner operations. Industry sources highlight options including cloud-native platforms, freight-specific TMS with modern user interfaces, and solutions that centralise shipment tracking, quoting, and documentation without extensive per-transaction fees.
Smaller and midsize forwarders, in particular, are weighing alternatives that offer lower costs and easier onboarding than legacy enterprise systems. Forwarders looking to retain operational flexibility are also considering strategies that combine lightweight TMS tools with specialised modules for billing, visibility, and integration layers — reflecting a broader trend toward composable supply chain technology stacks.
As the technology landscape evolves, decision-makers in forwarding and logistics are expected to continue balancing the advantages of established systems against the financial and strategic benefits of newer platforms designed for agility and cost efficiency in global supply chains.
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