ShipperGuide Blog

Freight Procurement Models: RFPs, Mini-Bids & More | ShipperGuide

Written by Hal Koss | October 23, 2025 - 8:48 PM

Key Takeaways

  • The four freight procurement models shippers use: RFPs, spot posts, mini-bids, and dynamic contracts.
  • When each model applies and how blending them protects margins during market volatility.
  • How ShipperGuide's procurement platform supports all four models in a single workflow.

ShipperGuide's freight procurement platform supports RFPs, mini-bids, spot posts, and dynamic contracts within a single workflow, giving shippers one place to manage every procurement model from annual bids to mid-cycle lane adjustments without switching between tools. Highly successful shippers blend contractual and on-the-spot coverage using mini-bids and dynamic contracts, insulating efficiency and revenue from sudden market volatility. For teams that have moved to a managed transportation model, see how managed transportation differs from 3PL brokerage when it comes to procurement strategy and carrier ownership.

By addressing the inflexible nature of traditional RFPs through dynamic procurement, carrier contracting can absorb mid-cycle market shifts without breaking contractual caps or service guarantees.

Shippers overcome rapid-cycling market conditions using a balanced mix of fixed and flexible logistics contracting:

  • RFPs define your contractual baseline.
  • One-load spot posts cover the unexpected.
  • Mini-bids refresh problematic lanes mid-cycle.
  • Dynamic contracts tailor rates despite market shifts.

This fits market research predictions showing that dynamic, auction, and spot mechanisms control costs and reduce instability. Explore the optimal mix of contract methods to streamline quote time, conserve freight spend, and steer rate decisions.

What Are Mini-Bids vs. RFPs?

RFPs typically establish baselines for long-term bids and contractual agreements, often lasting 12 months or more and aligning with seasonal cycles. Mini-bids are shorter in duration, sometimes weekly or monthly, and are usually event-specific, designed to drive competition and enable rapid lane adjustments in the short term.

RFPs are best when networks need a structural reset. Mini-bids are ideal for tactical recalibrations such as adjusting rates or carriers on problem lanes or accommodating seasonal shifts. ShipperGuide automates both: teams run annual RFPs by uploading lane data, inviting carriers, and collecting bids in a structured workflow, then launch mini-bids directly on underperforming lanes without starting a new procurement cycle from scratch.

For spot coverage, ShipperGuide lets shippers post individual loads to the carrier network instantly, filling unexpected capacity gaps without manually working the phone or disrupting contracted lane performance. Before locking in contract rates, teams can benchmark current market rates using ShipperGuide's freight rate tool to ensure bids are grounded in real market data before the RFP goes out.

What Are Dynamic Contracts?

Dynamic contracts introduce pricing formulas into carrier agreements, linking rates to external indexes or margin structures.

For example, a dynamic contract might set truckload rates as index plus margin, with floor and ceiling bands to prevent extreme fluctuations. This allows rates to flex with the market while maintaining budget predictability and carrier commitment. Traditional fixed contracts do not adjust when markets change, often leading to strained relationships or budget variance. Dynamic models build resilience by updating automatically and preventing large pricing gaps. Research shows hybrid dynamic and spot auction strategies improve acceptance, reduce budget variance, and increase speed to market.

ShipperGuide supports dynamic contract structures within the same platform used for RFPs and spot, so teams manage every procurement model in one place and pull reporting across all models without consolidating data from separate tools.

Manage Every Freight Procurement Model with ShipperGuide

ShipperGuide gives shippers one platform to run RFPs, launch mini-bids, post spot loads, and manage dynamic contracts without switching between tools or losing visibility across procurement models. Before market conditions raise variance, hinder acceptance, or blow up contracted rates, reinforce your procurement process with the platform built to handle every model in one workflow.

Book a free demo and see how ShipperGuide manages RFPs, mini-bids, spot posts, and dynamic contracts in a single freight procurement platform.

Frequently Asked Questions About Freight Procurement Models

What Are Mini-Bids vs. RFPs in Freight Procurement?

RFPs establish baselines for long-term contractual agreements, often lasting 12 months or more, while mini-bids are shorter and event-specific, designed to drive carrier competition and enable rapid lane adjustments mid-cycle. RFPs are the right tool when your network needs a structural reset. Mini-bids are the right tool when you need to fix a problem lane or respond to a seasonal shift without reopening your full carrier negotiation.

What Are Dynamic Contracts in Freight Procurement?

Dynamic contracts link carrier rates to external market indexes or margin structures, with floor and ceiling bands that allow rates to flex without exposing shippers to extreme fluctuations. Unlike fixed contracts that stay static while market rates move, dynamic contracts update automatically, keeping carrier relationships intact and keeping budget variance low through volatile cycles.

How Do Shippers Choose the Right Freight Procurement Model?

The right freight procurement model depends on network stability, shipment volume, and how much mid-cycle flexibility your operation needs. Most high-performing shippers use a blend: RFPs for annual lane coverage, mini-bids for tactical recalibrations, spot posts for unexpected capacity needs, and dynamic contracts to absorb market shifts without renegotiating from scratch. ShipperGuide manages all four models in a single platform, so teams do not need separate tools for each procurement type.