What happens to freight rates after you award a carrier? Shippers who go hands-off after awarding lanes often see costs creep through rate drift, missed volume thresholds, and billing errors.
Freight rate management is the process of keeping costs in check after award through pricing controls, approval workflows, and ongoing rate optimization.
This guide covers what rate drift looks like, how pricing controls and approval workflows help prevent it, and why ongoing rate optimization matters.
Managing freight rates after awarding a carrier a lane comes down to engagement on the part of the shipper. Simply looking at your rates and RFPs annually doesn’t cut it, and it can lead shippers to only consider their own data and benchmarks year after year rather than comparing against the market.
Managing your rates after awarding requires more proactive engagement with industry data, market volatility, and your carrier network.
Modern transportation management systems give shippers an external reference point, so teams can see whether their contracted rates are still competitive without waiting for the next RFP cycle.
Freight rate drift occurs when actual freight costs start to diverge from contracted expectations. Examples include volume falling below tier thresholds or updates being missed, which can result in invoices reflecting higher rates than expected. Other forms of rate drift include consistent overpaying on spot lanes that could be contracted and high price volatility on specific lanes.
In order to prevent rate drift, shippers have to develop a freight audit process. This allows you to identify overpayment, billing discrepancies, and rate variance before they compound into larger cost problems.
Freight rate optimization is the process of selecting the most cost-effective carriers, routes, and modes, while also evaluating strategies like contract versus spot mix and load consolidation. Typically, shippers use transportation management systems in order to have access to centralized data that makes it easier to compare rates to the market. The goal of rate optimization is to lower costs as well as maximize profitability per load, all without compromising on service quality and delivery performance.
Balancing cost and service is tricky. Lower rates can come with the risk of working with carriers that have weaker performance, such as lower on-time delivery rates or inconsistent service. Because of this, shippers have to find the right balance between competitive rates and reliable service.
It’s easier to juggle and analyze these metrics when using software, like a modern TMS, because you're not relying on slow, legacy systems or spreadsheets. A TMS may even have a tender-rejection-prediction tool that can be used to quickly conclude which carriers balance competitive pricing and high-quality service.
Pricing controls within freight execution are another way to keep freight rate management on track. These can include contract guidelines or system rules that flag noncompliant shipments, billing errors, and data inconsistencies.
Other strategies include using real-time data (again more easily facilitated through the use of software) to monitor contract rates against spot rates. This allows you to shift specific lanes or shipments to spot rates when they’re more competitive, or move consistent spot lanes to contract for more predictable pricing.
A transportation management system should allow you to set up guardrails that define how much a fallback rate can exceed the primary carrier’s rate. So when the system moves through the tender sequence, cost stays controlled.
Approval workflows automate the review of freight charges and invoices. An auto-approval feature can let shippers set variance thresholds so invoices within the defined range are approved automatically, while outliers are flagged for manual review.
Freight rate management is the process of keeping freight costs in check, even after awarding carriers with lanes. It includes monitoring rate performance against benchmarks, preventing rate drift, and using approval workflows to catch billing errors.
It depends on the mode—for LTL, freight rate is calculated through several factors, including freight class, shipment weight, distance, and accessorial charges. For FTL, rates can be based on the lane, equipment type, and market conditions.
ShipperGuide TMS automates freight rate management, whether teams are looking for rate benchmarking, auto tender guardrails, or invoice approval workflows.
Request a demo of ShipperGuide to see how rate management can work across your freight network.