Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

FedEx extends Microsoft partnership to build “logistics as a service” product

Software giant will apply AI muscle to mine data from FedEx’ 17 million daily package volume.

fedex dsc05807_50431119898_o_50709322253_o-scaled.jpg

As retailers, merchants, and brands continue to search for better ways to handle the relentless growth of e-commerce, the parcel carrier and logistics provider FedEx Corp. today launched a plan to answer that call through a collaboration with software giant Microsoft Corp.

Memphis, Tennessee-based FedEx will combine its package network intelligence with Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft’s Microsoft Dynamics 365 product, which includes enterprise resource planning (ERP) and customer relationship management (CRM) business applications. According to the partners, that mixture is a recipe for a cross-platform “logistics as a service” product that will improve commerce experiences for businesses so they can offer their consumers more integrated ways to shop, and support faster, more efficient deliveries.


More specifically, FedEx and Microsoft say they will apply artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) tools to extrapolate insights from the 17 million packages that pass through the FedEx network each day. The benefits of that approach could include faster, more cost-effective delivery; near real-time delivery status communications; and convenient, frictionless returns with approximately 60,000 drop-off locations and printerless QR codes, the companies said.

The partnership expands an existing relationship between the two companies that had previously created the “FedEx Surround” product, a platform allowing business users to enhance visibility into supply chain details by leveraging data to provide near-real-time analytics into shipment tracking, which will drive more precise logistics and inventory management.

“More than ever, it’s clear just how critical having a resilient supply chain is for every organization's success in the modern economy,” Satya Nadella, chairman and CEO of Microsoft, said in a release. “We’re bringing data and insights from the FedEx network together with the Microsoft Cloud, starting with Dynamics 365, to help organizations accelerate their digital transformation across their business operations so they can offer customers more integrated ways to shop, and faster, more efficient deliveries.”

The partnership follows news last week that two other logistics powerhouses—JD.com and Shopify—had likewise teamed up to combine their capabilities in the name of supercharging the way their networks can serve e-commerce demand.

That initiative enlists different types of players, but it likewise shows the lengths that logistics providers will go to create more powerful fulfillment engines. Specifically, the deal will link Shopify’s millions of merchants worldwide with JD.com’s 550 million active customers in China. The result could give independent brands in the U.S. a simple, trusted way to access consumers in China, while simultaneously enabling Shopify merchants worldwide to access JD’s quality supplier network, the companies said.

“Bringing together two world-class commerce platforms—Shopify and JD.com—is a major step in solving cross-border commerce for merchants,” Aaron Brown, vice president of Shopify, said in a release. “The future of commerce is commerce everywhere—and that starts by removing barriers to entry to one of the most important e-commerce markets in the world.”

Recent

More Stories

gartner chart of survey on procurement risk

Gartner survey: supply disruption ranked as top procurement risk

A hefty 42% of procurement leaders say the biggest threat to their future success is supply disruptions—such as natural disasters and transportation issues—a Gartner survey shows.

The survey, conducted from June through July 2024 among 258 sourcing and procurement leaders, was designed to help chief procurement officers (CPOs) understand and prioritize the most significant risks that could impede procurement operations, and what actions can be taken to manage them effectively.

Keep ReadingShow less

Featured

Logistics services continue to “go green”

Logistics services continue to “go green”

The market for environmentally friendly logistics services is expected to grow by nearly 8% between now and 2033, reaching a value of $2.8 billion, according to research from Custom Market Insights (CMI), released earlier this year.

The “green logistics services market” encompasses environmentally sustainable logistics practices aimed at reducing carbon emissions, minimizing waste, and improving energy efficiency throughout the supply chain, according to CMI. The market involves the use of eco-friendly transportation methods—such as electric and hybrid vehicles—as well as renewable energy-powered warehouses, and advanced technologies such as the Internet of Things (IoT) and artificial intelligence (AI) for optimizing logistics operations.

Keep ReadingShow less
An audience views a presentation given by man in a sport coat against a backdrop that says "Becoming a Real-Time Busines."

Peter Weill of MIT tells the audience at the IFS Unleashed user conference about the benefits of being a "real-time business."

Ben Ames

Real-time data flows can provide competitive advantage

Companies that integrate real-time data flows into their operations consistently outperform their competitors, said Peter Weill, the chairman of MIT’s Center for Information Systems Research (CISR), in a session Wednesday at a conference held by IFS, the Swedish enterprise resource planning (ERP) and artificial intelligence (AI) firm.

These "real-time businesses," according to Weill, use trusted, real-time data to enable people and systems to make real-time decisions. By adopting that strategy, these companies gain three major capabilities:

Keep ReadingShow less
hurricane milton rainfall forecast map florida

Supply chain networks prep for delays as Milton storms in

Hurricane Milton was just beginning to unleash its slashing wind and pouring rain on Florida’s western coast on Wednesday, but the supply chain disruptions caused by the enormous storm have already been unfolding for days.

For example, millions of residents and workers in the Tampa region have now left their homes and jobs, heeding increasingly dire evacuation warnings from state officials. They’re fleeing the estimated 10 to 20 feet of storm surge that is forecast to swamp the area, due to Hurricane Milton’s status as the strongest hurricane in the Gulf since Rita in 2005, the fifth-strongest Atlantic hurricane based on pressure, and the sixth-strongest Atlantic hurricane based on its peak winds, according to market data provider Industrial Info Resources.

Keep ReadingShow less
NRF Hackett port import stats chart

U.S. imports remain high despite dockworkers strike

The three-day dockworkers strike that shut down East and Gulf coast port operations from Maine to Texas last week appears not to have dented the nation’s flow of imported goods, according to the latest monthly report from the National Retail Federation (NRF) and Hackett Associates.

Imports at the nation’s major container ports should continue at elevated levels this month despite the strike, the groups said in their Global Port Tracker report.

Keep ReadingShow less