Transportation management is the process of planning, coordinating, and controlling all activities related to moving goods from an origin to a destination. It’s one of the largest cost items within the supply chain: freight movement accounts for at least a third of a company’s total logistics costs, ahead of warehousing or order management.
It’s the set of decisions and processes through which a company organizes how its goods move: which mode of transport to use, which routes to follow, which carriers to work with, and how to make sure each shipment arrives on time and in the agreed condition. It isn’t an isolated task, it’s a function that runs across planning, procurement, production, distribution, and customer service.
Transportation isn’t a secondary cost: in most companies it’s the single largest item within total logistics spend, ahead of warehousing or inventory management. Well-structured transportation management delivers direct benefits:
A transportation management system (TMS) is the software that digitizes and automates much of this work: it plans routes automatically, manages shipping documentation, calculates rates, and provides real-time load tracking. For medium- or high-volume operations, managing transportation without a TMS usually means more manual errors, worse fleet utilization, and less capacity to react to delays.
Picture a company with an excellent TMS: optimized routes, real-time tracking on every truck, automatic alerts for any delay. And yet, a customer still doesn’t get their order on time. How is that possible?
Because the TMS flagged the truck’s delay, but nobody connected that data point to the stock level at the destination warehouse or to the production line waiting on that material. The system did its job, tracking the shipment, but that information stayed isolated, never turning into a timely operational decision elsewhere in the chain.
That’s the structural limit of any TMS: it sees transportation, not the full operation. Connecting that data with the ERP, the WMS, and the rest of the systems through a supply chain visibility platform is what turns a delay alert into a concrete action: rebalancing inventory, notifying production, or reprioritizing another order, instead of letting the problem stop at the carrier’s screen.
Logistics is the broader concept, it includes warehousing, inventory management, distribution, and transportation. Transportation management is one of the functions within logistics, specifically focused on how goods physically move from one point to another.
Not always. With a low shipment volume, managing transportation manually or with spreadsheets can be enough. As the number of daily shipments and carriers grows, the margin for manual error increases and a TMS starts to justify its cost.
Common industry estimates put transportation at roughly a third of a company’s total logistics costs, ahead of warehousing or order management, which makes it one of the areas with the greatest savings potential.
The most common are on-time delivery rate, cost per kilometer or per shipment, transportation incident rate, and fleet utilization level.
It depends on shipment volume and predictability. An owned fleet gives more control but requires greater fixed investment; outsourcing transportation offers more flexibility to adapt to demand peaks, though with less direct control over service.