The Role of ‘Influencers’ as Drivers of a More Sustainable Urban Freight Sector
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature on Business Models, Stakeholders and Influencers in Urban Freight
Research on Influencing Organisations as a Group of Stakeholders in Urban Freight
3. Materials and Methods
4. Results
- Vehicle-related requirements such as greener vehicles, e.g., low emissions vehicles, hybrid and electrical vehicles
- Requirements to participate in (e.g., deliver to) UCC initiatives
- Consolidating deliveries and collaborative procurement
- Scheduling or time-agreed deliveries, off-hour deliveries (OHD)
- Common carrier locker system
- Deliveries to pick-up point
- Parking-related regulations and anti-idling programs
- Delivery and servicing planning (DSP)
4.1. Business Improvement Districts
- (1)
- Collaborative procurement via so-called buyers’ clubs. This is a service provided to BID members that gives them the possibility to procure some common types of goods and services with discounted prices from preferred suppliers. Reduced numbers of suppliers can lead to a reduced amount of delivery trips and deliveries to several receivers at once.
- (2)
- Waste consolidation and associated delivery vehicle reduction schemes. This is a two-phase program that focuses on waste vehicle reduction during the first phase and adds on the reduction of commercial vehicles during the second phase via the introduction of consolidation schemes.
- (3)
- Freight consolidation schemes using UCC and delivery to the final goods receivers using environmentally-friendly vehicles.
- (4)
- Facilitation of OHD implementation. OHD are the deliveries made outside of peak hours – that is, deliveries are made during late evening, night or early morning. Some of the interviewed BID representatives have provided assistance during the pre-study phase (such as participation in focus groups) and have actively supported the recruitment of businesses (goods receivers) that could participate in the OHD pilot project.
- (5)
- Promotion of DSP among BID members. Designed to facilitate goods deliveries to specific destinations, the DSP is a managerial tool that drafts the measures that may positively impact the generation of externalities from deliveries while improving the quality of the service. DSPs can include consolidation of specific deliveries, reduction of trips, raising the load factors of delivery vehicles, eliminating carriers that are distant in relation to the end destination, collaboration during procurement, and postulating the use of specific standards for delivery vehicles. One of the interviewed BIDs had conducted a pre-study for DSP implementation and a pilot project for several multi-tenant buildings located on one street in their area. Another BID is actively promoting DSP for the large office buildings in their area.
- (6)
- Several BIDS from the sample are promoting the use of collection points and locker banks for personal deliveries. The management teams of several BIDs expressed concerns about the extensive private deliveries made to the employees in the area, especially at big office buildings, which lead to situations wherein multiple delivery vehicles with one or few packages arrive at the building and are parked in front of it, sometimes for long periods of time because the delivery personnel have to find the package receiver. Some of the building managers are keen to ban personal deliveries to workplaces, and the use of collection points and locker banks could be a good alternative for the employees and for the particular area.
4.2. Property Owners
- (1)
- A big property owner, together with a logistics company, established a freight consolidation scheme and used electrical vans for the final deliveries from the UCC, which resulted in the significant reduction of deliveries received by the participating businesses.
- (2)
- Participation in a collaborative project about waste collection together with other stakeholders. This already-implemented project includes the property owner and a number of other stakeholders, such as a big service provider for recycling and waste management, and one carrier. This scheme combines waste collection with deliveries of packages, and the last mile delivery is operated by environmentally-friendly vehicles.
- (3)
- Consolidated delivery scheme initiated and implemented by a shopping mall owner. The scheme is implemented as follows: the goods for the participating retailers are delivered to the UCC outside the city centre and are delivered to the final customers by the collaborating logistics company using environmentally-friendly vehicles.
- (4)
- In a project in development, the property owner, together with other stakeholders (a waste management company, logistics company, and warehouse management company) took care of the waste and goods delivery for the designated area, including commercial and residential establishments, with the aim of decreasing transportation by up to 70% and using the freed-up space for greening, which is expected to increase the liveability and attractiveness of the area.
4.3. Facility Management Companies
- (1)
- Choosing suppliers with the lowest CO2 transport impact. As part of the ‘green’ service provided to the customers, the FMC nominates the suppliers with the lowest environmental impact by considering, for example, the suppliers that deliver the products to the FMC’s customers using greener vehicles or which have a more sustainable delivery strategy.
- (2)
- Tracking the cumulative effect of CO2 emissions and reporting it to the customers on a yearly basis. The FMC that has been studied provides to the customers the cumulative report on the impact of total CO2 emissions during the year, which includes the impact from the suppliers that delivered during this period; the impact of transport activities arranged by the FMC on behalf of the customers, including the transportation used by the FMC’s site manager; and the reduction in CO2 emissions achieved by the implementation of a continuous improvement program on-site.
- (3)
- Demand planning on behalf of the customers to minimise the delivery trips while keeping up the service level. The FMC site manager from the case study usually estimates the demand for each product and product category and works out the delivery schedule together with the suppliers. The intention is to diminish the negative impact of deliveries while keeping the service level. For example, the replenishment strategy for stationery products at a big office building was set as once in two weeks.
- (4)
- Implementation and management of common post rooms and concierge services. These services enable the receptionist or site manager to receive and send the post and packages on behalf of the customers (office tenants), resulting in decreased dwelling time for delivery vehicles and the consolidation of outbound flows of post and packages.
- (5)
- Optimisation of the deliveries to foodservice establishments at their premises. One of the interviewed FMCs has worked out the canteen menu with the chef and optimised the delivery schedule for foods deliveries for the canteen in the multi-tenant office building, which resulted in a significant decrease in the number of delivery trips of foods without compromising the quality of food service provided to the tenants.
4.4. Public Procurement Organisations
- (1)
- Stipulating in the framework agreements that delivery vehicles must meet certain environmental standards. The supplier that delivers the products should ensure that the delivery vehicles meet the stipulated environmental standards (such as Euro 5 or Euro 6), regardless of whether the deliveries are made directly by the supplier or by a contracted carrier.
- (2)
- Stipulating in the framework agreements the method and frequency of deliveries as well as penalising out-of-schedule and unplanned deliveries. For the transport-intensive deliveries, the purchaser and supplier agree on the delivery schedule; this puts the requirement on the final goods receiver (municipal establishment) to plan their demand in advance and communicate it to the supplier. Out-of-schedule deliveries can be arranged if needed, but the final customer is required to pay for additional unplanned transportation.
- (3)
- Stating requirements for carriers to consolidate deliveries as much as possible. The aim is twofold: to minimise the dwelling time of delivery vehicles in the vicinity of institutions such as schools and kindergartens to decrease the potential for traffic accidents and to diminish the environmental impacts of deliveries. This was particularly relevant for transport-intensive deliveries, such as food deliveries to municipal institutions, and for carriers who have shown the capability to consolidate and deliver foods less frequently.
4.5. Qualitative Analysis
- (1)
- Vehicle-focused measures such as the usage of greener vehicles for the deliveries – that is, vehicles that have higher environmental standards, such as low-emissions vehicles, hybrid vehicles, and electric vehicles.
- (2)
- Consolidation linked to physical infrastructure – that is, establishing a physical UCC, and in connection with the UCC, setting up delivery solutions for the last mile.
- (3)
- Consolidation through behavioural changes, including activities that imply the implementation and use of collaborative procurement schemes, demand planning activities and goods consolidation that should lead to the consolidation of deliveries.
4.5.1. Vehicle-Focused Measures
4.5.2. Consolidation Linked to Physical Infrastructure
4.5.3. Consolidation Through Behavioural Changes
4.6. Potential for Financial Impact on the Business Models of Carriers
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
- (i)
- The influencers play an important role in promoting sustainable urban freight activities because they influence different groups of goods receivers.
- (ii)
- The influencers have different relations with the goods receivers and their impacts on delivery practices differ.
- (iii)
- Different types of influencers tend to engage in different types of sustainable urban freight activities based on the influencer’s own resources, goals and range of activities.
- (iv)
- The business models of carriers are likely to be impacted by the activities promoted or initiated by influencers, and the impact is greater when influencers have power through stronger presence or more comprehensive rules.
- (v)
- The potential impact on the business models of carriers depends more on the type of activity and less on the type of influencer that initiates the sustainable urban freight activity; however, the potential for conflicts with carriers arises owing to the probable costs, including investments and operational changes, that business model changes entail.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Sections | Quotes |
4.1. Business Improvement Districts | |
(1) | “We are, like all other BIDs, looking into how we consolidate and how we reduce the impact of deliveries. When you look at deliveries of stationary alone it is something we have picked up on. I mean businesses like these could have three or four stationary suppliers bringing them things every single day since one department is unaware what another department is ordering. So, what we have got in places is an agreement with the stationary company. Because we talked to them as a group, and encouraged our members to go to them, to receive a discounted service. That is why there we could save although it is not a consolidation, but we are reducing the impact”. BID 1 in UK |
(2) | ”So, we have been running the [street name] project for the number of years, almost three years now, and it was an initially the pilot on waste consolidation and then we added goods deliveries to it”. BID 3 in UK |
(3) | “But there is an opportunity to use that UCC and then to talk to carriers with electrical vehicles here to have goods delivered and picked up in this area”. BID 1 in UK |
(4) | (About off-hour deliveries) “…I always recommend having [deliveries] done in the middle of the night. And what I’ll do is, I’ll work with [the persons involved] to make sure that the drivers don’t get a ticket because, that’s what happens. On the road everyone is parking illegally to do this, to do these deliveries in the middle of the night. If you could just relax enforcement, then it goes a long way, because if every time you get a delivery, you also get a $100 ticket, that will be $5000 a week”. BID 1 in US |
(5) | ”So, we have done several DSPs, delivery service planning, on physical street areas, like [street name], where we worked with about 30 of the local shops and businesses”. BID 2 in UK |
(6) | ”We try to do as much as possible with the occupants around click and collect, trying to encourage personal deliveries to not to come in to [the city centre]”. BID 2 in UK |
4.2 Property owners | |
(1) | “One of the examples is freight consolidation scheme, introduced at one of the most important streets here; it is one of the successful projects initiated and supported by this property owner together with other stakeholders”. BID 3 UK about property owner, UK |
(2) | ”We have been involved in the project in Stockholm with the entrepreneur I have been talking about, in our head offices, we have a service actually, it is called “love your city”, it is located here, this is one big property, so goods are coming here and the entrepreneur, they distribute the goods to others in this area”. Property owner, Sweden |
(3) | ”We want to contribute to the city accessibility and sustainability”. Property owner, Sweden |
(4) | “We think that to be at one place is very good because then we have a lot of influence on the neighbourhoods, which we actually like, and we think we are good at it. And in that specific case we figured out if we could handle the last mile, we could probably decrease the transportation by up to 70% or something. […] we made a survey from which we could figure out that if we don’t do anything the yearly number of transports in this area will be around 400 000. If we could cut that down to 100 000, it would be a much better area to live in, or to work in, or to visit. We could then use the streets and green areas for other things. […] we could raise the utilization ratio while still being able to keep the green areas […] So with that idea in mind we started this company”. Property owner 4, Sweden |
4.3 Facility Management Companies | |
(1) | ”Our suppliers that we use are quite strictly controlled. Not any supplier can become our sub-supplier. For example, a coffee supplier designs their route when they drive to the city, and it should be as effective as possible. Then they even report how much CO2 emissions they produce. They report that to me […] and we then report that in our system”. FMC site 1 |
(2) | ” I report all my work trips with my work car, once a year. How much I was traveling for work and how much emission was produced by my car. Because we have a responsibility to report in order to keep our certificates”. FMC site 1 |
(3) | ”I, and the people that work on the site, put together all requests into one order. For example, with stationary, we conduct inventory and then add to the list what should be refilled, and then we order from the list once in a month”. FMC site 1 |
(4) | “And then we have of course the thing called “[company name] smart flow”. It is for postal services within a building. So, instead of the post officers delivering the post to the building, they give all the packages to us and we sort them and send email to the customers to come down and pick up”. FMC site 2 |
(5) | ” We consolidate the deliveries as well. So instead of like the regular restaurants that have around 15 providers, we have 4. And we only take deliveries like, the big deliveries, only twice a week. And then we have like fish and stuff like that – that is daily. We actually agreed to pay the provider an environmental fee, since that makes my head chefs more eager to consolidate the transports”. FMC site 2 |
4.4 Public Procurement Organisations | |
(1) | “Yes, well when it comes to transport-intensive deliveries, we can put requirements on the vehicles. For example, the trucks used for distribution must be Euro 5 or other types of requirements. If they drive in the centre, they have to use biofuels and nothing else”. PPO 1, Sweden |
(2) | “…then there were requirements on how the deliveries are done. For example, what type of vehicle that is used, how often the deliveries are done. We can put requirements both when it comes to deliveries which are free of charge or paid for by the goods receivers, so those are the things that we can make requirements about. This means that we do not have any fast or unplanned delivers”. PPO 1, Sweden |
(3) | “We do not want to have a large number of delivery trucks that drive around in the vicinity of the school yard, it is a security issue. So, we try to control this fairly meticulously”. PPO 1, Sweden |
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Influencers | Country |
---|---|
Nine BIDs and BIDs-like organisations: Four BIDs Three BIDs One BID-like association | U.S.A. U.K. Sweden |
Four Property owners/property developers | Sweden |
Two FMCs (one organisation with two sites) | Sweden |
Two PPOs | Sweden |
Other actors or stakeholders | |
One umbrella organisation for BID-like associations | Sweden |
Three carriers, including two cargo bike delivery companies | Sweden |
Two municipal traffic agencies | Sweden |
Building blocks | Changes in business model |
---|---|
Infrastructure | |
Key partners | Changes in key partners: adding influencing organisations such as BIDs or property owners as a key partner, adding a consolidation centre coordinator in the case of consolidated deliveries or acquiring a new vehicle supplier or new maintenance service provider. |
Key activities | Changes in key activities: adding consolidation activities (with additional handling or/and coordination) for specific groups of goods, specific goods receivers, specific areas, etc. In case of OHD, operating during the night, including the difference in operation for unattended deliveries. Deliveries to UCC also bring changes in the key activities. |
Key resources | Key resources such as vehicles or the physical location may change to comply with the environmental standards; ICT software may be needed for scheduling the deliveries and consolidating the goods. More resources dedicated to planning and coordination of the flows. |
Offering | |
Value proposition | Changes in value proposition for the customers, for example, in the case of scheduled deliveries, consolidated deliveries and providing more sustainable deliveries to the customers using greener vehicles. The carriers delivering only to the UCC and not to the final customer also change their value proposition. |
Customers | |
Customer relationships and channels | Entering into more long-term relations with customers in case of special agreements with them on providing extra service such as deliveries by environmentally friendly vehicles, consolidated deliveries and deliveries from the UCC to final goods receivers. Expanding the coordination and communication with goods receivers and shippers or in some cases with influencing organisations. |
Customer segments | The customer segments may change. The customers are going to be segmented according to their requirements for deliveries and consolidation, being coordinated by influencing organisations, adding a new intermediate or coordination instance as influencing organisations for example. |
Finances | |
Cost structure | The cost structure will change owing to high investments into ‘greener’ vehicles, the necessity of sharing the income flows with other carriers, delivering for the final mile or, in case of consolidated deliveries, with UCC, etc. Possibility to decrease running costs per package in case of better vehicle filling rate. Additional handling for consolidation might increase costs. |
Revenue streams | Revenue streams change owing to changes in, and implementation of, differentiated delivery schemes. The use of a UCC with a different carrier for different stages impacts how each carrier gets compensated and the ability of carriers to change fees or contracts. Negotiation between the carrier and the receiver may change by the influencer injecting itself, or specific rules, in the negotiation process. |
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Share and Cite
Brettmo, A.; Williamsson, J. The Role of ‘Influencers’ as Drivers of a More Sustainable Urban Freight Sector. Sustainability 2020, 12, 2850. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12072850
Brettmo A, Williamsson J. The Role of ‘Influencers’ as Drivers of a More Sustainable Urban Freight Sector. Sustainability. 2020; 12(7):2850. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12072850
Chicago/Turabian StyleBrettmo, Alena, and Jon Williamsson. 2020. "The Role of ‘Influencers’ as Drivers of a More Sustainable Urban Freight Sector" Sustainability 12, no. 7: 2850. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12072850
APA StyleBrettmo, A., & Williamsson, J. (2020). The Role of ‘Influencers’ as Drivers of a More Sustainable Urban Freight Sector. Sustainability, 12(7), 2850. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12072850