3PL, 4PL, Now the 5PL

Everyone in our industry knows what Third-party contract logistics is (3PLs and LSPs). Many of us will be familiar with the concept of the 4PL. But 5PL?! David Priestman reports.

Stuart Love has a long and impressive job title for his new role at supply chain behemoth DSV: Director of Global Supply Chain Inventory Management Solutions. For a global forwarding and logistics firm that is 50% air and sea freight-based and 25% road cargo, that means one quarter of all operations are designated as ‘solutions’ for customers. The new combined company will have around 150,000 employees.

Love (pictured below) is a data man, recruited from Intel. His specialism is in assembly and packing operations for manufacturers, assisting them with sourcing, procurement and planning. Entering the supply chain world, he is seeing things afresh and learning fast. “Freight forwarders are lean, 4PL set-ups that transcend industry problems due to the complexity of their operations and networks across all vertical markets,” he told me when we met at Manifest.

So, a fourth party logistics provider (4PL) is one that manages the contracted-out logistics and warehousing activities of a customer but uses few or none of its own physical assets, such as commercial vehicle fleets, distribution centres, ships and cargo planes. Instead, it sub-contracts these to many separate logistics companies across the supply chain it is managing. The 4PL provides the ‘control tower’ with its supply chain management and associated software, selects routes, modes and hubs, drives efficiencies and strives to create synergy.

Big Logistics Party

By extension, a 5PL must be one step removed from a 4PL. Love agrees: “A 5PL utilizes data across all modes, analysing what can be measured in transit, such as temperature and locations. Everyone talks about AI and data but many customers can’t see the wood for the trees. What are you going to do with the data and do differently? Being prepared isn’t enough, you need to enable increases in revenue, new lanes and new markets. It is these that determine your data requirements.”

Serving the current customer is key. “Supply chains need to be touchless and incident-based. We can assess the control tower metrics and network capacity,” Love added. “A 5PL is more than consultancy, its designing inventory management solutions, data crunching and analysis to then build new distribution centres, server centres and capacity.” Recommendations to the customer would be made, whether that be using DSV assets or brokerage for sub-contractors. The emphasis is on project management and navigating customer requirements.

Whither the Haulier?

What does the future holds for road transport companies around the world? It is a low-margin, often family-run sector, supplemented by pallet freight networks and alliances, challenged by fuel costs, driver shortages and the need to decarbonise logistics by gradually adopting electric vehicles. Nothing can be transported without a 3PL logistics service provider or haulier. 4PL supply chain management services cannot be offered if there are insufficient trucking firms to do the donkey work.

“The technology and the trucks are all there,” Love responded. “Perhaps the haulage sector is ripe for subsidies?” Right now there is just enough capacity, generally, due to the low barriers to entry for the road haulage market. “Most DSV road freight is for our own shipped or flown cargo, as part of a service solution,” Love explained. As a 4PL forwarder there is no desire to truck freight unless it is part of a higher-margin contract.

Some supply chains, such as Tesco’s, maintain some logistics operations in-house, both as a core competency for know-how and as a KPI comparison with outsourced providers. Contract lengths remain a key issue. 3PLs and 4PLs are loathe to invest in EVs and warehouse automation if the contract is up for renewal tendering just a few years ahead.

Wind of Change

The speed of change in logistics is increasing. Unnecessary, counter-productive trade barriers and tariffs are re-emerging. What about reshoring and nearshoring? “It can’t be rushed or done until the supply chain is figured out,” Love stated. “Nearshoring solutions require good people to deliver it and competent resources. It is mission-critical for consumer goods, technology and electronics manufacturers.” New locations such as Ghana and the Indian subcontinent offer opportunities and most inward investment agencies, such as CARISCA and JAMPRO dangle incentives. “It’s more challenging in high-tech sectors, automotive and parts,” Love advises.

Are the benefits and challenges of nearshoring pretty straight forward? “Yes. Shorter lead times, less impact from governmental and geopolitical turmoil, lower transit costs, more direct linkage, better manufacturing and revenue realization by making the product in where it will be consumed. Additionally, nearshoring can unlock new tax and financial incentives that likely didn’t exist just a few decades ago. Emerging skillsets, improving infrastructure, growing and shifting demand profiles all create opportunities for new manufacturing locations that in many cases unlock not only supply resiliency, but also new markets. As more countries become industrialized and grow their talent pool, so grows their economy, and their need for advanced consumer goods, services, all of which can be satisfied by the very industries that are driving the growth.”

Impact of 5PLs on Current Supply Chains

“5PLs will deliver faster time to information, or time to decision, more integrated and optimized workflows across supply chain nodes,” adds Love. “Using AI engines (LMM, Gen AI, Machine Learning, RPA and Agentic AI) successful companies in the near future will rely on 5PLs to not only streamline operations, communications, business process efficiency, but it will also unlock previously untapped potential regarding alternate or direct sources, supply chain financing, shared warehousing and freight lane utilization.”

How are 5PLs building on the proven benefits of the 4PL? “Via the inclusion of Artificial Intelligence data models, Robotic Process Automation, and Big Data interconnectivity,” says Love, “resulting in faster time-to-market, better use of limited and constrained resources, better identification of risk, and optimized net working capital.”

Updates in Control Tower Technology

As worldwide supply chain operating models continue to grow more complex, so too grows the complexity of monitoring, evaluating and reporting of supply chain health. As Love explains, “the Supply Chain Control tower will undergo a major shift in the next 2-3 years. No longer are the days of dashboards fed by Excel and Access queries. Rather, connections throughout the supply chain now enable a whole new level of data integration and scalability.

“While, historically, Control Towers were limited to ‘static’ data with a limited ability to drilldown, investigate and mitigate revenue impacts, the Control Towers of the future will provide not only real time, structured data that is scalable at all levels, but these towers will also deliver sourcing opportunities, supplier and customer KPI summaries and scorecards, and real time tracking/tracing throughout the entire supply network. This will be made possible through improved system connectivity, master data governance and quality, and a systematized approach to gathering, aggregating and reporting data as stipulated by business operations.”

Emerging Trends

Where are we headed then? “The AI trends are everywhere. I think one of the most compelling developments currently underway is the need for real time track/trace with system connectivity to not only the shipment recipient, but also the downstream dependents of the materials. Tomorrow’s economy will be hastier, more demanding and profit constrained than ever. As such, the ability to confidently know exactly where shipments are and what condition they are will be paramount to companies ability to ‘just say yes’ to customer demand shifts, mitigate business impacts from supply chain excursions, and navigate geopolitical turmoil.”

similar news

DSV’s ‘Lead Logistics’ Set to Change Approach to 4PL

 

Tariff Response Solution Helps Supply Chains Adapt to Disruption

As ongoing tariff pressures and trade uncertainty continue to reshape global supply chains, Kinaxis®, a leader in real-time supply chain orchestration, has launched Kinaxis Tariff Response – a new offering that helps companies simulate tariff exposure, run strategic scenarios, and make data-informed decisions quickly.

Built on the company’s AI-powered Maestro™ platform and delivered by Kinaxis supply chain experts, the service can be live in as few as 21 days, giving planners access to tariff modeling without the cost or complexity of building it internally. The solution meets rising demand for scenario planning – providing a faster, more accessible way for companies to shift from reactive firefighting to proactive orchestration.

While AI-powered what-if scenario planning has long been a core capability of Maestro, Kinaxis Tariff Response builds on that foundation with a focused solution for trade disruption. It combines tariff-specific inputs, sourcing logic, pricing levers, and demand modeling so companies can assess margin risk, test strategies, and evaluate trade-offs in seconds, not days or weeks.

“We’re already using Maestro scenario planning to model the impact of disruptions across our supply chain including tariffs and trade compliance policies,” said Colton Porter, manager, supply chain planning systems at furniture manufacturing and design company MillerKnoll. “It helps us evaluate sourcing options, anticipate risks, and align our team’s strategy before those changes affect our margins or customer delivery commitments.”

“Global supply chains aren’t operating by the old rules anymore,” said Fabienne Cetre, EVP EMEA at Kinaxis. “Tariffs are hitting faster, with broader consequences, and our data shows just how disruptive they’ve become. When trade policies shift overnight, companies need more than spreadsheets. With Kinaxis Tariff Response, they get visibility into cost, demand, and sourcing implications in real time, giving them the confidence to act with speed and precision.”

Supply chain data surging

Many Kinaxis customers already rely on Maestro’s scenario planning to stay ahead of supply chain disruptions. Over the past year, usage spiked significantly around key tariff discussions, showing how companies are turning to simulation to evaluate risks and respond faster:

• 124% scenario usage spike after the June 2024 presidential debate that first mentioned tariffs
• 112% increase following the January 2025 White House tariff memo
• 15% month-over-month rise ahead of the April 2 tariff announcements
• 24% increase in scenario planning usage quarter-over-quarter (Q1 2025 vs Q4 2024), with automotive, oil & gas, and consumer packaged goods leading the surge in anticipatory orchestration
• 4.5x daily activity in the auto sector alone during the final week of March 2025.

similar news

US Trade Tariffs’ Supply Chain Disaster

 

Cloudy Supply Chain Data

There were many Davids at the Manifest convention. Logistics Business’ David met with 3 namesakes, including Blue Yonder’s Senior Director for Global Retail Industry Strategy.

Blue Yonder is a major global player in supply chain operating systems, offering specific products for WMS, TMS, Warehouse Execution, Order Management (boosted by the acquisition of Yantriks), Demand Planning, Inventory Optimisation and more. With a turnover of $1.28bn, 6000 employees and 167 new customers last year, representing 17% growth, it is a Microsoft Azure cloud computing partner and a division of Panasonic. The company has released a digital cognitive platform, ‘Luminate’, a generative AI capability, ‘Orchestrator’, and a new data cloud service with its partner Snowflake.

Dave Hamilton, pictured, has 30 years’ experience as a specialist in retail logistics in the USA, much of it at Best Buy. I asked him about the recent acquisition of Doddle, a company we spotlighted in our February issue (p6-7). “We’re excited to have them in the group. They’re strong in solving the returns issue and growing in North America now.”

“Snowflake will change how organisations connect their supply chain network,” Hamilton explains. “Currently there is the challenge of middleware (software that lies between an operating system and the applications running on it), but Snowflake eliminates that as it’s permissive, for example if using ERP software. Data is gold. The ability to share it via the cloud, end-to-end, is great.”

Inter-operable Solutions

I asked Hamilton about the interaction of Blue Yonder software applications with IT hardware used in warehousing and distribution. “Best-in-class is what we want,” he replies, “but we don’t have to provide every hardware product.” Customer use cases span applications in planning, DCs, commerce and transport management, in the third party logistics sector, retail or any manufacturing industry.

Of course, you cannot discuss all these areas without mentioning AI. “In problem-solving, generative AI enables the customer to go further,” Hamilton states. This can result in reducing costs or increasing inventory. “Orchestrator (which runs on its Luminate platform) is agile and co-ordinates decision-making.” It factors in all relevant data and context within the supply chain application to optimize and augment user prompts.

“Blue Yonder Orchestrator helps companies bring value to their data, which is where many companies struggle,” said Duncan Angove, CEO, Blue Yonder. “It allows business users to quickly access recommendations, predictive insights, and intelligent decisions to ensure they generate the best outcomes to impact their supply chain positively. In today’s supply chain environment, in which many professionals are nearing retirement age and it’s challenging to retain that institutional knowledge, companies can use Orchestrator as a trusty supply chain assistant that can augment intuition – using the value of the data – to make better and faster decisions.”

Supply Chain Transformation

In the transport management environment FedEx is a major customer. “Our carbon footprint isn’t big, we just sell software, but we can help customers reduce theirs and aid the EV transition,” adds Hamilton. These days WMS is normally co-ordinated with TMS. It should be quick to install. WES looks at tasks and resources in order to plan human and robotic labour. Blue Yonder partner with materials handling equipment suppliers like GreyOrange but remain brand agnostic.

British retail customers include ASDA, M&S, and Sainsbury’s – for whom it has provided inventory planning and other solutions as part of a multi-year supply chain transformation. “We tend to work with tier 1 retailers, plus up-and-coming ones and the sector is as much as 60% of our revenue,” Hamilton reveals, “but we’re putting a lot of attention into 3PLs/LSPs and looking to grow there.”
Innovation leads to an improved customer experience. “We’re a true partner to customers,” he adds. “I’ve sat in their shoes so I can really talk to them. That gives us credibility, but ultimately the product needs to work. Seeing the progress is key. Our teams help provide the value analysis. We should take ours cues from customers and keep our promises in terms of developing products and being future-ready.”

read more

Asda accelerates multi-channel offering with Blue Yonder

 

Subscribe

Get notified about New Episodes of our Podcast, New Magazine Issues and stay updated with our Weekly Newsletter.