According to www.scmr.com, Penske Logistics has launched a new end-to-end supply chain visibility platform, entering a competitive market where the number of commercial visibility solutions has grown to 23 providers.
Platform Capabilities and Integration
The platform aggregates data from multiple sources including transportation management systems (TMS), warehouse management systems (WMS), electronic logging devices (ELDs), and Internet of Things (IoT) sensors. It supports real-time tracking across all transportation modes: over-the-road trucking, intermodal rail, ocean freight, and air cargo. Penske states the system processes more than 1.2 million shipment events daily, with latency under 30 seconds from event occurrence to dashboard update.
Industry Context and Market Expansion
According to the report, the visibility software market has expanded rapidly: in 2020, only 9 providers offered integrated end-to-end platforms; by early 2024, that number reached 23. This growth parallels increased adoption among shippers — 68% of Fortune 500 manufacturing companies now deploy at least one dedicated visibility solution, up from 41% in 2021. Competitors launching similar capabilities include Körber Supply Chain, which announced a digital twin integration partnership with NVIDIA in March 2024, and Amazon, which opened its supply chain network to third-party users in Q4 2023.
Operational Impact and Client Deployment
Penske’s visibility offering is embedded within its managed transportation services and is available as a standalone SaaS product priced at $12,500 per month for mid-market clients. The platform went live with its first enterprise client — a Tier 1 automotive supplier headquartered in Auburn Hills, Michigan — on April 1, 2024. That deployment covers 27 distribution centers and 142 carrier contracts across North America. According to the source, early metrics show a 22% reduction in late deliveries and a 17% decrease in manual exception resolution time during the first 90 days of use.
Supply Chain Practitioner Implications
For logistics professionals, the proliferation of visibility tools introduces both opportunity and complexity. With 23 competing platforms now on the market, integration compatibility, data ownership terms, and API documentation quality have become key evaluation criteria — not just dashboard features. The report notes that 53% of procurement teams now require third-party visibility vendors to comply with ISO 28000 supply chain security standards before onboarding. Penske’s platform includes built-in compliance reporting for ISO 28000, FMCSA, and CSA 2010 requirements. As one practitioner observed:
“Visibility isn’t about seeing more data — it’s about reducing the time between detection and action. If your platform takes longer than 90 seconds to route an alert to the right dispatcher, you’re already behind.” — Maria Chen, Director of Logistics Operations, Whirlpool Corporation
Source: www.scmr.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










