What Is Freight Management
  • Elyse Klein
May 26, 2026
Posted by Elyse Klein

A Guide for Modern Shippers: From Strategy to Business Growth

 

Freight management is the end-to-end business discipline of planning, executing, optimizing, and auditing freight across LTL, FTL, intermodal, and parcel. Done well, it is a strategic profit lever. Done poorly, it silently erodes margin through overpayments, billing errors, and operational chaos.

The three things every shipper needs to know:

  1. Freight management is a discipline that covers carrier strategy, execution, visibility, audit, and analytics.
  2. Freight and parcel audit alone recovers 2–5% of annual freight spend; most companies leave this money on the table.
  3. A freight management solution automates every layer, cutting freight spend by 10–20% and eliminating manual processes.

Table of Contents 

  1. What Is Freight Management?

  2. The Core Components of Freight Management​

  3. Freight Management by the Numbers​

  4. Freight Management vs. Transportation Management System​

  5. What Is a Freight Management Solution?​

  6. Freight and Parcel Audit: The Hidden Profit Center​

  7. How ShipHawk Delivers Best-in-Class Freight Management​

  8. Who Needs a Freight Management Solution?​

  9. How to Evaluate a Freight Management System​

  10. Frequently Asked Questions​

  11. Explore More from ShipHawk​

Freight costs are one of the largest and most controllable line items on a shipper’s P&L. Yet most companies still manage freight through disconnected systems, manual rate shopping, and reactive carrier relationships. The result is predictable: overpayments, invoice errors, missed SLAs, and zero visibility into what’s actually moving or why it costs so much.

What Is Freight Management?

Freight management is the end-to-end process of planning, executing, optimizing, and auditing the movement of goods via freight carriers, including LTL (less-than-truckload), FTL (full truckload), intermodal, air freight, and parcel. It encompasses carrier selection, rate negotiation, shipment tendering, in-transit tracking, delivery confirmation, and post-shipment invoice auditing.

Effective freight management is an important logistics function. It is also a strategic capability that directly impacts customer experience, gross margin, and supply chain resilience. Companies that treat freight as a managed discipline consistently outperform those that treat it as a fixed cost.

Quick Definition

Freight management = the systems, processes, and people that control how freight moves from origin to destination, at what cost, and with what level of service, then verify the bill afterward.

The Core Components of Freight Management

A complete freight management program covers five interconnected domains. Weakness in any one of them creates cost leakage, operational friction, or customer experience failures.

Freight Management

Carrier Management & Rate Negotiation

Carrier management involves building and maintaining relationships with LTL, FTL, and specialty carriers, negotiating contract rates, and establishing service-level agreements. Best-in-class shippers maintain a diversified carrier portfolio, using a mix of national carriers, regional carriers, and asset-based 3PLs, to shift volume dynamically based on price, capacity, and service requirements.

Negotiate minimum charge thresholds, fuel surcharge caps, and accessorial fee schedules upfront

Set carrier performance KPIs: on-time delivery, claim rate, and transit time accuracy

Review carrier scorecards quarterly and use data to re-negotiate contracts annually

Maintain backup carrier options for capacity disruptions

Shipment Execution & Tendering

Tendering is the process of offering a load to a carrier and receiving acceptance. Manual tendering via phone or email introduces errors and delays. Automated tendering through a freight management system dramatically reduces booking time, enforces routing guide compliance, and creates a consistent audit trail.

Rule-based routing guides ensure the right carrier is selected for every shipment

Automated tender acceptance and confirmation eliminate back-and-forth

Exception management handles rejected or expired tenders without manual intervention

Real-Time Freight Visibility

Visibility is the ability to know exactly where a shipment is at any moment, with proactive alerts for delays, exceptions, or carrier deviations. Visibility has become a non-negotiable expectation both internally (operations, customer service, finance) and externally (customers who expect accurate ETAs and proactive updates).

Unified tracking across LTL, FTL, and parcel in a single interface

Automated exception alerts for delays, missed pickups, and damaged freight

Customer-facing tracking portals to reduce WISMO (Where Is My Order?) contacts

Freight Audit & Invoice Reconciliation

Freight billing is notoriously error-prone. Studies consistently show that 3–8% of freight invoices contain billing errors — including incorrect weight classifications, duplicate charges, unauthorized accessorials, and contract rate misapplication. Freight and parcel audit is a critical and often underinvested discipline that catches these errors before — or after — payment is made.

Pre-audit: validate rates before payment is released

Post-audit: recover credits for overbilling already paid

Analytics: identify carriers and lanes with the highest billing error rates

Freight Analytics & Reporting

You cannot optimize what you cannot measure. Freight analytics transform raw shipment and invoice data into actionable intelligence — enabling finance to forecast freight spend, operations to identify inefficient lanes, and procurement to negotiate better contracts backed by data.

Freight spend by carrier, mode, lane, business unit, or product line

Cost-per-unit and cost-as-a-percent-of-revenue trending

On-time delivery and claims rate by carrier

Accessorial charge breakdown and YOY comparison

Freight Management by the Numbers

The business case for investing in a structured freight management program is compelling. Here is how the before-and-after looks for a typical mid-market shipper:

 

Metric

Without Freight Management

With ShipHawk

Freight invoice accuracy

~92–97% (manual)

99%+ with automated audit

Rate shopping time per shipment

10–20 minutes

<30 seconds (automated)

Carrier selection consistency

Varies by rep / shift

100% rule-based routing

Freight spend visibility

Lagging 30–60 days

Real-time dashboard

WISMO contact rate

5–15% of orders

Near-zero with tracking portals

Annual freight spend savings

Baseline

10–20% reduction typical

Freight audit recovery

~0% (invoices paid as-billed)

2–6% of freight spend recovered

Freight Management vs. a Transportation Management System: What’s the Difference?

This is one of the most common points of confusion in logistics and the distinction matters for how you think about both strategy and software purchasing.

Freight management is the business discipline: the full set of processes, decisions, and workflows involved in planning, executing, and optimizing freight from carrier selection through invoice reconciliation. It describes what your organization does to control freight costs and service levels.

A transportation management system (TMS), also called a freight management system, is the software platform that automates and enables those processes. A TMS connects to carrier APIs for real-time rating, enforces routing guides, aggregates tracking data, and processes invoices at scale. It’s the tool; freight management is the discipline.

Think of it this way: you can have a freight management strategy without software (though it will be manual and painful), but a TMS without a clear freight management strategy is just an expensive booking portal.

Related Reading

For a comprehensive breakdown of TMS software, including how it works, types of systems, ROI benchmarks, and how it compares to WMS and ERP check out What is Transport Management System

What Is a Freight Management Solution?

The term freight management solution describes a more holistic offering than a standalone software tool. A solution typically bundles:

Software: The freight management system platform itself

Carrier network: Pre-negotiated rates with hundreds of carriers, accessible from day one

Implementation support: Onboarding, routing guide configuration, and ERP/WMS integration services

Ongoing optimization: Customer success teams that proactively surface cost-saving opportunities over time

For mid-market and enterprise shippers, a freight management solution is often preferable to a standalone TMS because it dramatically compresses time-to-value. Instead of negotiating carrier contracts from scratch and building custom integrations over months, you get an operational platform on day one — with a carrier network already in place.

 

Freight and Parcel Audit: The Hidden Profit Center

One of the most underrated components of freight management is freight and parcel audit. The concept is straightforward: every carrier invoice should be validated against the contracted rate, the original quote, and the actual shipment data before payment is made. In practice, most shippers pay the vast majority of invoices without systematic validation — effectively leaving money on the table every billing cycle.

The most common billing errors that a disciplined audit program catches:

Incorrect weight or dimensional weight calculation

Wrong freight classification (NMFC class misapplication)

Unauthorized accessorial charges — liftgate, residential, inside delivery, redelivery

Fuel surcharge miscalculation or wrong index applied

Duplicate invoices for the same shipment

Rate misapplication — carrier bills published tariff rate instead of contracted rate

A disciplined freight and parcel audit program — ideally automated within your freight management system — can recover 2–5% of total freight spend annually through credits and adjustments. For a company spending $5M per year on freight, that’s $100,000–$250,000 in recoverable costs that most companies are simply writing off.

Audit data also has a second life: it becomes the evidence base for carrier contract renegotiations, exposing which carriers overbill most frequently and on which lane types.

ShipHawk Insight

ShipHawk’s automated freight and parcel audit engine compares every invoice against contract rates, original quotes, and actual shipment data in real time — flagging discrepancies before payment and building a clean, auditable data set for carrier negotiations. ShipHawk customers regularly recoup 3–6% of freight spend in the first year alone.

How ShipHawk Delivers Best-in-Class Freight Management

ShipHawk is purpose-built for mid-market and enterprise shippers who need the power of an enterprise freight management system without the 18-month implementation timelines and seven-figure consulting fees that legacy TMS vendors require. ShipHawk is a complete freight management solution — software, carrier network, integrations, and ongoing optimization — delivered as a unified platform.

Intelligent, Multi-Modal Rate Shopping

ShipHawk’s rating engine connects to hundreds of LTL, FTL, and parcel carriers — returning competitive, real-time rates in under 30 seconds. Business rules and routing guides are applied automatically, so every shipment moves at the optimal rate with the preferred carrier for that lane, every time — regardless of who is processing the order.

Deep ERP & WMS Integrations

ShipHawk offers native, bidirectional integrations with NetSuite, Salesforce, SAP, Acumatica, Microsoft Dynamics, Infor, Sage, and major WMS platforms. Freight costs, shipment status, and tracking data flow back into your ERP automatically — eliminating manual data entry and ensuring financial reporting reflects actual freight spend in real time.

Automated Freight and Parcel Audit

Every carrier invoice is automatically matched against contract rates and shipment data the moment it arrives. Discrepancies are flagged, disputes are logged, and audit results feed directly into ShipHawk’s analytics — giving your finance team a complete, accurate picture of freight spend without hours of manual reconciliation.

Real-Time Visibility & Customer Experience

ShipHawk’s tracking layer aggregates milestone updates across all carriers and modes, surfacing exceptions before they escalate into customer complaints. Branded, self-serve tracking portals keep customers informed proactively — dramatically reducing inbound WISMO contacts and protecting the post-purchase experience.

Freight Analytics That Drive Action

ShipHawk’s analytics suite translates freight data into business decisions — identifying high-cost lanes for renegotiation, surfacing carrier performance gaps, flagging accessorial charge patterns, and providing finance with accurate accruals and spend forecasts month over month.

Who Needs a Freight Management Solution?

Freight management software delivers the strongest ROI for organizations that recognize themselves in one or more of the following scenarios:

  • High freight volume: 50+ LTL/FTL shipments per week, or significant parcel volume that is growing

  • Multi-carrier complexity: Using 3 or more carriers across multiple modes with no centralized rate comparison

  • Manual processes: Teams spending hours per day rate shopping, booking shipments, and reconciling invoices

  • Lack of visibility: No real-time view of in-transit freight; customer service reactive to order inquiries

  • Audit gaps: Carrier invoices paid without systematic validation against contracted rates

  • ERP integration needs: Freight costs require manual entry into accounting and order management systems

  • Rapid growth: Freight volume is scaling faster than manual workflows can support

If any of these resonate, your freight operations have likely outgrown spreadsheets and email. The cost of inaction, overpayments, operational errors, and poor customer experience, almost always exceeds the cost of the right freight management solution.

How to Evaluate a Freight Management System

When evaluating freight management software or a full freight management solution, use this seven-point framework to separate best-in-class platforms from legacy systems dressed up with modern UI:

  1. Carrier breadth: Does the platform connect to all carriers you currently use, plus the regional and specialty carriers you want to add?

  2. Integration depth: Can it connect bidirectionally with your ERP, WMS, and OMS with pre-built connectors — not months of custom development?

  3. Audit capability: Is freight and parcel audit automated and real-time, or does it require manual reconciliation after the fact?

  4. Visibility coverage: Does tracking cover LTL, FTL, and parcel in a single interface, with proactive exception alerts?

  5. Analytics quality: Are reporting capabilities pre-built and actionable, or does your team need to build dashboards from raw data?

  6. Time to value: How quickly can you go from contract signing to live shipments? Weeks matters enormously — months of implementation delay is a legacy-TMS red flag.

  7. Support model: Is there a dedicated customer success team post-go-live, or are you handed a help center and left to self-serve?

 

Frequently Asked Questions About Freight Management

What is the difference between freight management and transportation management?

The terms are often used interchangeably, and in practice the outcomes are the same. Traditionally, “transportation management” refers to the software category (TMS), while “freight management” describes the broader discipline of processes, people, and technology working together. A modern freight management solution delivers both.

What is freight and parcel audit?

Freight and parcel audit is the systematic process of reviewing every carrier invoice against contracted rates, original quotes, and actual shipment data — identifying billing errors before or after payment and recovering credits. It applies to freight (LTL/FTL) and parcel (UPS, FedEx, USPS) invoices alike.

How much can freight management software save?

Savings vary by starting point, but ShipHawk customers typically achieve 10–20% reduction in total freight spend through a combination of automated rate optimization, routing guide compliance, data-driven carrier negotiations, and freight and parcel audit recoveries.

Is freight management software only for large companies?

No. While legacy TMS platforms were historically designed for Fortune 500 shippers with dedicated IT teams, modern freight management solutions like ShipHawk are built for mid-market companies shipping 50–5,000 shipments per week. The ROI is often strongest for organizations that are just outgrowing manual workflows.

How does freight management software integrate with NetSuite or SAP?

Leading freight management systems offer pre-built, bidirectional connectors to major ERP platforms. ShipHawk’s NetSuite, SAP, Acumatica, and Dynamics integrations sync order data, freight rates, and shipment status automatically — so freight costs appear in your ERP in real time, without manual entry.

What is the difference between LTL and FTL freight management?

LTL (less-than-truckload) shipments share trailer space with other shippers’ freight and are rated based on weight, dimensions, and freight class. FTL (full truckload) dedicates an entire trailer to a single shipment. A freight management system handles both modes, optimizing carrier selection and rates across LTL and FTL based on shipment characteristics and routing guide rules.

Ready to Transform Your Freight Operations?

ShipHawk helps mid-market and enterprise shippers cut freight costs, eliminate billing errors, and gain real-time visibility — with implementation measured in weeks, not months.

Request a Demo

Explore More from ShipHawk

This article is part of ShipHawk’s Freight Intelligence Series. Explore related guides:


By ShipHawk

ShipHawk has a team of subject matter experts (SMEs) that specialize in warehouse operations, fulfillment strategy and shipping optimization. They partner with customers to evaluate the current state of their operation, identify opportunities for improvement, design a proposed solution, then work with the customer to deliver the improvements that drive real, measurable results.

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