title: Logistics Coordinator
slug: logistics-coordinator
aliases:
  - Logistics Specialist
  - Freight Coordinator
  - Transportation Coordinator
  - Shipping Coordinator
category: Transportation
tags:
  - logistics
  - freight
  - supply-chain
  - shipping
  - transportation
difficulty: intermediate
summary: >-
  Holds the whole order-to-delivery flow in their head, trading time against
  cost against risk to land freight on time and in full while the chain breaks
  underneath them.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: supply-chain-manager
    type: progression
    note: owns the network strategy the coordinator executes within
  - slug: truck-driver
    type: collaboration
    note: the carrier whose pickups and line-haul the coordinator books and tracks
  - slug: ship-captain
    type: collaboration
    note: moves the ocean freight the coordinator routes and traces
  - slug: procurement-specialist
    type: adjacent
    note: sources the goods at the inbound end of the chain
  - slug: operations-manager
    type: related
    note: runs the warehouse and dock nodes freight flows through
specializations:
  - International Freight Coordinator
  - Cold-Chain Logistics Coordinator
  - Inbound Logistics Coordinator
country_variants: []
sources:
  - title: APICS/ASCM Body of Knowledge (CPIM/CSCP)
    kind: standard
  - title: Designing and Managing the Supply Chain
    kind: book
  - title: Incoterms 2020
    url: https://iccwbo.org/business-solutions/incoterms-rules/
    kind: standard
status: draft
reviewers: []
sections:
  - heading: Purpose
    markdown: >-
      Goods are useless where they are not. A coordinator's reason for being is
      to move

      the right freight to the right place by the time it's promised, at a cost
      the

      business can live with, across a chain of trucks, ships, planes, docks,
      and

      warehouses that no single person controls. The work exists because every
      link runs

      on its own schedule and breaks in its own way, and someone has to hold the
      whole

      order-to-delivery flow in their head and make it land. Demand is
      uncertain, capacity

      is finite, and the clock never stops — the coordinator absorbs that chaos
      so the

      customer sees a box arrive on the promised day.
  - heading: Core Mission
    markdown: >-
      Get the order delivered on time and in full at the lowest landed cost the
      service

      level allows, and when something goes wrong — it will — see it before the

      customer does and fix it.
  - heading: Primary Responsibilities
    markdown: >-
      The visible work is booking carriers and tracking shipments; the actual
      work is

      managing time, cost, and risk against each other under constant
      disruption. A

      coordinator turns a purchase or sales order into a moving plan: picking
      the mode

      (full truckload, less-than-truckload, intermodal rail, air, ocean),
      tendering to

      carriers, building loads so trailers go out full, booking dock
      appointments,

      cutting the paperwork (bill of lading, commercial invoice, customs
      entries), then

      watching the shipment and intervening when it stalls. They position
      inventory so

      stock sits where demand is without drowning the company in carrying cost,
      chase down

      exceptions — a missed pickup, a truck held at a border, a reefer that lost

      temperature — and reconcile freight invoices against the quote. Underneath
      it all is

      communication: a delay nobody flags becomes a stockout, and a stockout a
      lost

      customer.
  - heading: Guiding Principles
    markdown: >-
      - **On-time-in-full is the only score that matters.** A shipment that
      arrives late,
        short, or damaged failed, no matter how cheap the freight was. OTIF is the
        customer's experience of you.
      - **The cost of delay usually dwarfs the cost of freight.** Saving $300 by
      routing
        ground instead of air can cost $30,000 in a shutdown line. Know what the freight is
        worth to the person waiting for it.
      - **Plan for the exception, not the happy path.** Most shipments arrive
      fine; your
        job is the 5% that don't.
      - **Visibility is leverage.** A problem caught at the origin dock is
      cheap; the same
        problem caught at delivery is a crisis.
      - **Capacity is a relationship, not a spot market.** The carrier who
      answers your
        call during a crunch is the one you treated fairly when freight was loose.
      - **Total landed cost, not line-item cost.** Cheap freight that triggers
      detention,
        rework, or expedites is expensive freight in disguise.
  - heading: Mental Models
    markdown: >-
      - **The bullwhip effect.** Small swings in end demand amplify into wild
      swings in
        orders upstream. A coordinator dampens it by smoothing orders and sharing real
        signal, not by reacting to every blip.
      - **The supply chain as a pipeline with lead times.** Every node adds
      transit time
        and variability; total lead time and its variance drive how much safety stock the
        company holds, so cutting variability frees up cash.
      - **Cube vs. weight.** A trailer fills up by volume or by weight,
      whichever comes
        first; which constraint binds tells you how to stack, consolidate, and price.
      - **Rate vs. transit-time tradeoff.** Every mode sits on a curve — ocean
      cheap and
        slow, air fast and dear, intermodal and LTL between. The right point depends on the
        cost of delay, not on habit.
      - **Contract vs. spot.** Contract rates buy predictability and committed
      capacity;
        spot buys flexibility at the mercy of the market. The mix is a bet on where rates
        are heading.
      - **The perfect order.** On time, in full, undamaged, documented, billed
      right —
        each defect compounds, and chasing the perfect-order rate finds the weak link.
  - heading: First Principles
    markdown: >-
      - A shipment is a promise with a deadline attached; everything else is
      detail.

      - You cannot control the weather, the port, or the customs officer — you
      can only
        control your buffers, your information, and your reaction time.
      - Every handoff is a place the chain can break and the truth can get lost.

      - Inventory is frozen cash; transit time is interest you pay on it.
  - heading: Questions Experts Constantly Ask
    markdown: |-
      - What does this freight cost the receiver per hour it's late?
      - What's the latest it can ship and still hit the delivery window?
      - Where is it right now, and when did we last actually confirm that?
      - Cube or weight — which fills the trailer first?
      - Can we consolidate this with another order going the same way?
      - Spot or contract for this lane this week?
      - If this carrier falls through at 4 p.m., who's my backup?
      - Are the documents clean enough to clear customs without a hold?
  - heading: Decision Frameworks
    markdown: >-
      - **Mode selection by cost of delay.** Start from the deadline and the
      penalty for
        missing it. If the cost of delay is high, pay for speed; if it's low, optimize for
        price. Never default to a mode out of habit.
      - **Carrier selection scorecard.** Weigh rate, transit time, on-time
      history, claims
        ratio, lane capacity, and visibility capability. The cheapest carrier with a 70%
        on-time rate is not the cheapest carrier.
      - **Expedite decision.** When a shipment slips, compute the landed cost of
        expediting (air freight, hot-shot truck, premium) against the cost of arriving
        late (line-down, penalty, lost sale). Expedite only when delay costs more.
  - heading: Workflow
    markdown: >-
      1. **Receive the order.** A PO or SO lands with a delivery date, quantity,
      origin,
         and destination. Confirm the details are real before planning.
      2. **Plan the move.** Pick the mode against the deadline and cost of
      delay; check
         for consolidation and the cube-vs-weight constraint.
      3. **Source capacity.** Tender to contract carriers first, spot if they
      pass or the
         lane is tight. Confirm equipment — dry van, reefer, flatbed — and special handling.
      4. **Book the dock.** Secure pickup and delivery appointment windows so
      the truck
         isn't turned away or left accruing detention.
      5. **Cut the documents.** Generate the BOL, commercial invoice, and
      customs
         paperwork; get the Incoterm and HS codes right the first time.
      6. **Track and trace.** Watch against milestones. Silence is not good news
      — confirm
         pickup, line-haul, border, delivery.
      7. **Manage exceptions.** When a milestone slips, reschedule, reroute,
      expedite, or
         notify — and tell the customer before they ask.
      8. **Confirm, reconcile, learn.** Get proof of delivery, check it landed
      in full and
         undamaged, file any claim, audit the freight invoice against the quote, and feed
         the root cause of any miss back into the carrier scorecards.
  - heading: Common Tradeoffs
    markdown: >-
      - **Speed vs. cost.** Air beats ocean on time and loses on price by an
      order of
        magnitude; the deadline and the value of the goods decide.
      - **Inventory vs. transit time.** Hold more stock and you can use slow,
      cheap
        freight; hold less and you depend on fast, reliable freight.
      - **Consolidation vs. responsiveness.** Waiting to fill a trailer cuts
      freight cost
        but adds days; shipping half-empty is fast and wasteful.
      - **Single carrier vs. diversity.** Concentration earns volume discounts;
      diversity
        buys resilience when one carrier fails.
  - heading: Rules of Thumb
    markdown: >-
      - If you haven't confirmed the location in the last few hours, you don't
      know where
        it is.
      - A trailer that leaves half full leaves money on the dock — consolidate
      or wait.

      - Get the paperwork right before the truck moves; fixing a customs
      document at the
        border costs days.
      - Tell the customer about the delay before they discover it themselves.

      - Keep one backup carrier warm on every critical lane.
  - heading: Failure Modes
    markdown: >-
      - **Chasing line-item freight savings.** Booking the cheapest rate and
      eating
        detention, expedites, and damage claims that cost far more.
      - **Flying blind.** No real visibility, so the first sign of trouble is
      the
        customer's angry call.
      - **Reacting to the bullwhip.** Over-ordering on a demand spike and
      drowning in
        inventory, or panic-buying spot capacity in a crunch.
      - **Document errors at the border.** A wrong HS code or missing
      certificate that
        parks a container in customs for a week.
      - **Promising windows you can't hit.** Quoting an optimistic ETA to win
      the
        conversation, then missing it.
      - **Treating carriers as interchangeable.** Burning relationships when
      freight is
        loose and finding no capacity when it's tight.
  - heading: Anti-patterns
    markdown: >-
      - **Spreadsheet-and-phone-calls only** — running a network on tribal
      memory with no
        system of record.
      - **Ship-and-pray** — tendering the load and assuming it arrives.

      - **Mode by default** — always trucking it because that's what was done
      last time.

      - **Single point of failure** — one broker, one carrier, one dock door
      with no
        backup.
  - heading: Vocabulary
    markdown: >-
      - **OTIF** — on-time-in-full; the share of orders delivered complete by
      the promised
        date.
      - **FTL / LTL** — full truckload vs. less-than-truckload (shared trailer,
      priced by
        space and class).
      - **Intermodal** — freight moved in a container across rail and truck
      without
        rehandling the goods.
      - **Detention / demurrage** — penalty charges for holding a truck or
      container
        beyond the free time.
      - **Incoterms** — standardized rules (FOB, CIF, DDP, EXW…) for who owns
      risk and cost
        at each point.
      - **Bill of lading (BOL)** — the contract and receipt for the freight.

      - **Lead time / safety stock** — total order-to-receipt time, and the
      buffer held
        against its variability.
      - **Cold chain / hazmat** — temperature-controlled handling for
      perishables and
        pharma; regulated dangerous goods needing special documentation.
      - **Cube-out vs. weight-out** — a trailer hitting its volume limit before
      its weight
        limit, or vice versa.
  - heading: Tools
    markdown: >-
      - **TMS (transportation management system)** — plans, tenders, and tracks
      loads; the
        system of record for the network.
      - **WMS (warehouse management system)** — inventory and dock operations at
      the node.

      - **EDI / API integrations** — automated carrier messaging for tenders,
      status, and
        invoicing.
      - **Track-and-trace / GPS visibility platforms** — real-time location and
      ETA against
        milestones.
      - **Rate and spot-market tools** — load boards and benchmarks for sourcing
      capacity.

      - **Customs and trade-compliance software** — HS classification, duties,
      and filings.
  - heading: Collaboration
    markdown: >-
      Logistics is played across organizational seams. The coordinator works
      with

      procurement and suppliers inbound, sales and customers outbound, warehouse
      and dock

      crews who load and receive, carriers and brokers who haul, and customs
      brokers and

      finance who clear and pay. The recurring friction lives at handoffs —
      between the

      promised pickup and the actual one, between what sales sold and what the
      network can

      move, between the carrier's status feed and the truth. Good coordinators

      over-communicate at exactly those seams: one call confirming an
      appointment window

      prevents a day of detention and a missed delivery. They treat carriers as
      partners

      whose capacity they need next month, not vendors to squeeze today.
  - heading: Ethics
    markdown: >-
      Coordinators sit on safety, honesty, and labor. Hazmat rules, weight
      limits, and

      hours-of-service regulations exist because cutting them kills people;
      pressuring a

      driver past legal hours or overloading a trailer to save a trip is never
      worth it.

      Cold-chain integrity for food and pharma is a public-health duty — a
      falsified reefer

      log can poison someone. Customs declarations must be truthful;
      mis-declaring value to

      dodge duty is fraud. And warehouse crews and drivers carry the physical
      risk and

      deserve realistic schedules. The honest ETA, the accurate manifest, and
      the safe load

      are the quiet ethics of the job.
  - heading: Scenarios
    markdown: >-
      **A carrier no-show at 4 p.m. on a critical lane.** The booked truck for a
      next-day

      delivery to a production plant cancels late in the day. First move is to
      size the

      cost of delay: this freight feeds an assembly line that costs the customer
      roughly

      $20,000 an hour if it goes down. That dwarfs any freight premium, so the
      coordinator

      works the backup list, books a hot-shot expedite at triple the rate, and
      confirms an

      after-hours dock appointment with the plant. Then they log the root cause
      against the

      carrier's scorecard — a pattern of late cancellations drops this carrier
      off the

      critical lanes even if its rate is best.


      **A container held in customs.** A track-and-trace alert shows an ocean
      container

      stuck at port three days past its free time, accruing demurrage. The
      coordinator

      pulls the entry and finds the commercial invoice listed an HS code that
      triggered a

      compliance hold. Rather than wait, they have the broker file a corrected

      classification that day, release the container, and trace the error to the

      supplier's invoice template. The fix is systemic: an HS-code check in the
      document

      workflow before the next shipment moves.


      **A demand spike whipsaws the network.** Sales reports a surge and asks to
      triple

      the supplier order. The coordinator recognizes the bullwhip: one promotion
      is not

      permanent demand, and tripling orders leaves the company holding frozen
      cash and

      scrambling for spot capacity. Instead they smooth the order, lift safety
      stock

      modestly on the affected SKUs, and pre-book contract capacity for the
      window — so

      when the spike fades, there's no warehouse of dead stock.
  - heading: Related Occupations
    markdown: >-
      A logistics coordinator shares the exception-management instinct of
      several roles

      but is defined by orchestrating the physical movement of goods in real
      time. Supply

      chain managers own the strategy and network design the coordinator
      executes within.

      Truck drivers and ship captains are the carriers whose capacity and
      schedules the

      coordinator books and tracks. Procurement specialists source the goods at
      the

      inbound end, and operations managers run the warehouse and dock nodes the
      freight

      flows through. All of them reason about time, cost, and reliability — but
      the

      coordinator lives at the handoffs.
  - heading: References
    markdown: >-
      - *APICS / ASCM Body of Knowledge (CPIM/CSCP)* — the supply chain
      reference standard

      - *Designing and Managing the Supply Chain* — Simchi-Levi, Kaminsky &
      Simchi-Levi

      - Incoterms 2020 — International Chamber of Commerce
