Scott:
FDX has been discussed on this thread as a backdoor internet play. The article below also talks to this:
msnbc.com
From boxes to bytes for Fedex? Web operations change mission of shipping firm
A shift in operations from shipping packages to tracking via the Internet may ground many Federal Express planes.
By Douglas A. Blackmon THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Behind the standoff between Federal Express Corp. and its 3,500 pilots lurks a startling question: Could the express-delivery service be morphing from a transportation company into an information company? Frederick W. Smith, chairman and chief executive of FedEx's parent company, FDX Corp., has already started on that course, according to top executives there.
The company claims its army of 1,500 in-house programmers write more software code than almost any other non-software company.
FACED WITH THE PROSPECT of a Christmas-season strike by the pilots, Mr. Smith and the executives who run the companies controlled by FDX say they are making a monumental shift in the FedEx mission. They are accelerating plans to focus on the information systems that track and coordinate packages. A new FedEx could emerge from all this needing fewer pilots and fewer aircraft than anyone thought possible a few months ago. The company is already some ways along in its transformation. FedEx's Web site (www.fedex.com) is one of the most heavily used places on the Internet. The company claims its army of 1,500 in-house programmers write more software code than almost any other non-software company. Besides delivering packages, FedEx also designs and operates high-tech warehousing and distribution systems for big manufacturers and retailers around the world.
FDX Corporation (FDX) price change $63.13 +2.438
Data: Microsoft Investor and S&P Comstock 20 min.delay
How much of the change is negotiating bluster and how much is a real strategic overhaul is still unclear. But today, information clearly commands a higher premium than trucks and planes. FedEx executives envy the lofty valuations of Internet companies such as bookseller Amazon.com Inc. They are far more appealing than the multiple Wall Street puts on FDX. “Moving an item from point A to point B is no longer a big deal,” says James Barksdale, chief executive officer of Netscape Communications Corp. and early architect of FedEx's high-tech strategies in a 12-year stint at the company, most of it as chief operating officer. “Having the information about that item, and where it is, and the best way to use it ... that is the value. The companies that will be big winners will be the ones who can best maximize the value of these systems.” In an interview Thursday, FedEx's president and chief executive, Theodore L. Weise, said the company still hopes no strike will occur. He said he would prefer the transformation of FedEx to be gradual, in partnership with the pilots. But faced with the threat of a strike, he said, the company can't wait. “There will be unwavering dedication to serving our customers and rebuilding FedEx in the future WITH OR WITHOUT YOU,” Mr. Smith warned this week in an electronic missive to the pilots, who don't have a contract and theoretically could all be fired. Information Highways As FedEx talks about shifting its focus, a look at where the company stands in fiscal 1998: Revenue $13.25 billion Average daily package volume 3,025,999 Average revenue per package $15.69 Large jets 328 Average number of employees 143,000 Pilots 3,500 Source: FDX Corp.
A futuristic FedEx that traffics in information and outsources major segments of the routes packages take would run huge risks. What if the other companies transporting FedEx packages don't have the dedication and care that the people loading and operating FedEx planes and trucks are famous for? FedEx could find itself haunted by its own 1970s advertising tagline; “The more people involved in shipping a package, the less chance of it getting there the next day.” Already, though, there are signs that a new FedEx is starting to emerge. Thursday, FedEx executives said they had consummated agreements to contract with other airlines for all flight operations in the company's vast international network. The company wouldn't detail the arrangements, but said the other airlines will take over the international operation regardless of whether the pilots strike in early December, as they have threatened to do. FedEx says it has now entered into outsourcing agreements that will cost the company more than $100 million over the next six months. FedEx began mapping out these changes in earnest two years ago, under an internal plan named “Reinventing FedEx,” Mr. Weise said. The changeover in international flights could begin as soon as next week, the company says. For 25 years, Mr. Smith courted customers by evangelizing about a way of doing business in which companies don't need to own trucks, planes, and warehouses. FedEx would do it all for them. Now Mr. Smith is talking about taking his own advice. Where its value has long been built on giant airplanes and big trucks, he sees a time when it will be built on information, computers, and the allure of the FedEx brand. If it works, FedEx's most important assets will no longer be taking off and landing on the Tarmac, but instead zapping around the pristine and pilot-free world of cyberspace. It might invite more labor strife from other employees: A reduction in aircraft and pilots could also mean one day cutting jobs among thousands of aircraft mechanics and support personnel.
A reinvention of FedEx has other potential pitfalls. The company spent more than a billion dollars to acquire air routes in Asia, so that purple-tailed FedEx aircraft could ply the trade routes. Is the investment as valuable if other companies fly the routes? And it might invite more labor strife from other employees: A reduction in aircraft and pilots could also mean one day cutting jobs among thousands of aircraft mechanics and support personnel. The pilots' union, the FedEx Pilots Association, maintains the restructuring pronouncements are simply a giant bluff by an anti-union company aimed at frightening pilots — and other workers who might want to organize themselves — into accepting inferior pay, benefits and working conditions. Several other pilot unions Thursday pledged not to fly FedEx packages if there is a strike. Negotiators for the two sides have been meeting off and on with officials of the National Mediation Board in Washington D.C. for the past two weeks, in hopes of restarting formal talks. So far, no date to resume bargaining has been set. Both sides say no major disruption can occur until after pilots count their strike ballots on Dec. 3. The White House confirmed it has been receiving updates from the Mediation Board and spoke Wednesday with Mr. Smith regarding the FedEx situation, declining to elaborate. For almost two decades, FedEx has been investing massive amounts to develop software and create a giant digital network. FedEx is currently building a corporate technology campus here, in addition to five others in the U.S. and several more overseas. The company's electronic systems are directly linked via the Internet or other online connections to more than one million customers. That system, which tracks packages almost hour by hour, allows the company to do much more than just inform customers. It also allows the company to predict the future flow of goods and rapidly reconfigure its network to handle it. Mr. Smith declined to be interviewed for this story. On Nov. 11, the FDX board voted to authorize the international moves, as well as leasing trucks and aircraft domestically, based on the possibility of a strike. The planning accelerated in the past six months in anticipation of a labor dispute with the pilots, according to FDX's executive vice president and chief financial officer, Alan B. Graf Jr.
FedEx has long struggled with a troubling trend in its fundamental business. As rivals including United Parcel Service of America Inc. and DHL Worldwide Express have moved to match the technological innovations which once made FedEx distinct, FedEx has been increasingly forced to compete on price, rather than pure service. The result is that revenue per package has fallen precipitously in key categories during the 1990s, while the cost of maintaining an advanced transportation network has risen. It has been a battle to maintain acceptable margins. Managing the investments and maintenance costs of an enormous fleet of jets has been one of the key issues. Currently, FedEx keeps 17 unused DC-10s, purchased on the cheap, stored on a desert field in Arizona, waiting to upgrade the aircraft and phase them into the fleet at precisely the right time. Concerns about profitability have been exacerbated by global economic problems in the past year. With 20 additional aircraft scheduled for delivery in the next several years, at a total cost of about $2 billion, FedEx has been actively looking for ways to reduce capital investments without cutting on services, Mr. Graf said. —Bob Davis in Washington contributed to this article. Copyright © 1998 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. |