Strategy
Why Manual Freight RFPs Are Costing Indian Companies Millions And How e-Auctions Fix It
Most Indian procurement and logistics teams are running freight sourcing through a process that has been largely unchanged for years. An Excel template goes out to a carrier panel by email.
Rates come back in varying formats. Someone consolidates the responses. Comparisonshappen in a spreadsheet. A round of negotiation follows over calls and email threads. A carriergets selected.
The process completes. The freight moves. And a significant portion of the potential savings in that cycle never gets realized.
That is not a capability problem. It is a structural one. Excel-based RFPs were built to collect data, not to generate competitive tension. They return a rate from each carrier, but they do not create the conditions where carriers are actively competing against each other in real time.
The difference between collecting rates and creating competition is where freight spend is either actively managed or quietly left on the table.
Rates Collected, Competition Absent
In a typical freight procurement cycle at an Indian manufacturer or distributor, the RFP process looks roughly like this.
A procurement team prepares a lane list and attaches it to an Excel template. The sheet goes to an approved carrier panel, usually between five and fifteen transporters depending on the lane. The response deadline is set. Carriers return their sheets, each formatted slightly differently, with varying assumptions baked into the rates.
The consolidation is manual. The comparison is manual. Follow-up negotiations happen outside the tool, over the phone or in WhatsApp threads. The team has a sense of which carrier is competitive, but the process does not surface that picture cleanly or quickly.
What the Excel RFP produces is a snapshot of rates at one point in time, collected through a format that is passive by design. Carriers submit what they choose to submit. There is no mechanism that encourages them to sharpen the rate after seeing where the market is moving.
When Carriers Bid Without Knowing the Field
The core difference between an Excel RFP and a reverse auction is what carriers know about each other during the process.
In an Excel-based sourcing round, each carrier submits in isolation. They do not know where their rate stands relative to the panel. There is no signal that tells them their current quote is above the lowest offer. The only feedback they receive is a post-award notification or a follow up negotiation call, by which point the opportunity to move the rate systematically has passed.
In a reverse auction, carriers are active participants in a live bidding event. Each participant can see their rank in the auction without seeing competitor identities. They know, in real time, whether their current rate is competitive. That visibility creates the conditions for carriers to move their rate toward the market floor, and to do so within the auction window rather than through a drawn-out negotiation cycle.
The rate that emerges from a structured reverse auction reflects what carriers are actually willing to accept when they know they are being evaluated against a live field. The rate that emerges from an Excel RFP reflects what carriers were comfortable submitting without that context.
The Freight Spend Hidden Inside the Process
For an Indian company moving meaningful freight volume across multiple lanes and carriers, the difference between an Excel RFP rate and a competitively auctioned rate accumulates consistently across the procurement cycle.
Lane rates settled through manual negotiation carry a margin that reflects the information asymmetry in the process. Without visibility into where the market is sitting, procurement teams accept rates that are reasonable in isolation but above the competitive floor the carrier panel would reach under structured bidding conditions.
Across a lane portfolio, across quarterly RFP cycles, and across a carrier panel that has no incentive to lead with their sharpest rate in a passive submission process, that gap compounds into a freight spend figure that is meaningfully higher than it needs to be.
The saving opportunity is already in the carrier panel. The structure that surfaces it is what the manual process is not set up to provide.
Turning Rate Collection Into Rate Competition
An e-auction platform changes the sourcing process at the structural level, not just the operational one.
Rate collection moves from asynchronous email submissions to a structured bidding event with defined parameters: the lane, the time window, the carrier panel, and the auction rules. All participants enter the event with the same information and the same visibility into rank.
Comparison is built into the process. Procurement teams see a structured view of all bids as the auction progresses, without the consolidation work that manual submissions require. The lowest compliant rate at the close of the auction is the market-tested rate, not an estimate of where the market might be.
The negotiation cycle that follows an Excel RFP, the follow-up calls, the carrier callbacks, the revised submissions, compresses significantly. The auction window runs the competitive process in a defined timeframe. The rate that closes the auction reflects what the carrier panel was willing to accept under competitive conditions, without the extended back-and-forth that manual sourcing requires.
For carriers, the process is straightforward. Participation is structured, timelines are clear, and the bidding event gives them a fair opportunity to compete on the lanes they want to win. Carriers with competitive capacity have an active mechanism to put that capacity to work.
How Enmovil Structures the Freight Sourcing Cycle
Enmovil's freight procurement platform is built around structured e-auctions with CADDIE, the AI decisioning layer, operating across the sourcing cycle.
Procurement teams configure lane events, set carrier panels, and define auction parameters directly in the platform. Carriers participate through a structured bidding interface. CADDIE surfaces bid analytics in real time, flags anomalies, and connects auction outcomes to the broader freight management workflow, including rate benchmarking, carrier performance data, and historical lane intelligence.
The Excel sheet is replaced by a sourcing event with structure, visibility, and audit trail built in. Every bid, every rank movement, and every carrier response is captured and available for review and reporting.
For Indian manufacturers and distributors running regular freight procurement cycles, the shift to structured e-auctions produces measurable outcomes: rates that reflect competitive market conditions, procurement cycles that move faster, and a sourcing process that generates clean data for every subsequent round.
What Your Next Sourcing Round Should Actually Look Like
For any Indian company running freight procurement today, the carrier panel is already in place. The lanes are defined. The sourcing rounds happen on a regular cycle.
The question is how that panel is being activated during each sourcing event. Are carriers submitting rates in isolation through a passive process, or are they competing in a structured environment where the market rate surfaces clearly?
The distance between those two processes is where freight savings are either realized or left in the sourcing cycle. Enmovil closes that distance.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Why do Excel-based freight RFPs produce rates above the market floor?
2. How does a reverse auction drive freight rates down systematically?
3.What does the transition from Excel RFPs to e-auctions look like operationally?
Ready to Move Freight Procurement Off the Spreadsheet?
Enmovil's e-auction platform gives Indian procurement teams a structured, competitive sourcing process that surfaces market rates and closes faster than any Excel-based RFP cycle.
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