As a whole, market conditions in the third-party logistics (3PL) sector appear to be holding up well, despite the uneven nature of the economy, according to the 1st Quarter 2012 TIA 3PL Market Report by the Transportation Intermediaries Association (TIA).
TIA officials said this is the 18th edition of this report, which was initially released in April 2009. It focuses on 3PL industry trends and practices, with an objective to provide a representative understanding of what is happening in the 3PL industry.
Data for the report is based on confidential feedback from 33 TIA member companies, whom answer questions on various topics, including: number of shipments by mode, total billing, and gross margins. Other data collected are customer-based forecasts to offer up expectations of near-term business volume.
Total revenue in the first quarter for all TIA member study participants—at roughly $2.27 billion—was up 3.0 percent compared to the first quarter of 2012, and total shipments—at 1,307,062 saw a 3.2 percent annual increase. First quarter invoice amount per shipment—at $1,739—dipped 0.2 percent annually, and profit margin—at 13.6 percent—was off by 0.7 percent.
According to the report, nearly 98 percent of 3PL revenue cited came from truckload, intermodal, or less-than-truckload at 72 percent, 18 percent, and 8 percent, respectively, with each of these modes seeing annual gains in shipments.
Truckload shipments were up 3.1 percent annually, and LTL shipments were up 2.6 percent, with intermodal was up 2.0 percent. Revenues for truckload, LTL, and intermodal were up 2.4 percent, 6.5 percent, and 4.0 percent, respectively.
Mark Christos, a member of the TIA Board of Directors, Chair of the TIA 3PL Market Report and vice president at Matson Logistics, said in an interview that one of the biggest takeaways of the report was that there was similar shipment growth in each of these three primary modes that the participating 3PLs offer to their shipper customers.
“In the past, that has seen some volatility, due at times to one certain mode being down” he said. “But there was similar growth among the three this time, which is encouraging.”
SC
MR

More 3PL
- Eli Lilly’s Mar Gimeno to keynote at NextGen Supply Chain Conference 2026
- Your 3PL has EDI, and then what?
- Top 50 Trucking Companies: Strategy separates the leaders
- NextGen extends 2026 award, speaker submission deadlines amid strong industry interest
- The final frontier: Navigating the last-mile paradox in 2026
- Amazon Supply Chain 101: Enabling efficiency and growth for businesses everywhere—and everywhere they sell
- More 3PL
Latest Podcast

Explore
Business Management News
- PepsiCo moves its startup sustainability program from pilots to operational scale across Asia Pacific
- Eli Lilly’s Mar Gimeno to keynote at NextGen Supply Chain Conference 2026
- Agentic coding and the future of supply chain leadership
- From orbit to operations: Winning the race for the earliest disruption signal
- Stop moving boxes, start moving dollars: The new math of global supply chain velocity
- Finding your rhythm: SME supply chain footwork when the rules keep changing
- More Business Management
Latest Business Management Resources

Subscribe

Supply Chain Management Review delivers the best industry content.

Editors’ Picks
