Why Global Supply Chains May Never Be the Same | WSJ Documentary
الملخص
TLDRThe video explores the complexities of global supply chains, focusing on the journey of a USB charger from Vietnam to consumers. It highlights the challenges faced during the pandemic, including unexpected demand surges, labor shortages, and logistical bottlenecks at ports. It also details the roles of different stakeholders in the supply chain, including manufacturers, shipping companies, warehouse workers, and last mile delivery drivers, and discusses the impact of automation and e-commerce on these roles. The ongoing supply chain disruptions are linked to inflation and increased product costs, prompting companies to rethink their manufacturing strategies.
الوجبات الجاهزة
- 📦 The pandemic caused unexpected demand surges.
- 🚢 Global shipping routes are complex and often bottlenecked.
- 👷♂️ Truck drivers face significant challenges and shortages.
- 🏭 Warehouses are critical for managing product flow.
- 🤖 Automation increases efficiency but can lead to burnout.
- 🏷️ Last mile delivery is evolving with subcontracted drivers.
- 💰 Inflation is impacted by ongoing supply chain issues.
- ⚙️ Companies are reconsidering manufacturing locations.
- 🌐 Globalization benefits but also introduces vulnerabilities.
- 🔄 Supply chain disruptions highlight consumer dependency on convenience.
الجدول الزمني
- 00:00:00 - 00:05:00
Discussion on the kettlebell shortage of 2020 highlights consumer frustration over delayed deliveries.
- 00:05:00 - 00:10:00
As consumers eagerly await products that were supposed to arrive months ago, frustrations with the supply chain become evident.
- 00:10:00 - 00:15:00
The pandemic disrupted expectations as demand for many goods surged, showcasing the delicate balance of global supply chains.
- 00:15:00 - 00:20:00
The shipping process is complex, with products traveling thousands of miles, relying on numerous human and technological elements to deliver goods.
- 00:20:00 - 00:25:00
The journey of shipping containers, including the pressures and challenges faced by sailors, underpins the entire supply chain's functioning.
- 00:25:00 - 00:30:00
Container ships are massive but face risks of catastrophic failure, particularly when logistics bottlenecks occur during crises like the Suez Canal blockage.
- 00:30:00 - 00:35:00
Global ports become critical junctions, but their increasing size also makes them vulnerable to backups that slow down the entire supply chain.
- 00:35:00 - 00:40:00
Longshore workers play a vital role in cargo operations, but current congestion has increased processing times drastically, further aggravating supply issues.
- 00:40:00 - 00:45:00
The trucking industry faces significant challenges, from driver shortages to outdated working conditions, hindering timely goods delivery.
- 00:45:00 - 00:54:43
With the rise of e-commerce, the need for efficient last-mile logistics has surged, impacting the quality of jobs and delivery standards.
الخريطة الذهنية
فيديو أسئلة وأجوبة
What caused the kettlebell shortage in 2020?
The pandemic led to an unexpected surge in demand for home fitness equipment, outpacing supply.
Why are there shipping delays?
Delays stem from increased demand, congestion at ports, and labor shortages in the transport industry.
How has the pandemic affected consumer behavior?
Consumers expect faster delivery, which has led to stress on supply chains trying to meet this demand.
What is the role of warehouses in the supply chain?
Warehouses manage the storage, sorting, and distribution of products before they reach retailers or consumers.
What challenges do truck drivers face?
Truck drivers face long hours, low pay, and a shortage of available drivers in the industry.
How does automation impact warehouse work?
Automation increases speed and efficiency but can lead to higher turnover and worker burnout.
What is the future of last mile delivery?
Last mile delivery is evolving with a shift towards subcontracted drivers and increased use of technology.
What is the potential impact of ongoing supply chain issues?
Persistent supply chain problems may lead to continued inflation and further shortages of goods.
What are companies doing about manufacturing and production?
Some companies are investing in domestic manufacturing to reduce supply chain vulnerabilities.
How does globalization affect supply chains?
Globalization has made goods cheaper and more accessible, but has also introduced vulnerabilities to disruptions.
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- 00:00:03- [Man] Look at this.
- 00:00:04Sold out, can you believe this stuff?
- 00:00:06- So they were supposed to deliver it in October.
- 00:00:09- This is going to be an update
- 00:00:10on the kettlebell shortage of 2020.
- 00:00:13- I just want my shoe.
- 00:00:14Gimme my shoe, please.
- 00:00:16- Then it was supposed to be November.
- 00:00:18No.
- 00:00:20Then December.
- 00:00:21- Get me my PlayStation.
- 00:00:23Am I wrong for wanting this, bro?
- 00:00:25- I mean, everything just sucks lately.
- 00:00:29- Take my money.
- 00:00:31Take my money, I don't want it.
- 00:00:32Gimme my shoe.
- 00:00:33- Every time I check my email,
- 00:00:35it's stuck on this right here.
- 00:00:37I don't even know what that means.
- 00:00:39- Tonight, one word sums up the feeling along
- 00:00:41every line of the supply chain: frustration.
- 00:00:45- Well, the shortages and delays
- 00:00:46in the global supply chain threaten
- 00:00:48a total paralysis.
- 00:00:52- When the pandemic hit,
- 00:00:53businesses anticipated that the COVID recession was coming.
- 00:00:56They thought that demand was going to drop,
- 00:00:59but something funny happened.
- 00:01:01The opposite of what all of these businesses
- 00:01:04and economists predicted happened.
- 00:01:07Demand exploded,
- 00:01:07people bought things like crazy,
- 00:01:09and now supply chains are choking
- 00:01:11on that record demand.
- 00:01:13Everyone has had the experience of not being able
- 00:01:15to get something
- 00:01:16and everyone has had the experience
- 00:01:17of paying more for something.
- 00:01:20Prior to the pandemic,
- 00:01:21most of us just took it for granted that
- 00:01:22we could get things ever faster.
- 00:01:25E-commerce made it seem like everything was
- 00:01:27right at our doorstep.
- 00:01:29But that obscures what was a 14,000 mile journey
- 00:01:32halfway around the world.
- 00:01:34It took months.
- 00:01:35And when you add up all the automation,
- 00:01:37all the algorithms,
- 00:01:39all of the hundreds of people
- 00:01:40who had to touch those goods
- 00:01:42or transport them in some way,
- 00:01:43it's, in total, one of the most complicated endeavors
- 00:01:47that human beings ever engage in,
- 00:01:49and yet it happens millions of times per day,
- 00:01:52and we take it for granted
- 00:01:54because all of that has been rolled behind
- 00:01:57this ultimate convenience of just
- 00:01:59one click E-commerce shopping.
- 00:02:01But the pandemic showed us just how unsustainable
- 00:02:05and unrealistic that expectation is.
- 00:02:12(pensive music)
- 00:03:16So consumer electronics,
- 00:03:17like USB chargers,
- 00:03:19they feel like they are readily available to us, right?
- 00:03:23We can get it the same day.
- 00:03:24- USB chargers are an interesting product.
- 00:03:28They're relatively simple.
- 00:03:31The key thing is those chargers don't sell for a lot,
- 00:03:35so you have to keep your labor costs down
- 00:03:37and you have to really focus on efficiency.
- 00:03:41- [Mims] The invention of the shipping container
- 00:03:42and ocean-going shipping made it cheap enough
- 00:03:44to move manufacturing
- 00:03:46wherever labor costs were lowest.
- 00:03:49- Global supply chains have really brought us
- 00:03:52a cornucopia of products
- 00:03:54that we might not otherwise be able
- 00:03:57to have as much variety as...
- 00:04:01Or as attractive costs that we see.
- 00:04:05When you buy a product off of a store shelf or online,
- 00:04:10that's actually the tail end of a journey
- 00:04:13that might have begun a year ago
- 00:04:16in a factory that might be half a world away.
- 00:04:30Vietnam has been attractive
- 00:04:32because of relatively low cost labor.
- 00:04:36- If we take the example of a simple USB charger,
- 00:04:40it's assembled in a factory in Vietnam,
- 00:04:43and then, usually, it's placed on a shipping container
- 00:04:47that travels on a barge
- 00:04:48to an ocean-facing port.
- 00:04:52There, it's loaded onto a ship for a trip
- 00:04:54across the Pacific Ocean.
- 00:05:07The trip across the Pacific Ocean can take anywhere
- 00:05:10from 20 to 30 days.
- 00:05:17Working on a ship can be like living in an office
- 00:05:21that you can't ever leave.
- 00:05:23It's high stakes,
- 00:05:24and it's often mundane and boring.
- 00:05:29Because sailors tend to be confined to these ships
- 00:05:32and it's almost impossible for outsiders
- 00:05:34to get on or off of them,
- 00:05:36this is part of the supply chain
- 00:05:37that remains invisible to most of us.
- 00:05:40- A watch (indistinct) is done visually
- 00:05:43and also by radar.
- 00:05:45- Fortunately, some of these sailors like
- 00:05:47to record their experiences.
- 00:05:49- The watch officer is in charge of the navigation
- 00:05:53and overall status of the ship.
- 00:05:55Safe navigation of the ship is the highest priority.
- 00:05:59- [Jeff] The fog is so thick in this area,
- 00:06:02we can't really see around us
- 00:06:04so we have to use radar.
- 00:06:07- [Mims] Each one of these container ships can carry
- 00:06:10up to 10,000 containers,
- 00:06:12but they can have a crew as few as 20
- 00:06:14so it puts enormous pressure each sailor
- 00:06:17to do their job
- 00:06:19because if anything goes wrong,
- 00:06:20the results are gonna be catastrophic
- 00:06:22for supply chains.
- 00:06:24- [Jeff] The last thing we want is containers falling
- 00:06:27into the sea if we ever run into bad weather.
- 00:06:30We keep watch on the overall conditions of the ship,
- 00:06:34checking the mooring lines
- 00:06:35and looking out for suspicious activities,
- 00:06:37like stowaways or pirates.
- 00:06:40Sea conditions like this can last for days;
- 00:06:43the relentless pounding,
- 00:06:45the never ending pitch and roll.
- 00:06:48I can only describe it as living
- 00:06:50under a 24/7 airplane turbulence.
- 00:06:54- The biggest container ships are
- 00:06:56as big as a skyscraper laid on its side,
- 00:06:58and one reason they've gotten so big is that
- 00:07:01when you look at all the costs,
- 00:07:02crew, fuel, etc,
- 00:07:04the bigger your ship,
- 00:07:05the more money you can make on every container,
- 00:07:08the cheaper it is ultimately to ship these goods.
- 00:07:11But the bigger you make these ships
- 00:07:13and the more efficient you make these supply chains,
- 00:07:16the worse things go when there's a bottleneck
- 00:07:18at one of these single points of failure.
- 00:07:20- [Newscaster] The 400 Meter long Evergiven got stuck
- 00:07:22on Tuesday morning,
- 00:07:24running aground in high winds reportedly
- 00:07:26after power failure on board.
- 00:07:28- More than a dozen ships are waiting
- 00:07:30to pass through the Suez Canal.
- 00:07:31That's one of the world's busiest trade routes.
- 00:07:35- [Newscaster] And each day of backlog,
- 00:07:36more than $9 billion worth of goods is stuck,
- 00:07:39and that translates to about $400 million an hour.
- 00:07:48- More and more shipping containers have been flowing
- 00:07:50toward us from Asia,
- 00:07:51and, of course, we're not really shipping stuff back.
- 00:08:02(upbeat music)
- 00:08:09- Now, we see a large number of ships
- 00:08:13in San Pedro Bay.
- 00:08:15Eventually, that cargo is going to land.
- 00:08:18Eventually, it's gonna hit the beaches.
- 00:08:29- [Mims] As ports get bigger,
- 00:08:31as more and more flows through the biggest ports,
- 00:08:33they become single points of failure
- 00:08:35in a global supply chain
- 00:08:36that used to be more robust.
- 00:08:39- The Port of Los Angeles
- 00:08:40and neighboring port, Long Beach,
- 00:08:43represent 40% of our US imports
- 00:08:46and nearly 30% of America's exports,
- 00:08:49showing just how critical this gateway is
- 00:08:52to the American economy.
- 00:09:00We have more than 15,000 international longshore
- 00:09:03and warehouse union members that work on the docks.
- 00:09:08- My job as a longshore worker is
- 00:09:10to help in the operations that move cargo
- 00:09:14through the terminals on Long Beach
- 00:09:17and Los Angeles ports.
- 00:09:20What I typically do is drive a UTR,
- 00:09:23that stands for "utility tractor rig."
- 00:09:25It's just kind of a compact truck
- 00:09:27that's strong enough to haul the tonnage.
- 00:09:29So what I do is I take cargo from point A to point B,
- 00:09:32to a designated spot out in the yard,
- 00:09:34to be stacked for outside truckers to come pick up
- 00:09:38to take to the retailer's destination.
- 00:09:42- [Gene] We've been averaging 900,000 container units
- 00:09:45for 14 consecutive months.
- 00:09:48That used to be one really good month
- 00:09:50in our peak season.
- 00:09:54- [Jaime] We use giant ship-to-shore cranes
- 00:09:58to unload containers.
- 00:10:00Typically, it takes three to five days,
- 00:10:03but with all of the problems we're having right now,
- 00:10:08productivity is suffering big time.
- 00:10:11It's taking up to two weeks to process a ship
- 00:10:15that would typically take three to five days.
- 00:10:20- Once a container's on the dock,
- 00:10:22a mix of humans, robots, and software is going
- 00:10:26to be picking it up
- 00:10:28and moving it to stacks of containers
- 00:10:31inside the port itself,
- 00:10:32where it's gonna be sorted and resorted
- 00:10:34so that it's available for trucks or rail
- 00:10:36that are gonna move it out of the port.
- 00:10:40- [Jaime] There is no room.
- 00:10:43We've gone even higher in the piles
- 00:10:45for our ground cranes to have to dig through,
- 00:10:49and we've also used every square inch available on our ports
- 00:10:54in order to put containers.
- 00:10:56And it's very, very hard to move of them in a timely manner.
- 00:11:04- Ports are, in some ways,
- 00:11:06amazingly democratic places,
- 00:11:08which means that they're often very contentious places.
- 00:11:11You have the longshoremen,
- 00:11:13that's an extremely strong union.
- 00:11:14You have the terminal operators,
- 00:11:15you have the city of Los Angeles or Long Beach,
- 00:11:18who actually owns the port,
- 00:11:19you have the ships coming in,
- 00:11:21and, finally, you have the drivers
- 00:11:22who are picking up shipping containers
- 00:11:24from the port.
- 00:11:25If you wanna make a change, like,
- 00:11:26maybe you operate the port 24 hours a day
- 00:11:28because you're trying to eliminate a backlog,
- 00:11:30nobody owns that entire system
- 00:11:32and can just dictate that that happens.
- 00:11:34There has to be consensus,
- 00:11:35and consensus with these groups
- 00:11:37of people is very difficult.
- 00:11:39- Congested ports and higher shipping costs have threatened
- 00:11:43to derail our nation's economic recovery.
- 00:11:46- After weeks of negotiation,
- 00:11:48the Port of Los Angeles announced today
- 00:11:50that it's gonna be began operating 24 hours a day,
- 00:11:54seven days a week.
- 00:11:58- It does no good to keep a terminal open 24 hours a day
- 00:12:04in the hopes that truckers will come pick up
- 00:12:06a load at 3:00 AM.
- 00:12:08Because if they do, they have to bring it somewhere.
- 00:12:12So not only do you have to get a trucker
- 00:12:14who's willing to come at 3:00 AM,
- 00:12:17he or she has to bring it to distribution center
- 00:12:20and that distribution center has to be willing
- 00:12:22to accept the load in the dead of night.
- 00:12:27- We're gonna try everything.
- 00:12:28We're increasing our gate hours,
- 00:12:30number of days that we work,
- 00:12:31we're gonna be working overnight where required,
- 00:12:33but we're also asking others to step up too,
- 00:12:36and trying to find new ways to move cargo out.
- 00:12:39- We can't be a one man show
- 00:12:42when it comes to 24/7 operations.
- 00:12:45We're depending on the terminal operators
- 00:12:46to order the work
- 00:12:48and the rest of the supply chain
- 00:12:49to also open 24/7.
- 00:12:53When we get full on the docks,
- 00:12:55that means everyone else is not functioning properly either.
- 00:13:00And we really can't do anything about it
- 00:13:03until the other aspects
- 00:13:04of the supply chain start functioning properly.
- 00:13:09- [Mims] When there's congestion in a port like this,
- 00:13:11it just reverberates,
- 00:13:12and the congestion gets worse and worse.
- 00:13:14The more that shipping times slip,
- 00:13:16the fewer ships there are to take empty containers
- 00:13:19back to Asia.
- 00:13:20So the entire system, it's like a traffic jam.
- 00:13:23What starts as one person gawking at an accident
- 00:13:26pretty soon turns into standstill traffic
- 00:13:28for two hours, for thousands of cars.
- 00:13:33Most goods, like our USB charger,
- 00:13:35when they leave the port,
- 00:13:36are taken a short distance by truck
- 00:13:38to the inland empire region
- 00:13:40where they're processed in a warehouse
- 00:13:42before they're distributed to the rest of the country.
- 00:13:58After our USB charger is unloaded
- 00:14:00from a shipping container,
- 00:14:01the next leg of its journey is by long haul truck.
- 00:14:14- That's okay, right there
- 00:14:18Might get lucky and get loaded early.
- 00:14:21I'm probably gonna be here about an hour, I hope.
- 00:14:24It possibly could be three.
- 00:14:27We'll just see how busy they are today
- 00:14:29and what's the...
- 00:14:31What their schedule's like, how fast they are.
- 00:14:34I'm not rolling, so I'm not making money.
- 00:14:35So that's part of the problem is
- 00:14:38when you sit around and wait all this time,
- 00:14:40the wheels aren't turning,
- 00:14:41you're not making any money.
- 00:14:44I am a professional truck driver.
- 00:14:45All told, over 30 years,
- 00:14:47I've been driving a truck.
- 00:14:50- They're 19 pallets.
- 00:14:51Did you want me to floor load it
- 00:14:53or do you want me to double stack?
- 00:14:54You're not gonna pick up another load, right?
- 00:14:55- No, how heavy is it?
- 00:14:56I'm an over-the-road driver.
- 00:14:58I'm gone, typically, two weeks at a time,
- 00:15:01roughly 3,500 to 4,000 miles a week,
- 00:15:05hauling all types of freight.
- 00:15:08Everything from house wares, to rice,
- 00:15:12to water, to beer, to...
- 00:15:16Name it, you put it in that truck,
- 00:15:17and I haul it.
- 00:15:36- The major strain on the long haul trucking industry is
- 00:15:39that there aren't enough drivers willing
- 00:15:42to do the job in America.
- 00:15:44Now, the American Trucking Associations has projected
- 00:15:47that, by 2028,
- 00:15:49America is gonna be short 160,000 truckers.
- 00:15:52You're talking about an $800 billion a year industry.
- 00:15:55It moved 70% of the freight in the United States by value,
- 00:15:59according to the Department of Transportation.
- 00:16:00And without it, we'd have paralysis.
- 00:16:02You wouldn't get the things that you're accustomed to
- 00:16:05on store shelves,
- 00:16:06nor would you get them delivered to your door.
- 00:16:08- I began studying the industry 15 years ago.
- 00:16:11I was looking at the labor process
- 00:16:14and the work that truck drivers do
- 00:16:16and what had happened to it since deregulation
- 00:16:19of the industry in 1980.
- 00:16:21The current driver shortage has been talked about
- 00:16:25by the industry since at least 2005.
- 00:16:28The issue with the truck driver shortage is not one
- 00:16:31of a lack of people who have been interested in this job,
- 00:16:35have gone through the trouble
- 00:16:37of getting trained for this job.
- 00:16:38It's really a shortage of people willing
- 00:16:40to do that job long term,
- 00:16:42and that's fundamentally a retention problem,
- 00:16:45not a driver shortage.
- 00:16:49- Well, here we are.
- 00:16:51Nice backup.
- 00:16:52Appears to be a wreck up here.
- 00:16:54This could be a long time.
- 00:17:02- Trucking used to be one of the very best blue collar jobs
- 00:17:05in the United States.
- 00:17:07The industry was almost fully unionized
- 00:17:09by the Teamsters Union.
- 00:17:11unionized truck drivers were making
- 00:17:14up to 20% more than even unionized steel workers
- 00:17:17or auto workers.
- 00:17:18It was one of the best jobs you could get
- 00:17:20and when you got one of those good jobs,
- 00:17:23you were likely to stay in it until you retired.
- 00:17:27And what happened was the industry was deregulated in 1980.
- 00:17:32The union was pushed out of the big segments
- 00:17:35of the industry,
- 00:17:36and wages and working conditions followed.
- 00:17:42- Truck driving is a blue collar job.
- 00:17:45There's nothing glamorous about it.
- 00:17:47Most of the common person thinks,
- 00:17:48"Oh, anybody can drive a truck."
- 00:17:50They don't take in consideration
- 00:17:52you're gone from your family,
- 00:17:54you work long hours.
- 00:17:56I typically work a 14 hour day.
- 00:18:00My pay structure is
- 00:18:04everything is based off of a per-mile basis.
- 00:18:07You have to manage your available time to drive,
- 00:18:11to be able to make that
- 00:18:13and still take your 10 hour break.
- 00:18:15How long are you gonna wait to get loaded?
- 00:18:17How long does it take you to get loaded?
- 00:18:19Your clock is running
- 00:18:21and you're losing time that you can drive.
- 00:18:30- [Mims] What the big limitation is
- 00:18:31for those drivers is that
- 00:18:33they can only drive so many hours per day.
- 00:18:37There are federal rules,
- 00:18:38they have to record the hours that they drive,
- 00:18:40and that they work.
- 00:18:42Now, it's done electronically.
- 00:18:44- This clock has got a lot to do with
- 00:18:46when you can make your appointments.
- 00:18:48(murmurs) time, you legally can't drive.
- 00:18:52If you get caught, you'll get shut down.
- 00:18:55- The typical long haul truck at a big company will
- 00:18:58only be actually rolling on the highway,
- 00:19:02generating revenue,
- 00:19:03seven to eight hours a day.
- 00:19:05Another seven hours or so of that day,
- 00:19:09they'll be waiting,
- 00:19:10they'll be performing other kinds of unpaid work.
- 00:19:13And then, for 10 hours,
- 00:19:14they're required to take a break.
- 00:19:16You're not paying the driver
- 00:19:18for the vast majority of that time,
- 00:19:20you're really only paying them for the time that they drive.
- 00:19:23New drivers might end up getting paid somewhere
- 00:19:25in the low 30s in cents per mile.
- 00:19:30What that means in terms of total income is
- 00:19:32that a new driver might earn somewhere
- 00:19:34around $40-45,000 today,
- 00:19:37and in many cases does not work out to minimum wage.
- 00:19:41Better paid drivers in that long haul segment can work
- 00:19:44their way up to $60,000 or so.
- 00:19:48An experienced driver for better companies can
- 00:19:51easily make more than $100,000 a year.
- 00:19:56- There are about three and a half million truckers
- 00:19:58in America,
- 00:19:59there are 10 million people in the United States
- 00:20:01who have the kind of commercial driver's license
- 00:20:03that would enable them to drive a truck,
- 00:20:06so that's a measure of the number of people
- 00:20:08who've already churned through this industry.
- 00:20:15So one of the peculiar things
- 00:20:17about trucks and trucking in America is that where
- 00:20:19every other part of the supply chain has consolidated
- 00:20:22and the big have gotten bigger,
- 00:20:23trucking is still incredibly fragmented.
- 00:20:26So small trucking companies,
- 00:20:28which, of course, is the majority of the freight
- 00:20:31that's moved in the US,
- 00:20:32they have a limited amount of leverage, right?
- 00:20:35They are selling their services on a market
- 00:20:37where the freight brokers and the shippers have
- 00:20:40all the advantages in terms of data,
- 00:20:43in terms of being able to set rates.
- 00:20:45And so, those small trucking companies,
- 00:20:47it's very take-it-or-leave-it for them
- 00:20:48in terms of loads.
- 00:20:51- Name of my company is Avalon National LLC.
- 00:20:55We're based in Cassadaga, New York.
- 00:20:57We're up to about 11 trucks right now
- 00:21:01and struggling like everyone else.
- 00:21:06The driver turnover,
- 00:21:07ours is getting higher now
- 00:21:09because we lost a few good drivers
- 00:21:11and we can't replace the good drivers
- 00:21:13that we lost.
- 00:21:15- We really had to work at making sure
- 00:21:16that our loads were paying well enough,
- 00:21:19our drivers, that were currently on the road,
- 00:21:21were staying moving, staying busy,
- 00:21:24completing those loads,
- 00:21:25but also taking into account that
- 00:21:27they are human and have a family
- 00:21:30and everything at home as well.
- 00:21:32Hold on, this is a driver.
- 00:21:34Hey, Rocky, it's Ashley.
- 00:21:36You're all set to pick up that load
- 00:21:38a little bit later.
- 00:21:40She said, just work your magic
- 00:21:43and try to get over there when you can.
- 00:21:45They know you're gonna be a little bit late
- 00:21:46due to your drop-off time.
- 00:21:49Alrighty, drive safe.
- 00:21:53We've had trucks sitting for not having drivers,
- 00:21:58which is a big downfall for us.
- 00:22:06- It's something I shouldn't be doing,
- 00:22:08but again, I should because I'm short drivers.
- 00:22:13So I'll drive the truck myself,
- 00:22:15it's that critical.
- 00:22:18I've owned a couple companies
- 00:22:20and it's a tough business to be into.
- 00:22:23There's times I can't even get back to sleep.
- 00:22:26I wish I could, but I can't.
- 00:22:28I just got too many worries all the time.
- 00:22:31To recruit more drivers,
- 00:22:33we've increased our pay to 71 cents a mile.
- 00:22:37That's very good pay today, 70 cents a mile.
- 00:22:41We're trying to get our benefits
- 00:22:42a little bit better.
- 00:22:48It's not the great cowboy experience it used to be.
- 00:22:54It's more complicated.
- 00:23:03- The laws, the regulations,
- 00:23:06put you up against the wall to be able
- 00:23:08to meet not only your deadline or your appointment
- 00:23:10to get your load delivered,
- 00:23:13but now you're fighting the clock
- 00:23:14in order to have a place to stay safely at night.
- 00:23:18There's not enough room to park
- 00:23:20all the trucks on the road
- 00:23:21for a 10 hour stretch of time.
- 00:23:23So if you don't get parked early,
- 00:23:26you don't get parked.
- 00:23:30Or you can be like some of these guys
- 00:23:31that just pull on shoulder road,
- 00:23:32which is extremely dangerous to do.
- 00:23:35And I'll come fire up something to watch on TV,
- 00:23:39and I sleep generally about seven hours a night.
- 00:23:44So by the time I eat and watch an hour or so of TV,
- 00:23:46I'm done.
- 00:24:00Hi, give me a monster biscuit to go.
- 00:24:09I'm probably running as hard,
- 00:24:12or harder, than I've ever ran
- 00:24:13in the whole time I've been driving the truck.
- 00:24:18I'm 62 years old
- 00:24:20and I'm trying to last until I'm 70.
- 00:24:24Lord willing, my health holds up,
- 00:24:26I'll make that eight years.
- 00:24:31- So the stakes here are incredibly high.
- 00:24:34The average truck driver is aging,
- 00:24:36they're not being replaced.
- 00:24:38If these dire predictions hold true,
- 00:24:40within a decade, we'd be looking at something
- 00:24:41like paralysis for the trucking industry.
- 00:24:45- This is really important right now
- 00:24:47because we're at this transformational period.
- 00:24:50We're moving from the big box supply store
- 00:24:53to increasing E-commerce shipments.
- 00:24:56And E-commerce is way more dependent
- 00:24:59on transportation than the big box supply chain.
- 00:25:05- The ease of shopping these days,
- 00:25:07online, Amazon, those kinds of things,
- 00:25:11where you get on your phone
- 00:25:13and you can, for Christ sakes,
- 00:25:14literally buy your groceries,
- 00:25:17you're gonna get it one way or another,
- 00:25:20how much you gonna pay for it?
- 00:25:21How long do you wanna wait for it?
- 00:25:24In 2021, people are not real patient for waiting
- 00:25:27for what they want because they're so used
- 00:25:28to being able to click, click, click,
- 00:25:30and have it on their doorstep tomorrow.
- 00:25:34But everybody needs to remember that
- 00:25:36no matter what you got,
- 00:25:38it got there via truck.
- 00:25:43- [Mims] So when our USB charger is on a truck,
- 00:25:46its next stop is inevitably gonna be
- 00:25:49some kind of warehouse.
- 00:25:50It's often, if you're talking about E-commerce,
- 00:25:52what's known as a fulfillment center.
- 00:26:12- Good morning, everyone.
- 00:26:14Yesterday, we received in 15,154 units,
- 00:26:18eight ASNs and six sellers.
- 00:26:20- Come on, right up, left.
- 00:26:22One, two, three, four, five, six.
- 00:26:26- [Workers] One, two, three, four.
- 00:26:29- [Mims] As with trucking,
- 00:26:30working in a warehouse is a physically demanding job
- 00:26:33and that's one reason that companies have problems
- 00:26:35with turnover and retaining workers.
- 00:26:39- It gon' go to UPS.
- 00:26:42Take that one with you,
- 00:26:43so we can (indistinct) the box for it.
- 00:26:45You have to be fast, fun, and friendly.
- 00:26:49You gotta have your mind to it
- 00:26:51and not get distracted.
- 00:26:54When you have to lift boxes all day,
- 00:26:57it gets very like...
- 00:26:58You be going home achy, and you be like,
- 00:27:01"Oh, I'm so tired."
- 00:27:02Most days, it's tolerable.
- 00:27:03Then, some days, it's like, "Ugh."
- 00:27:06It's draining.
- 00:27:07- Everyone knows how to make a box, right?
- 00:27:11Short and simple.
- 00:27:13So everyone knows, this is the bottom of the box.
- 00:27:16- All of 'em are brand new,
- 00:27:17all of 'em are getting officially onboarded
- 00:27:18in anticipation of working either tonight
- 00:27:20or tomorrow night.
- 00:27:21People we probably reached out to yesterday.
- 00:27:25So you're literally talking from recruiting to onboard,
- 00:27:29being on the floor in three days now.
- 00:27:32And if I could go faster, I would.
- 00:27:35- [Mims] The shift to E-commerce means
- 00:27:38that even before the pandemic,
- 00:27:39the fulfillment center industry was struggling
- 00:27:41to find the space and workers to keep up.
- 00:27:44- The COVID-related spike with E-commerce
- 00:27:48and direct-to-consumer's absolutely blown up our business
- 00:27:51and our entire industry.
- 00:27:53And what's happening is
- 00:27:54it's a little bit like a snake eating a deer,
- 00:27:56that your supply chain is the snake
- 00:27:57and the supply chain, it's got this big bulge
- 00:28:00that's going through it as its being processed.
- 00:28:03We kind of anticipated the bulge coming our way.
- 00:28:06Yeah, I'm nervous, because there's still more constraints.
- 00:28:08It's not one deer that the snake is swallowing,
- 00:28:10it's a lot of deers, right?
- 00:28:13In its simplest form,
- 00:28:14a truck will deliver product to us.
- 00:28:18We will count that product.
- 00:28:20We will verify that product.
- 00:28:23We will put that product away
- 00:28:25into a storage location,
- 00:28:27And then we'll wait for an order.
- 00:28:29An order will come.
- 00:28:32We'll pick that product.
- 00:28:34We'll package that product
- 00:28:35and then tender it to the appropriate carrier.
- 00:28:38So you have the in and you have out.
- 00:28:40If the in is greater than the out,
- 00:28:42there's only so much space
- 00:28:43that the warehouse can manage.
- 00:28:49We've managed space here
- 00:28:50by leveraging our optimization tools
- 00:28:52and leveraging our technology.
- 00:28:55We have a goods-to-person robotics,
- 00:28:58and we have person-to-good robotics.
- 00:29:00Both of those, we are scaling up here in the facility.
- 00:29:05So one of the big advantages
- 00:29:06about the new automation is that
- 00:29:08it's so flexible.
- 00:29:10With the robots here,
- 00:29:11we're two weeks before black Friday
- 00:29:13and we're literally inducting robots
- 00:29:15right now to increase capacity.
- 00:29:18So Vert is using technology
- 00:29:19really to drive the next generation
- 00:29:21of what we're trying to do
- 00:29:22from a distribution standpoint.
- 00:29:25I'm on the cutting edge of trying
- 00:29:27to create technology and enable
- 00:29:29alternative networks to Amazon.
- 00:29:32Fulfillment's really been defined by Amazon,
- 00:29:36so they've opened the doors
- 00:29:38and the rest of us are now finding
- 00:29:39creative ways to support that.
- 00:29:43- So at Amazon, there's this thing known as "the promise."
- 00:29:47The promise is "we're gonna get you your goods in two days,"
- 00:29:51but, of course, Amazon has been raising the stakes
- 00:29:54throughout its entire life as a corporation,
- 00:29:56so then the promise became one day,
- 00:29:58the promise became same day,
- 00:30:00the promise became three hours.
- 00:30:02In order to achieve this in a fast and efficient way,
- 00:30:07it's gotta be automated as much as possible.
- 00:30:11Amazon, of course, has been a leader
- 00:30:12in this kind of automation,
- 00:30:13but now everyone else is following suit.
- 00:30:19- We're a global third party supply chain provider.
- 00:30:25The Indianapolis campus, specifically,
- 00:30:28we have 12 distribution centers,
- 00:30:30roughly about four million square feet
- 00:30:33of distribution space.
- 00:30:35We utilize robots and technology
- 00:30:38in our facilities
- 00:30:39because we want to be able to get merchandise
- 00:30:43quickly to market.
- 00:30:49That Bombay sorter is critical
- 00:30:52within the process of what we do.
- 00:30:55From the time that we brought
- 00:30:57the Bombay sorter online to now,
- 00:30:59we are moving merchandise much faster out of that facility
- 00:31:03because of that level of technology.
- 00:31:08Another piece of technology
- 00:31:09that is critical is the robots.
- 00:31:14These robots basically allow our teammates
- 00:31:17to pick much faster, pick safer,
- 00:31:20and be able to walk less within the facility.
- 00:31:24If you look at how we used to pick manually,
- 00:31:27we were picking about 70 units per hour.
- 00:31:30And now, with these robots,
- 00:31:31we're picking 140 units an hour.
- 00:31:36There's a speed component, obviously,
- 00:31:39but we definitely keep those capped at a certain level
- 00:31:43because it all comes back to safety.
- 00:31:50You don't want a robot being
- 00:31:53at a extremely high rate,
- 00:31:56which could have eventually caused
- 00:31:57some type of safety issue
- 00:31:59that's in a facility.
- 00:32:01It's to coexist with the employee,
- 00:32:04not to overtake the employee
- 00:32:06within the facility.
- 00:32:11- The introduction of technology can reduce
- 00:32:13the amount of walking and heavy lifting workers
- 00:32:15and warehouses need to do,
- 00:32:16but it can also increase the pace
- 00:32:18and the repetitiveness of their work.
- 00:32:21So how the tech is being implemented
- 00:32:23in each warehouse matters.
- 00:32:25Management sets the pace of the robots,
- 00:32:27and that determines the pace of which humans have to work
- 00:32:30in order to keep up.
- 00:32:33The UC Berkeley report found that
- 00:32:35the introduction of technology
- 00:32:36and the way it speeds up work can lead to
- 00:32:39more turnover and burnout.
- 00:32:41Turnover at many of Amazon's warehouses has exceeded 100%,
- 00:32:46according to a Wall Street Journal analysis
- 00:32:48of federal labor data
- 00:32:49and Amazon's own site data.
- 00:33:10- Well, just finished a nice 12 hour long shift.
- 00:33:16So I'm going from work,
- 00:33:17Amazon Warehouse MSP1 in Shakopee, Minnesota,
- 00:33:21home.
- 00:33:23One of the downsides to working till 6:00 AM is
- 00:33:26the sun coming up.
- 00:33:28At least when you wanna get to sleep.
- 00:33:31I was a stower, and then a picker,
- 00:33:34for two and a half plus years.
- 00:33:37You're stocking inventory,
- 00:33:39you are picking things out the inventory.
- 00:33:42When COVID hit, I became a learning trainer,
- 00:33:46so you train people.
- 00:33:48Hey, nice open spot.
- 00:33:55Good morning.
- 00:33:57Some of the things that I train people on are
- 00:33:59how to access real robotics very safely,
- 00:34:01how to fix individual pieces of equipment.
- 00:34:04I've worked at Amazon for four years now.
- 00:34:07When I first started,
- 00:34:08my feet hurt, I would get blisters.
- 00:34:11Blisters suck.
- 00:34:14After a long work week,
- 00:34:15you'll quite literally feel hung over
- 00:34:18the day after.
- 00:34:20Just from long hours,
- 00:34:21I feel kind of hungover right now
- 00:34:23from all of the just stress and strain
- 00:34:25that's put on your body.
- 00:34:35So you have to hydrate a ton,
- 00:34:37you need to get whatever sleep you can.
- 00:34:40What I started working at Amazon,
- 00:34:42in the first month, I lost 10 pounds.
- 00:34:45So I had to eat a meal before work,
- 00:34:47first break, second break, third break,
- 00:34:50and after work,
- 00:34:51just to keep my current weight.
- 00:34:53You have to make different adjustments
- 00:34:55like that to your life
- 00:34:56to make sure that you can physically make it through.
- 00:35:09Well, I'm awake.
- 00:35:10At least, today's my last shift,
- 00:35:13so tomorrow, I'll be able to bring your mail over.
- 00:35:17Love you, grandma.
- 00:35:20One of the positives, the golden handcuffs,
- 00:35:22that a lot of people like that keeps them there
- 00:35:24in spite of the negatives,
- 00:35:25that would be things like health insurance,
- 00:35:27and the time off, being flexible,
- 00:35:30that was also very helpful,
- 00:35:31and is still helpful, like nowadays.
- 00:35:34So if you have family commitments
- 00:35:36or you're trying to go to school,
- 00:35:38like I help my grandma all the time,
- 00:35:40it's really helpful 'cause you can use some
- 00:35:43of that time off to make that work
- 00:35:45with your Amazon schedule.
- 00:35:50You'll either mature
- 00:35:52in how you handle things
- 00:35:54to be able to handle different situations more effectively.
- 00:35:58Otherwise, you're just gonna burn out.
- 00:36:08- These warehouses are located
- 00:36:10at strategic points on our nation's highway system
- 00:36:12where land is cheap and widely available,
- 00:36:14and so, they tend to cluster.
- 00:36:17So workers there actually have a lot of leverage
- 00:36:20or more leverage than they used to
- 00:36:22because they can just go to
- 00:36:23wherever is offering the highest wage.
- 00:36:26- Okay, so we gonna have to re-palletize those
- 00:36:27so they can all sit at...
- 00:36:29- (indistinct) - Yes.
- 00:36:31Please.
- 00:36:32It's a very competitive things
- 00:36:34of working in warehouse nowadays,
- 00:36:36when you got different jobs
- 00:36:37that's offering you $22 an hour
- 00:36:39to come work for them.
- 00:36:43I started off as a picker,
- 00:36:43to a manual picker,
- 00:36:44to a packer,
- 00:36:45and then I moved to shipping.
- 00:36:48'Cause I always said
- 00:36:49I wanted to learn everything in the warehouse.
- 00:36:50That's my goal,
- 00:36:51to challenge myself.
- 00:36:53It get very stressful some days.
- 00:36:56You have your days, to where it's a good day,
- 00:36:58you have your days, to where you just be,
- 00:37:00"Right, I'm finna walk out."
- 00:37:01It's different days to different things.
- 00:37:03- If you think of this in terms
- 00:37:05of how we live now,
- 00:37:06there's been this grand shift
- 00:37:08between going to the store and buying your own stuff,
- 00:37:11to paying other people to do it for us.
- 00:37:13So it's this fundamental transition
- 00:37:16between how we used to shop,
- 00:37:17how our consumer culture used to work,
- 00:37:19and now how we shop online.
- 00:37:21It's not a trivial change at all.
- 00:37:24And it's a creator of millions of jobs in the meantime
- 00:37:26because somebody has to do all that work for us.
- 00:37:30- If labor continues to be a challenge,
- 00:37:33we'll continue to optimize through automation and robotics
- 00:37:37to offset the labor issue.
- 00:37:39But the reality is,
- 00:37:40is that the cost of fulfillment will go up
- 00:37:43because the cost of labor will go up.
- 00:37:49- So the very last leg of the journey
- 00:37:52of our USB charger is coming out
- 00:37:54of a fulfillment center.
- 00:37:56Then it's gonna end up being loaded onto a truck
- 00:37:59at what's known as a delivery station,
- 00:38:01and that truck is what will carry it
- 00:38:03to its ultimate destination;
- 00:38:04a business over your house.
- 00:38:21So one of the strange things about
- 00:38:22the new world that we live in is that
- 00:38:24when we order things online,
- 00:38:26it's the last mile delivery driver
- 00:38:28who might be our only point of human contact
- 00:38:30with this entire system.
- 00:38:37We might even know our local UPS driver
- 00:38:38or our local postal carrier
- 00:38:40because they tend to have very consistent routes.
- 00:38:44- Doreen likes her stuff inside
- 00:38:45'cause, especially if it's gonna rain.
- 00:38:47Other carriers sometimes don't leave it in the same spot
- 00:38:49and she's like searching the farm.
- 00:38:52So I try to be very consistent every day.
- 00:38:57I've been with UPS for 32 years,
- 00:39:00since 1989.
- 00:39:03I've been on this route for about 12 years,
- 00:39:06going on like 13 years now.
- 00:39:09It's okay, here.
- 00:39:12Come here.
- 00:39:13Come here, ready?
- 00:39:18I know, see?
- 00:39:20Everything's all good now.
- 00:39:23- [Mims] The primary strain on last mile delivery is
- 00:39:25that we'd want so much of it.
- 00:39:27Even before the pandemic,
- 00:39:29the challenge was how to hire enough workers
- 00:39:31to drive all of those delivery vans.
- 00:39:33- If you could transport yourself back 10 years
- 00:39:36and imagine the packages that you received at home,
- 00:39:40they tended to be relatively high value goods.
- 00:39:42You might have legal paperwork,
- 00:39:44or electronics,
- 00:39:46or some highly valued item that you was sent to you
- 00:39:51and, most likely, you had to sign for it.
- 00:39:54E-commerce requires a much cheaper system.
- 00:39:58- So the folks who actually do last mile delivery,
- 00:40:00they, just like warehouse workers,
- 00:40:03have to work to a very high standard.
- 00:40:05They have to work at a very quick pace.
- 00:40:07So typically, at a place like UPS,
- 00:40:10they're training these drivers
- 00:40:11to economize every single action.
- 00:40:15You have folks who have to operate
- 00:40:17like industrial athletes
- 00:40:18because they have to move so quickly
- 00:40:20and so efficiently,
- 00:40:21while also, of course, navigating the hazards
- 00:40:24of America's roads.
- 00:40:31- So today, we talked about three things.
- 00:40:33We talked about, "keep your eyes moving," right?
- 00:40:35Two seconds in the front,
- 00:40:36five to eight seconds in the rear.
- 00:40:38We talked about counting one, two, three.
- 00:40:40Count one, two, three before you put your vehicle in motion
- 00:40:42after that vehicle in front of you starts to move.
- 00:40:45- [Mims] So last mile delivery is
- 00:40:46extremely physically demanding
- 00:40:48because people are having to jump on and off
- 00:40:50a truck all day long,
- 00:40:51they have to carry heavy packages,
- 00:40:54and it's really, as in warehousing,
- 00:40:57the repetitive motion that can be damaging
- 00:40:58to people's bodies,
- 00:40:59so of course people have to be trained to do this safely.
- 00:41:02It's not just about lifting safely,
- 00:41:04it's about lifting safely two or 300 times per day.
- 00:41:08- So there's more than 500 methods to deliver one package.
- 00:41:13I mean everywhere from
- 00:41:15that three points of contact,
- 00:41:16that first step, scanning my area.
- 00:41:18I'm approaching the stop, I'm scanning that area.
- 00:41:20I'm signaling, "Okay, I'm gonna be parking here."
- 00:41:22I got my handbrake pulling my mirror.
- 00:41:25I'm planning ahead.
- 00:41:26"Okay, I know that for this stop,
- 00:41:28"I have five big packages.
- 00:41:30"I know they're in the back.
- 00:41:31"Okay, so I'm gonna pull up to this place,
- 00:41:33"put out the hand cart."
- 00:41:35I don't even like realize it sometimes, it's just...
- 00:41:38I've done it for so many years
- 00:41:40that it's just...
- 00:41:42It just...
- 00:41:42It's like automatic.
- 00:41:44I just know what I have to do.
- 00:41:47And I know how to get it done,
- 00:41:48and be efficient and safe at the same time.
- 00:41:53Working for UPS,
- 00:41:54I don't have to pay for my own vehicle
- 00:41:56or insurance on this vehicle.
- 00:41:57My health insurance is incredible.
- 00:41:59I get paid pretty well.
- 00:42:01We get paid almost 40 bucks an hour.
- 00:42:04And after eight hours,
- 00:42:05we get paid time-and-a-half.
- 00:42:07I know that ups isn't gonna go anywhere
- 00:42:10so when I go to retire in another six years,
- 00:42:13I'm gonna be okay, and so is my family.
- 00:42:19- We can't do the kind of bulk cheap transportation
- 00:42:23of goods that Amazon aspires to, for instance,
- 00:42:28with the kinds of services
- 00:42:30that we had with UPS and FedEx.
- 00:42:33at the same price.
- 00:42:34UPS drivers, for instance,
- 00:42:37very well paid job, good benefits.
- 00:42:40And so, what's happening in last mile is
- 00:42:44an attempt to create a much cheaper version
- 00:42:47of UPS or FedEx.
- 00:42:54- [Mims] So the trend in last mile delivery has been
- 00:42:56toward contract drivers,
- 00:42:58and it's a way to not just limit liability,
- 00:43:01but also limit how much any one company has
- 00:43:04to be responsible for anybody's working conditions.
- 00:43:09- All right, so it's 1:34 PM,
- 00:43:12and I have a block schedule from two to 5:00 PM.
- 00:43:17- There's been a fascinating story that's developed
- 00:43:20in last mile delivery.
- 00:43:22It's almost exclusively driven by Amazon,
- 00:43:25almost entirely.
- 00:43:27Similar to Uber and Lyft,
- 00:43:28which Amazon calls Amazon Flex,
- 00:43:29where people drive their own personal vehicles.
- 00:43:33- I do Amazon Flex delivery.
- 00:43:36I also do a lot of side hustle,
- 00:43:38like the gig economy apps,
- 00:43:41like Uber, DoorDash, Instacart.
- 00:43:44Well, actually, I started signing up for the Amazon Flex
- 00:43:48during the first lockdown for COVID.
- 00:43:51I don't think you can do Amazon Flex full time
- 00:43:54because usually you only get about 30 hours of work.
- 00:43:58You are responsible for all your own expenses;
- 00:44:01Gas, wear-and-tear, oil change and all that.
- 00:44:05Basically, it's like Uber but with packages.
- 00:44:08- [GPS] You've arrived with the destination on your right.
- 00:44:11- Usually, with Amazon Flex,
- 00:44:12it start out like at $18 per hour
- 00:44:14for a three hour block.
- 00:44:16So for a three hour block,
- 00:44:18you would get $54.
- 00:44:20Sometime, the blocks would surge up to like $23 per hour
- 00:44:24or, sometimes, $45 per hour during peak seasons.
- 00:44:38It can be lucrative if you are willing
- 00:44:40to be patient and leverage all the surge.
- 00:44:43Peak season is definitely here.
- 00:44:46So this block was three and a half hours
- 00:44:49for 157.50, fam.
- 00:44:52That's the biggest three and a half hour block pay
- 00:44:54I ever seen.
- 00:44:55That's like 45 an hour.
- 00:44:57Mostly, I get country routes.
- 00:44:58From one delivery to the next is about six miles.
- 00:45:03I've been putting a lot of miles on my car.
- 00:45:06As far as physical work,
- 00:45:08a lot of time it's light envelopes
- 00:45:09and just a lot of driving.
- 00:45:12It's usually the different route every day.
- 00:45:15I think it's inefficient
- 00:45:17'cause you don't really get to learn your route
- 00:45:20or your delivery area.
- 00:45:23- In order to keep up with its own demand
- 00:45:26for last mile delivery,
- 00:45:27Amazon had to create a last mile logistics network,
- 00:45:30just like UPS's or FedEx,
- 00:45:32but theirs consists of subcontracted
- 00:45:35local delivery companies
- 00:45:37that actually own and operate
- 00:45:38the Amazon branded vans.
- 00:45:41- And so, what they've moved to is
- 00:45:42a relatively unique approach,
- 00:45:45which is a kind of franchise.
- 00:45:46And so, now they...
- 00:45:47You can buy 40 vans from Amazon,
- 00:45:51or lease them, as an entrepreneur,
- 00:45:52you can hire up to 100 drivers
- 00:45:54in what they call a DSP,
- 00:45:56delivery service partner.
- 00:45:58And then, Amazon does all of the planning.
- 00:46:02So they put all the packages together,
- 00:46:05label them, plan the route,
- 00:46:06and then your drivers of your franchise will take
- 00:46:10a van that you own
- 00:46:11with an Amazon logo on it
- 00:46:12and drive to the fulfillment center,
- 00:46:14load it up,
- 00:46:15and then follow the route that Amazon provides
- 00:46:18on their phone.
- 00:46:24- I've been working with Amazon Flex
- 00:46:26for about two years now.
- 00:46:28I also used to work with Amazon DSP
- 00:46:30for about another 10 months,
- 00:46:33driving the blue van was...
- 00:46:34I think it is a very physical job.
- 00:46:37Sometimes you have like 200 stops
- 00:46:39and 300 packages in a eight hour, or 10 hour, shift.
- 00:46:44My most ever stops in one day was 240 stops.
- 00:46:47It is what it is.
- 00:46:49Do your job to make sure you come home in one piece.
- 00:46:54You have to be on pace with
- 00:46:56the Amazon's expectation of 20 stops per hour.
- 00:47:00- So one of the effects of using subcontractors
- 00:47:04in order to do your delivery is that
- 00:47:06when drivers are pushed to make more
- 00:47:10and more stops per day,
- 00:47:12if that leads to an accident,
- 00:47:13then the parent company is shielded
- 00:47:15from any legal liability.
- 00:47:18- And I think that'll be the central question
- 00:47:20of the next decade or so for Amazon,
- 00:47:23if they continue on this model,
- 00:47:25is what responsibility does Amazon have
- 00:47:27for those workers and what they do out on the roads.
- 00:47:49- [Mims] Amazon has already become the primary carrier
- 00:47:51of its own packages.
- 00:47:52Now it's touting that it expects
- 00:47:54to beat UPS and FedEx at their own game.
- 00:47:57- We expect it'll be one of the largest carriers
- 00:47:59in the world by the end of this year.
- 00:48:00I think we'll be probably
- 00:48:02the largest package delivery carrier in the US.
- 00:48:05- [Mims] Amazon's delivery network is growing
- 00:48:07at a rapid pace.
- 00:48:08From 2019 to 2020,
- 00:48:10its share of US parcels by volume grew
- 00:48:13from 13% to 21%, which, at this point,
- 00:48:16makes it bigger than FedEx.
- 00:48:18- Last mile delivery work,
- 00:48:20which has been fairly high quality work until recently,
- 00:48:23is facing a similar kind of decline
- 00:48:25that long haul trucking experienced
- 00:48:27after deregulation.
- 00:48:28So the job's being de-skilled,
- 00:48:30workers are paid less and less over time,
- 00:48:34and it's causing very high levels
- 00:48:36of churn within subcontractors for major companies.
- 00:48:43We are gonna need to hire hundreds of thousands
- 00:48:46of last mile delivery workers
- 00:48:49to meet the needs of E-commerce
- 00:48:50in the next decade or so,
- 00:48:53and we may have a shortage of those kind of workers
- 00:48:54in the future.
- 00:48:56- When I was working for the Amazon delivery company,
- 00:49:00I didn't see any future
- 00:49:03or any career advancement,
- 00:49:05so I just quit.
- 00:49:08I really like the Amazon Flex work
- 00:49:11because it gives me a lot of freedom to choose.
- 00:49:28- I know there's a blind spot here,
- 00:49:30'cause this is my route
- 00:49:33and I've been doing it for 12 years.
- 00:49:35So I know all the little hidden things
- 00:49:38that I need to be aware of.
- 00:49:44- So the very last leg of our journey is
- 00:49:47a human being picking up a box
- 00:49:49and walking it to our front door.
- 00:49:52And our entire involvement
- 00:49:53with the supply chain up to this point might have been
- 00:49:56as minimal as opening a website or an app,
- 00:49:59clicking "buy now,"
- 00:50:00and then that product arrives the very next day.
- 00:50:08- When you think about ordering
- 00:50:10a USB charger online
- 00:50:12and having it delivered to your door,
- 00:50:14that's really a remarkable accomplishment.
- 00:50:18It's not a very expensive device
- 00:50:20and it came a long ways from the factory.
- 00:50:25What that relied on was inexpensive transportation,
- 00:50:30inexpensive labor,
- 00:50:32and efficiency all along the way.
- 00:50:36We've really been benefiting from
- 00:50:40a very benign global trade environment
- 00:50:44for the last 25 or 30 years.
- 00:50:47And what the pandemic has shown us is that maybe
- 00:50:51that's not necessarily a good assumption.
- 00:50:53What the pandemic really highlights for us is
- 00:50:57how vulnerable a lot of those links are to disruption.
- 00:51:09- [Mims] Consumers are finding themselves having
- 00:51:12to adapt to the frustration
- 00:51:12of intermittent shortages,
- 00:51:14not being able to get what they want
- 00:51:16because one thing or another can't get
- 00:51:18through the supply chain.
- 00:51:20Beyond shortages, obviously,
- 00:51:22one of the biggest impacts
- 00:51:23of supply chain issues are increased prices.
- 00:51:27- It's difficult it to predict the persistence
- 00:51:29and effects of supply constraints,
- 00:51:30but it now appears that factors pushing inflation
- 00:51:32upward will linger well into next year.
- 00:51:36- [Mims] Challenges in supply chains make it difficult
- 00:51:39to fight inflation with the usual tools,
- 00:51:42which is adjusting interest rates.
- 00:51:43The most powerful financial institution
- 00:51:45in the world is telling us
- 00:51:47that interest rates aren't necessarily enough
- 00:51:50to deal with all of this inflation.
- 00:51:53As a result of these supply chain challenges,
- 00:51:56companies are rethinking where things are manufactured
- 00:51:59and how far they have to travel
- 00:52:00in order to get to us.
- 00:52:02- One of the questions that
- 00:52:03a lot of people have asked,
- 00:52:06because of the pandemic,
- 00:52:07is about all this manufacturing that has moved offshore,
- 00:52:12and can we move it back onshore?
- 00:52:15That was really driven by the labor cost differential,
- 00:52:18which was substantial.
- 00:52:20So moving from a high cost country
- 00:52:23to a low cost country,
- 00:52:25economically, that's pretty straightforward.
- 00:52:27Moving from a low cost country,
- 00:52:30re-shoring to a high cost country,
- 00:52:33that's a whole different question.
- 00:52:35We'll see some,
- 00:52:36but we shouldn't underestimate the challenge.
- 00:52:39- It's a big day for the tech industry in Texas.
- 00:52:41Samsung officially announcing it's bringing
- 00:52:43a $17 billion semiconductor factory to Taylor.
- 00:52:49- Companies like Samsung have pledged 10s of billions
- 00:52:52of dollars to build factories
- 00:52:54for manufacturing microchips
- 00:52:55within the United States.
- 00:52:57Intel, specifically, has pledged 20 billion
- 00:53:00to build a facility in Ohio.
- 00:53:03- This is a major win for Ohio
- 00:53:05and it's really a game changer,
- 00:53:08a game changer for our economic future.
- 00:53:11- [Mims] It shows just how big of a problem
- 00:53:14these supply chain issues are
- 00:53:15and just how different the present is
- 00:53:17from any point in the immediate past.
- 00:53:25- I think what we saw during the pandemic was
- 00:53:29an inability to rapidly shift
- 00:53:32to meet changing patterns in demand.
- 00:53:38The question we have to ask is,
- 00:53:40"is it likely to happen again?"
- 00:53:53(artillery shelling)
- 00:54:30(tense music)
- Supply Chain
- Pandemic
- Logistics
- E-commerce
- Labor Shortage
- Inflation
- Warehousing
- Transportation
- Globalization
- Automation