The 2007 Great Package Race is Underway

*********************************
There is now a CONTENT FREEZE for Mercury while we switch to a new platform. It began on Friday, March 10 at 6pm and will end on Wednesday, March 15 at noon. No new content can be created during this time, but all material in the system as of the beginning of the freeze will be migrated to the new platform, including users and groups. Functionally the new site is identical to the old one. webteam@gatech.edu
*********************************

Contact

Barbara Christopher
Industrial and Systems Engineering
Contact Barbara Christopher
404.385.3102

Sidebar Content

For complete details about the Great package Race including this year\'s winner, please visit http://www2.isye.gatech.edu/~jjb/wh/package-race/package-race.html.

Summaries

Summary Sentence:

The 2007 Great Package Race is Underway

Full Summary:

Professor John Bartholdi, Manhattan Associates Professor of Supply Chain Management and Research Director of the Supply Chain & Logistics Institute (SCL), coordinates a race each year where his students track packages sent from SCL at Georgia Tech in Atlanta, GA (USA) to sites around the world via different international parcel carriers (UPS, Fedex, DHL).

Media
  • Great Package Race is underway. Professor Barthold Great Package Race is underway. Professor Barthold
    (image/jpeg)
  • GT memorabilia GT memorabilia
    (image/jpeg)

How do packages actually get from sender to consignee? Each carrier has its own freight network through which a package travels and the experience of each package depends on the construction of the network. For fun, each year Professor John Bartholdi's class coordinates a race where they track packages sent from ISyE's Supply Chain and Logistics Institute at Georgia Tech in Atlanta, GA (USA) to sites around the world via different international parcel carriers (UPS, Fedex, DHL).

On Friday, April 13th, Professor Bartholdi's class contacted UPS, FedEx, and DHL to carry identical packages to contacts in:
Yangon: until recently, capital of Myanmar; formerly known as Rangoon, Burma
Tikrit: administrative center of the province of Salah ad Din, Iraq
Harare: the capital of Zimbabwe
Florianopolis: an island off the coast of southern Brazil
Apia, Samoa: in the western pacific

Sites are chosen based on locations that challenge the business processes of the multinational package carriers. It is remarkable that most packages eventually reach their destinations, even under difficult circumstances, but there have been some dramatic lapses. One package was carried back-and-forth across the Atlantic Ocean nine times before delivery. Another was sent to Costa Rica instead of Croatia. One carrier claimed that the destination country did not exist. (It does.)

There have been dramatic finishes as well. In 2006, UPS beat DHL to Croatia by 3 minutes. One race ended in a tie when delivery folk from competing companies arrived at the door simultaneously, even though the packages had taken completely different routes to the destination. Technically FedEx made the delivery first, but we gave extra credit to the UPS person for courtesy in holding the door.

 

Additional Information

Groups

School of Industrial and Systems Engineering (ISYE)

Categories
Institute and Campus, Student and Faculty
Related Core Research Areas
No core research areas were selected.
Newsroom Topics
No newsroom topics were selected.
Keywords
Bartholdi, DHL, FedEx, Great package race, UPS
Status
  • Created By: Ruth Gregory
  • Workflow Status: Published
  • Created On: May 30, 2007 - 8:00pm
  • Last Updated: Oct 7, 2016 - 11:04pm