finding new revenue sources in a down economy how ns short lines can enhance their customers’...
TRANSCRIPT
Finding New Revenue Sourcesin a Down Economy
How NS short lines can enhance their customers’ competitive advantage
Norfolk Southern Short line Conference,
Brosnan Forest, April 2009Roy Blanchard, The Blanchard Company
Railway Age Contributing Editor
TRAINS Contributor
March 18, 2009 www.rblanchard.com 2
Agenda• Infrastructure and Equipment
– Classifying NS short lines– Be careful what you ask for
• Trends Going Forward– “Heat and eat”– Consolidation and abandonment
• Markets and Competition– Creating a shortline niche– Understanding the customer perspective
• The Smarter Railroad– Asset productivity– Doing more with less
March 18, 2009 www.rblanchard.com 3
The purpose of any business is to create customers.
-- Peter Drucker
Customers will increasingly focus on the complete door-to-door trip. -- Dr. Joe Giglio, Mobility
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Where the Short Lines Live: Infrastructure and Equipment
• Track and power good to marginal or worse
• Some “one-trick ponies”
• Over-reliance on grants or subsidies to exist– Some cut-backs already
– “Stimulus” unclear
• Financial strength varies
• Handling lines and switch carriers volume-dependent
Staged accident, NC, 1996
Reading & Northern Open House, Sep 2008
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Where the Short Lines Live: Good Track Equals Competitive advantage
Short Line, Virginia, 2006 NKCR, Nebraska, 2005
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Where the Short Lines Live: Classifying NS Short lines by Ownership
• More than 250 names• Holding companies:
G&W, RA, Watco, G&O • Individually owned,
unaffiliated– Strong stand-alones– Marginal properties
• S&Ts – BOCT, IHB, TRRA, CSAO
• Joint ownership with another Class I: WSSB
UP, Gibbon, NE, 2005
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Where We are and What’s Coming: Ownership Trends in 2009 and beyond
• Strong unaffiliateds bought by holcos with economies of scale and marketing savvy
• Merch service in single-car lots of low-rated commodities going away
• Financially weak names are at risk
• “Heat and eat” here to stay
NKCR, Nebraska, 2005NKCR, Nebraska, 2005
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Where We are and What’s Coming: Service
• Merch carload service improving
• Focus on service to improve volumes, revenues, or both
• Customer and market segmentation
• Scalpel, not a meat ax
Maine 2-foot gauge, 2008Maine 2-foot gauge, 2008
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Is the business model profitable and growing? It must be for both to prosper
Customer/Railroad Customer/Railroad
Yes/Yes
A winning combination. Nurture and grow.
No/Yes
Going out of business sale? Using the RR because he can’t afford trucks? Kill
Yes/No
Can go either way. Why are you losing share? Can you recover margin and share?
Grow or kill, depending.
No/No
Dead meat. Run, do not walk, to the nearest exit.
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Cash Cow or Sacred Cow?Milk the cash cow, kill the sacred cow
Revenue-cost ratio
Volume
High Medium Low
High Cash Cash Cash
Medium Cash Depends Sacred
Low Cash Depends Sacred
March 18, 2009 www.rblanchard.com 11
Markets and Competition: Creating a Shortline Niche
• Marcellus Shale formation in Pennsylvania
• 353 new drilling permits– 300 tons frac sand in 100-
ton PD hoppers– 200 pieces casting pipe in
OT gons, 150 per car
• Transmission pipe 24-42” diameter on TTX flats– Up to 20 sections per car– Arrives in 20-car cuts Natural gas pipe, Lycoming Valley RR, 2008
March 18, 2009 www.rblanchard.com 12
Markets and Competition: Creating a Shortline Niche
• Create a bypass– Offer a 40 mph RR to
parallel the Class I’s 60 mph core route
– State grants, RRIF loans
• Expand service offerings– Local service
– Transload
– Bridge traffic
Western NY & Pa first run
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Markets and Competition: Creating a Shortline Niche
INRD increases unit train to 100 cars from 65 cars for utility– New aluminum cars– 286 vs. 263 – New SD90 MACs– Same tonnage with
45% fewer trains– Increased available
track capacity– Lowered operating
expense
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Markets and Competition: Understanding the Shipper Perspective
• We need our shipments on time every time; easily as bad as late
• We need an end to transit L&D
• We need an end to RR-caused demurrage problems
• We need to have the right car in the right place at the right time
• We need total shipment visibility door-to-door
• We need a quality product on a consistent basis
• Everything else is irrelevant N&W, Waverly, VA, late 1950s
March 18, 2009 www.rblanchard.com 15
The Smarter Railroad: Doing More with Less
• Use technology to produce more revenue per asset
• Increase throughput on existing corridors – short lines as alternate routes?
• Price to the market but contain costs
• Match service design to customer supply chain
• The smart and nimble will prosper.
DM&E, South Dakota
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Rule 99 in Effect. Hope you enjoyed the ride.
NYC, Briarcliff Manor, NY July, 1954