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AfterShip is an eCommerce experience SaaS company [2] offering branded shipment tracking, returns management, product discovery personalization, and more. [3] [4] It was founded after winning the Startup Weekend Hong Kong 2011 [5] and Global Startup Battle 2011.
DHL (German pronunciation: [ˌdeːhaːˈʔɛl]) is a multinational logistics brand, founded in the United States and headquartered in Bonn, Germany. [5] It provides courier, package delivery, and express mail service, delivering over 1.7 billion parcels per year. [6]
RFID is synonymous with track-and-trace solutions, and has a critical role to play in supply chains. RFID is a code-carrying technology, and can be used in place of a barcode to enable non-line of sight-reading. Deployment of RFID was earlier inhibited by cost limitations but the usage is now increasing.
DHL Global Forwarding, formerly known as DHL Danzas Air & Ocean, [1] is a division of Deutsche Post DHL providing air and ocean freight forwarding services. It also plans and undertakes major logistics projects under the brand name DHL Industrial Projects. Together with DHL Freight, it forms Deutsche Post's Freight/Forwarding department.
Pacific International Lines (PIL) is a Singaporean shipping company incorporated in Singapore on 16 March 1967. [1] It was founded by Singaporean entrepreneur Chang Yun Chung , who was the world's oldest billionaire [ 2 ] until he died at 102 in September 2020.
The DHL Global Forwarding division carries goods by rail, road, air and sea under the DHL brand and includes the DHL Freight operation which runs a ground-based freight network covering Europe, Russia and traffic into the Middle East. In 2016, this division's revenue declined by 7.7 percent to €13.7 billion but operating profit before ...
DHL Supply Chain was the global market leader in contract logistics with a market share of 8.3% (2010). In this highly fragmented market, the top ten players account for only about 23% of the overall market, the size of which is estimated to be €147 billion.
Singapore Airlines Cargo was the third airline to be the targeted for fuel surcharge price fixing. [8] In May 2010, Singapore Airlines was fined by the Fair Trade Commission of South Korea for conspiring to introduce fuel surcharges for cargoes or continuing to raise them over the past seven years. [9]