Engineering and Applied Science Research (Nov 2022)

The decision-making for selecting cold chain logistics providers in the food industry

  • Nalinee Wiangkam,
  • Thitipong Jamrus,
  • Panitas Sureeyatanapas

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 49, no. 6
pp. 811 – 818

Abstract

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The issue of selecting a third-party logistics (3PL) provider is becoming more important for businesses that want to reduce costs and improve customer service. This is especially true in cold chain logistics (CCL), which has challenges in shipping perishable products. The objectives of this study are to: (1) compile and validate the criteria used to select CCL providers using the index of item-objective congruence (IOC) and expert interviews; (2) determine the importance of the criteria (the weights) based on the rank-order centroid (ROC) method; and (3) apply the fuzzy technique for order preference by similarity to an ideal solution (fuzzy TOPSIS) methodto choose the appropriate provider in real life.The food industry is used as a case study. As a result, after validation, there are 11 main criteria broken down into 26 sub-criteria. The five most important criteria are found to be on-time delivery, transportation system standard, transportation cost, trust, and accessibility of contact persons in urgency, respectively. A sensitivity analysiswas also undertaken to assess the robustness ofselection result. The integration of the fuzzy TOPSIS and ROC methods is able to facilitate a logical selection of a CCL provider and allows the decision-making process depends less on the subjectivity of the decision maker.

Keywords