Site icon Food Industry Executive

Why Yard Operations Are Now Part of the Executive Agenda

Many Ways Of Transporting Goods And Freight Of World Trade, Load

Many ways of transporting goods and freight of world trade, loading trucks at a logistics warehouse, delivery from an online store

By Rafael Granato, VP of Marketing, YMX Logistics

Key takeaways: 



When executives discuss supply chain transformation, the yard rarely makes the agenda. Warehouses get robotics. Transportation gets telematics and real-time visibility. Data teams get AI dashboards. Meanwhile, yard operations, the connective tissue between all these nodes, often run on radios, clipboards, and legacy processes and equipment.

Most enterprise shippers are realizing that yard operations are a strategic pressure valve. When it runs well, inventory flows, carriers stay loyal, and costs remain under control. When it doesn’t, margins erode, service falters, and compliance risks rise. Let’s dive into it.

The true cost of neglect

For many organizations, the yard looks small on the P&L. But its inefficiencies quietly inflate costs across the enterprise:

These aren’t operational inconveniences. They are strategic risks that directly impact profitability and the confidence of customers and partners.

Why technology alone falls short

Yard Management Systems (YMS) promise visibility, but many executives are left questioning the ROI. Visibility without alignment only exposes fragmentation:

Technology is valuable, but only when deployed on top of disciplined processes and clear accountability.

The yard operating system: A strategic framework

Forward-looking enterprises are adopting a Yard Operating System (YOS). This isn’t another software platform. It’s an operational framework that elevates the yard from tactical to strategic. For food and beverage executives, the yard is more than a staging area. It’s a strategic activity that builds stronger relationships and improves cost and reliability in a tight market. 

Some of the key elements include:

Where to start

Yard transformation doesn’t happen overnight. But executives can accelerate results by focusing on five priorities:

  1. Audit the baseline: Dwell time, safety records, compliance gaps.
  2. Establish standards: SOPs and training that scale across sites.
  3. Redefine partnerships: Move beyond transactional contracts to outcome-based accountability.
  4. Deploy technology with intent: Support disciplined processes, don’t mask broken ones.
  5. Measure what matters: Safety, sustainability, service, and ROI, not just cost.

Partnering for success

Not every organization has the in-house expertise, bandwidth, or resources to overhaul yard operations on their own. And that’s okay. The fastest way to accelerate results is often to partner with a yard logistics company that already embeds a Yard Operating System into its core operations.

These partners bring more than labor and equipment. They provide the process discipline, trained talent, and integrated technology required to run yards consistently across multiple sites. They’re also accountable for outcomes, not just activity, ensuring improvements in throughput, safety, and sustainability are built into day-to-day operations.

For executives, this means fewer distractions and confidence that the yard is no longer a weak link but a performance lever.

Rafael Granato, VP of Marketing at YMX Logistics, leads brand strategy, thought leadership, and positioning, showcasing innovation, customer value, and industry leadership in yard operations and logistics.

Exit mobile version