Enron Mail

From:mike.mcconnell@enron.com
To:daniel.reck@enron.com
Subject:hello
Cc:
Bcc:
Date:Mon, 13 Nov 2000 01:28:00 -0800 (PST)

FYI
m
---------------------- Forwarded by Mike McConnell/HOU/ECT on 11/13/2000
09:28 AM ---------------------------


Shawn Cumberland@ENRON_DEVELOPMENT
11/11/2000 03:57 AM
To: Mike McConnell/HOU/ECT@ECT
cc:
Subject: hello

Mike:

Many thanks for all of the support in the placement of the former CALME
employees. We are done to just a very few at this time.

It appears that your new squad is getting some traction on building the LNG
business. I'm pleased to hear that.

I look forward to hearing how our transportation or logistics business is
developing. Perhaps we can get together sometime during the San Antonio
conference to catch up.

All the best. Shawn

PS. the following is an interesting article about the online intermodal
landscape.


Hashing Out E-commerce.
JOHN GALLAGHER
10/23/2000
Traffic World
Page 29
Copyright 2000 Gale Group Inc. All rights reserved. COPYRIGHT 2000 Journal of
Commerce, Inc.

'Dot-coms' explain how they hope to compete in intermodal market and among
themselves

With some 150 websites devoted to transportation, e-commerce companies
acknowledge that it's difficult for potential customers to cut through the
confusion and figure out who's doing what and who's going to be with them for
the long term.

Because of the competition between their respective railroad partners, one of
the bigger questions for intermodal shippers is the relationship between
Arzoon and Freightwise. There has been speculation that after Freightwise was
established by Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway, four competitors --
Union Pacific Railroad, Norfolk Southern, CSX and Canadian Pacific Railway --
teamed up with rival e-commerce site Arzoon in a response to BNSF's proposed
merger with Canadian National Railway. However, both Freightwise and Arzoon
claim that's not the case. "I'm continually asked, 'What's up with the four
railroads and Arzoon?'" said Charley Eisele, UP senior vice president,
strategic planning. "People are trying to make a whole lot out of the
coincidence of these two things from a timing perspective. The reality is, it
was a decision made on the underlying business model."

Freightwise executives agree with that assessment, pointing out that because
the industry happened to be divided along merger lines at the same time the
railroads were aligning with e-commerce initiatives, it seemed too much of a
coincidence that the same four railroads opposing the merger were the ones
joining Arzoon. However, "I think to launch a company like this takes more
than just a reaction to a merger," said Freightwise Chief Marketing Officer
Sanjay Joshi.

There are major differences between the two Internet companies starting with
their business plans. Arzoon categorizes itself as a "shipper-centric
transportation management system," whose target market is the roughly 80
percent of the transportation business that currently moves under contract.
Freightwise, on the other hand, classifies itself as a transportation
exchange and is targeting the remaining 20 percent of the market procured on
a spot basis. Arzoon, whose primary focus is the shipper, is setting out to
help manage the relationships that already exist between shipper and carrier.
The priority for carrier-focused Freightwise is to make sure the capacity is
there for shippers who log on to their system.

In addition, Arzoon, which currently is involved only with rail and truck,
wants eventually to become a transportation management system that "manages
across all modes and borders," including ocean and air freight, said Eisele.
Freightwise will stick to truckload and inter-modal for the time being.
"We're not sure about getting involved with air freight, given the size of
the market and the economics," said Joshi. "It takes a different set of
products and economics than surface transportation. Maybe sometime down the
line, but right now we really plan on getting entrenched in the truckload and
inter-modal spot market. We think that's a lot to chew. The key is to focus
on a particular footprint that we can begin to own rather than get too broad
and lose focus."

The fact that Arzoon and Freightwise have teamed up with different rail
carriers is another cause for concern. Will there be a disincentive on the
part of carriers to use each others' e-commerce initiatives and ultimately,
therefore, a disadvantage for prospective customers?

"The answer is the 90-10 rule," said a source from an Arzoon rail partner. "A
particular shipper is in a position where 90 percent of their business is
conducted via truck and other modes, and maybe only 10 percent via railroads.
If the choice presented to them is to select a system that addresses all
modes effectively or one that only addresses a particular mode, then the
90-10 rule would suggest that greater leverage would lie in picking the
broader, multimode transportation management system. In that case, even
though a railroad may have another (e-commerce) approach, it would clearly
have to respond to the customers' needs in that situation."

Freightwise's Joshi makes a similar argument. "Freightwise is merely another
channel for BNSF to market its services," he said. "It posts a certain set of
rates for what it believes to be fair for the service. It's not for
Freightwise to decide what rates BNSF decides to move through its channel."
UP may not decide to post its rates on Freightwise, Joshi said, "so then BNSF
would have to find out what's the competitive rate relative to UP."

Another question arises as to whether Arzoon may have a competitive advantage
over Freightwise, particularly from an intermodal standpoint, because it is
backed by both Eastern and Western carriers. whereas Freightwise is backed
only by BNSF. "I would only say that the partnership we have with BNSF is not
exclusive and that we're talking to other railroads as well," Joshi noted. He
added, "This is an exchange to market your capacity and services. It would be
very difficult for six railroads to do something on their own; there would be
no critical mass. It's to the advantage of the other railroads to
participate."

Along with BNSF, which provides Freightwise with instant capacity, the
company recently signed GE Corp. as an "anchor tenant" and equity investor
that will help Freightwise reach the critical mass Joshi talks about. As both
a major supplier to the rail industry (locomotives) and a potential shipper
(appliances), "the goal is to use GE as something we can leverage, and work
with their respective divisions as a way to reduce their transportation
costs," he said.

Visibility is a key advantage for potential customers of both Interment
companies. "As a transportation management system with access to all modes,
it allows shippers to be more efficient in the management of transportation,"
Eisele said. "Cross-modal visibility means that because they'll be managing
their truck business under the same system as rail, the economics of rail
will be much more visible. And we believe that with comparable reliability,
the economics will be compelling to the point where rails will garner a
greater share of those customers' total transportation buy."

Joshi claims a big difference between Freightwise and other exchanges is that
when a shipper is looking for transportation options between specific
origin-destination pairs, Freightwise allows customers to make side-by-side
comparisons between truck and intermodal. It is this price and service
transparency, Joshi says, that will save its customers money: "We're giving
customers three to five choices between truck and intermodal, not 50, so that
they can see service and price parameters."

Intermodal e-commerce ventures such as Freightwise also bring up the question
of competition with traditional intermodal marketing companies. Joshi points
out that its fee for doing a lot of what small and midsize IMCs do currently
-- such as load matching, tracking and tracing and order processing -- is 3
percent, which is split between the buyer and seller of the services. This
compares to the 18 to 20 percent that customers traditionally have paid for
retaining an IMC. "I don't think all brokers will embrace us," Joshi
conceded, but at the same time, "there will be a segment of brokers who will
begin migrating into higher-added-value services, for example, the
third-party logistics side rather than the classical brokerage. They'll get
into things like inventory management on behalf of shippers and leave
back-end processing to firms like Freightwise."

Webmodal, which is a purely intermodal e-commerce venture whose vision is to
"make intermodal much more like truck in the eyes of the shipper," points out
that it can take customers several days to receive a bid from a traditional
IMC. "We can immediately configure door to door intermodal solutions that we
can put together using our underlying carrier relationships," said Webmodal
founder and CEO Chris Kravas. "We do business with a lot of large U.S.
railroads and with 37 drayage companies. We give everybody access to all the
information they might need to make decisions on price vs. service tradeoffs,
and which carriers make most sense based on what the shipper is trying to do.
And we do it without the traditional one-to-three-day wait that typically
happens in response to a normal request for (intermodal services)."

Kravas said the company has invested time and expertise in developing what it
calls a "first-ever" schedule engine that works door to door. "Traditionally,
the industry hasn't had a schedule engine that involves the
'dray-plus-rail-plus-dray' services, so there's been pretty much a reliance
on rules of thumb. But the truth is, it doesn't take anywhere near eight days
for most origin-destination pairs. We have a very robust way of representing
the capabilities of the dray carriers as well as the rail carriers, so that
much more truck-like transit can be shown to be viable."

Because of this, Webmodal sees itself as more of a technology and e-commerce
company than a traditional IMC, and considers itself more a vendor than a
competitor. How does a small or midsize IMC work as a customer of Webmodal?
"Not all small IMCs are set up to do business with all of the railroads or
with a large set of drayage companies," Kravas said. "What we do for them is
give them a low-cost way to access, a comprehensive array of intermodal
products and services available in the U.S. We've established ourselves as a
business partner with a large base of first-rate drayage companies across the
country. So if you're an IMC with an opportunity to handle freight in a new
market, Webmodal allows you to put together a service and pay only a modest
fee." Kravas wouldn't disclose the company's fee structure, only that it
charges per shipment for a web-based order and a "slightly higher" fee for a
phone or fax order.

A smaller IMC also could use Webmodal to put in place a private version of
its technology that would enable the IMC to better manage its business. "That
would range from pricing, order fulfillment, customer service -- kind of the
whole spectrum of capabilities that would allow an IMC to take advantage of
our system," Kravas said.

Everyone's waiting to see who's going to survive the transportation dot-com
fallout. Before that happens, however, Freightwise may find itself as big a
competitor with Arzoon as it is with a company like Webmodal. "We're starting
from different points," said Freightwise's Joshi, "but down the line, yes, I
can see" more head-to-head competition between the two companies.

In addition to establishing itself in that 80 percent of the market devoted
to transportation contracts, UP's Eisele notes that Arzoon also has a
catalog-capability function, which eventually can be used to auction capacity
in the spot market -- the market in which Freightwise is establishing itself.
"We will very much have the capability to enable spot market buying," he
said.

As Webmodal's Kravas pointed out, "It's going to be an interesting next six
months."

Arzoon-A.T. Kearney partnership

Consulting firm A.T. Kearney, a unit of Dallas-based EDS, and Arzoon, which
provides Internet-based services for managing transportation work processes
worldwide, have formed a strategic alliance.

A.T. Kearney was one of the first to establish a dedicated practice helping
shippers manage transportation more effectively on a global basis. Its
clients now will have direct exposure to Arzoon's transportation management
trading network, which provides online services for managing the full life
cycle of work processes across all modes, systems and enterprises.

Similarly, Arzoon and its clients can access "select" A.T. Kearney consulting
services, the company said. That includes inbound transportation management,
supply-chain and distribution rationalization, carrier selection and process
improvement, Arzoon said.

"Superior transportation management has emerged as a critical success factor
in the increasingly competitive world of commerce," said Randy Garber,
transportation services co-leader of A.T. Kearney's operations services
practice. "We think service companies, manufacturers and retailers that
incorporate the speed, simplicity and efficiency of the Internet into their
supply chains will lead their markets."

The plan is for both A.T. Kearney and Arzoon to gain valuable understanding
and insights into how the Internet creates great efficiencies in both the
strategic and tactical needs of transportation professionals, Garber added.

"We believe that the knowledge gained from this collaboration will benefit
our clients as well as Arzoon's customers involved in the $1 trillion global
freight transportation market," Garber said.

An Arzoon official said the company was "very pleased" to be associated with
A.T. Kearney, which Arzoon described as a "premier problem-so1ver." A.T.
Kearney has a global presence that includes 62 offices in 37 countries.
Arzoon.com, San Mateo, Calif., is a year-old Internet startup that describes
itself as a company that is working on "the transformation of the worldwide
transportation market into a networked community."

Copyright , 2000 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.