TARS (Transportation Audit & Recovery Services) helps businesses lower their shipping costs through expert parcel audit services, carrier contract negotiation, and refund recovery. We specialize in analyzing FedEx and UPS invoices to identify billing errors, late deliveries, and service failures—recovering refunds and optimizing shipping contracts to maximize savings. With no upfront fees and a performance-based model, TARS delivers risk-free logistics consulting that saves companies time and money.
Parcel contract negotiation strategy can start with the wrong question.
Most parcel negotiations focus on discounts. Stronger outcomes come from understanding how pricing structure, shipment behavior, and agreement design interact over time.
How TARS approaches carrier agreement strategy
Strong outcomes are not driven by isolated concessions or headline discounts. They are shaped by how pricing structure, shipment behavior, and agreement design interact over time. TARS helps bring clarity to that structure so decisions are made deliberately — not reactively.
Establish structural visibility
Understand how current pricing behaves across shipment mix, service usage, and billing patterns — not just how it appears in contract language.
Identify economic drivers
Determine which pricing components actually influence long-term cost performance and where meaningful leverage may exist.
Prioritize agreement decisions
Focus negotiation effort on the elements that matter most — rather than distributing attention across lower-impact concessions.
Guide negotiation structure
Support how proposals are approached, evaluated, and responded to so positioning remains disciplined throughout the process.
Validate agreement performance
Assess how negotiated terms translate into real-world billing behavior once the agreement is active.
Maintain economic control
Ensure agreement outcomes remain aligned over time as shipping patterns evolve and carrier behavior shifts.
Where most negotiation strategies break down
TARS was founded inside carrier billing and agreement performance. For years, our work centered on auditing live transportation invoices, analyzing contract language, and identifying how agreements behaved once they were operational.
That experience provided something many organizations rarely obtain: direct visibility into how carrier economics function beyond the negotiation table. Much of that perspective is grounded in how agreement performance shows up in live invoice behavior, not just how it appears in carrier proposals. That visibility is closely tied to what we’ve learned through active invoice and parcel audit work.
That visibility changed how agreement decisions are made. Recovering overcharges is valuable — but shaping agreement structure before outcomes are locked in creates far greater long-term impact. For broader context, explore the full TARS Media insight library or review how this thinking connects back to our broader service approach.
See how carrier agreements actually perform
Strong negotiation strategy begins with a clearer view of how agreement structure behaves under real shipping conditions. Review the broader performance framework before renewal priorities are set.
Learn how carrier agreements actually performWhere this approach comes from
The first structural decision shapes everything that follows
Carrier agreements are often approached as a discount exercise. But early structural decisions shape how pricing, service behavior, and agreement performance unfold over time.
What this approach changes in practice
A more structured approach to carrier agreements doesn’t just improve negotiation outcomes — it changes how decisions are made, how performance is evaluated, and how economic control is maintained over time.
Clearer decision priorities
Effort is focused on the pricing elements that actually influence long-term cost — not on headline discounts that may have limited impact.
Stronger negotiation positioning
Decisions are grounded in structural understanding, helping improve leverage and reduce reactive or fragmented negotiation behavior.
Better alignment with operations
Agreement structure is shaped around how shipping actually behaves — improving consistency between expected and realized outcomes.
Improved performance visibility
Organizations gain clearer insight into how agreements are performing once active, not just how they were designed.
Reduced erosion over time
Structural alignment helps prevent negotiated gains from gradually degrading as shipment patterns and carrier behavior evolve.
More disciplined execution
Internal teams operate with clearer guidance, improving consistency across evaluation, negotiation, and ongoing oversight.
