Creating a Digital Twin of Your Fleet is Closer than You Think

Digital twin, the creation of a virtual, but dynamic, representation of your operations is a powerful approach to better understand how it works today or could work in the future. With a digital twin, an organization can monitor performance, predict the impact of changes, identify areas for improved productivity or customer service and evaluate new operating models. The concept has been around for almost 20 years but has gained popularity recently because of the proliferation of IoT- and cloud-based modelling solutions. If you think about it, the possibility to create a digital twin of your fleet exists today. Here are the 5 key components that are needed to create digital twin of your fleet.

Real-world modelling

The real-world of fleet operations is inexact and messy and there are a lot of complex trade-offs between service and cost. The ability to deal with hard and soft constraints for vehicles, products, customers, etc. is critical to creating an accurate operational model of the fleet. One area where there has been significant modelling improvement in recent years is location-based services (i.e., digital map technology) where roads are modelled more accurately and there is a wealth of historical, predictive and real-time traffic information.

Continuous optimization

Digital twins operate in real-time, making or taking decisions that improve operational performance. The notion of planning and dispatching blurs as the optimization engine needs to take in real-time updates to make predictive recommendations on what best to do because of changes to orders, vehicle and driver status, road congestion, etc. Machine learning or other forms of artificial intelligence in combination with continuous optimization is a powerful way to enhance the quality of the decisions. What is clear, however, is that batch optimization will not work in a digital twin.

Integrated real-time data

The degree of integration of real-time data sources — mobile, telematics, traffic, etc. — with the continuous optimization technology is critical to the ability of the digital twin to make accurate and timely predictions and decisions. The breadth and depth of data and the sophistication of the interaction goes well beyond capturing regular GPS updates. In addition, the integration needs to be bidirectional and event-driven to take in order and delivery status changes as they occur and coordinate drivers’ actions on the road.  

Scenario management

The ability to test and validate the impact of proposed operational changes or new business models is one of the most powerful capabilities of the digital twin. Most fleet operators want to be more agile but are slowed by the validation process. With a digital twin, the ability to clone, tweak and run enhanced models against operational data allows organizations to more quickly and accurately assess the cost, service and other operation impacts of proposed changes.

Analytics

Not every improvement opportunity happens in real-time. Part of the power of the digital twin is to collect large amounts of data over time to analyze trends. For example, we had a customer who was collecting 4 billion data points annually and used that information to simplify and rewrite its stop time model to improve time forecasting and route productivity. Analytics technology is another area where the improvement in sophistication, ease-of-use and cost has also improved dramatically in the last several years to make it more widely adopted and part of the digital twin strategy.

All of the elements to implement a digital twin strategy exist in today’s integrated routing, mobile and telematics solutions. Now we just need to think differently about how to apply digital twin thinking to our approach to managing our fleets. How is your fleet digital twin progressing? Let me know.

Photo of Chris Jones

As Executive Vice President, Marketing and Services, Chris Jones is primarily responsible for Descartes’ marketing and professional services organizations. With over 30 years of experience in the supply chain market, Chris has held a variety of senior management positions including Senior Vice President at The Aberdeen Group’s Value Chain Research practice, Executive Vice President of Marketing and Corporate Development for SynQuest, Vice President and Research Director for Enterprise Resource Planning Solutions at The Gartner Group, and Associate Director Operations & Technology at Kraft General Foods.

 

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