Magaya Corporation, the leading freight management platform for logistics service providers, has officially announced a range of product innovations and feature enhancements, set to be delivered across its Digital Freight Platform.
According to certain reports, these updates arrive on the scene bearing an ability to help freight forwarders, customs brokers, warehouse operators, and other logistics service providers in the context of accessing smarter automation, enhanced compliance tools, and greater end-to-end visibility.
Talk about the given upgrade on a slightly deeper level, we begin from the step up introduced across Magaya Supply Chain. Here, the update in question will take up the shape and form of configurable payment terms, improved task templates, and contract lifecycle management (integrated rate sheets), each component coming in handy to reduce manual work, improve accuracy, as well as enhance transparency for managers and customers alike.
Complementing that would be an assortment of updates and clearer shipment alerts, designed to make daily operations smoother and communication more precise.
Next up, the users of Magaya Rate Management can also expect substantial upgrades moving forward. You see, Magaya Rate Management now delivers faster, more flexible rate searches with asynchronous processing, as well as the ability to download carrier contracts directly from the platform. We also have expanded APIs coming into play for pricing and free time, each one capable of simplifying integrations and improving visibility so to help logistics teams make quicker, more confident pricing decisions.
Another set of updates arrives within the Magaya Customs Compliance solution, which can now leverage streamlined tariff filings, expanded API coverage for PGA data, and larger, more complex entry types following the phase-out of the de minimis exemption. When leveraged in conjunction, these upgrades will make it possible for brokers to maintain compliance and efficiency even as regulations grow more demanding.
Magaya also took this opportunity to scale up the operations of its Magaya Flow WMS, with the avenue now having uninterrupted access to automatic line splitting, improved session handling, and synchronization across multiple devices boost productivity across teams within a faster, more scalable mobile experience.
Hold on, we still have a couple of bits left to unpack, considering we haven’t yet touched upon the recently introduced Magaya Extensions, each geared towards the Magaya ecosystem across booking, compliance, and visibility. The Air eBooking & Tracking extension will basically allow for direct air bookings and live rates via CargoAi, Canada eManifest, whereas on the other hand, the company’s ICS2 should tread up a long distance to simplify regulatory filings.
Not just that, new intermodal tracking in Container Tracking also brings rail events into view for complete shipment transparency.
Rounding up highlights would be an assortment of technology partnerships. For instance, Magaya recently linked up with Lune for carbon emissions data to enable sustainability tracking within logistics workflows, and extended support for FreightSnap dimensioners, thus giving customers more flexibility when it comes to capturing accurate shipment measurements directly within Magaya software.
Founded in 2001, Magaya’s rise up the ranks stems from optimizing the entire origin-to-destination supply chain through flexible, interoperable, and modular cloud-based software. The company’s excellence in what it does can also be understood once you consider it is trusted, at the moment, by more than 2,300 customers in well over 100 countries.
“At Magaya, innovation doesn’t happen in isolation, it’s the result of deep collaboration with our customers,” said Kristjan Lillemets, Chief Product Officer at Magaya. “Each enhancement we deliver is driven by real-world feedback and focused on solving the challenges logistics professionals face every day. Our goal is to give our users more control, more visibility, and more time to focus on what matters most, their customers.”