A AI knowledge base for a logistics and transport business tackles one specific leak: your operational knowledge, how to price a lane, which subcontractor to call for a region, how a difficult delivery site really works, live in a couple of senior heads and a mess of old jobs. When those people are busy, quoting and allocation slow to their pace. When they leave, the knowledge leaves too. Bamco builds it around the tools you already run, so it fits your operation rather than forcing you to change how you work.
Information current as at 4 July 2026
Your operational knowledge, how to price a lane, which subcontractor to call for a region, how a difficult delivery site really works, live in a couple of senior heads and a mess of old jobs. When those people are busy, quoting and allocation slow to their pace. When they leave, the knowledge leaves too.
This is not a generic problem with a generic tool bolted on. It is a specific leak in a logistics and transport business, and the system is built to close it. You can see the full picture of where a logistics and transport business leaks margin on the logistics and transport industry page.
A knowledge base that turns your operational and pricing history into something the whole team can question: past quotes, real lane rates, subcontractor and carrier details, delivery site notes, standard operating procedures and the lessons from difficult jobs, parsed, indexed and searchable in plain language. It can serve answers into a Slack or Teams channel where your team already works, with your despatch records and document stores feeding it, and it cites the source job or document behind every answer.
Bring us the idea you already have, or book an audit and we map where the money is leaking. Either way, you deal directly with the senior team that designs and builds it.
Week one. From week one, a new coordinator can find what a comparable lane was quoted at and which carrier ran it, without waiting for the one person who remembers, so quoting and allocation stop bottlenecking on a single desk.
Month three. By month three the knowledge base has become the place your operational knowledge lives, so it no longer walks out the door when someone does, and the consistency and speed of your quoting and allocation stops depending on who happens to be free that week.
Engagements typically start around $50k and are scoped after a systems audit, priced as a fraction of what a legacy build of the same capability would have quoted. You get a fixed-scope proposal with a real number before anything is built, and you own what we build. The point is not the price. It is that a well-built AI knowledge base for a logistics and transport business is meant to pay for itself in multiples, by plugging a leak that is costing you every week it stays open.
Whether you can name exactly what you want built, or you just know something is leaking, the next step is the same conversation.