Back to Press Releases

INTTRA to Lead Japanese International Freight Forwarders Association Seminar on The Value of E-commerce for the Ocean Shipping Industry

Parsippany, NJ, January 24, 2013 — INTTRA, the world’s largest, most active, multi-carrier e-commerce network for ocean freight, invites members of the Japanese International Freight Forwarders Association (JIFFA) to attend the session, “The Value of E-commerce for the Ocean Shipping Industry”, which will take place on Tuesday January 29, at 13:30 in Osaka and Wednesday January 30, at 13:30 in Tokyo.

INTTRA will lead an interactive session on the business imperative of developing an e-commerce business strategy to generate immediate benefits and deliver sustained value.  Session participants will learn how e-commerce can improve productivity by eliminating manual processes and standardizing processes across providers; enhance service levels by improving the accuracy and timeliness of information exchanged with shipping partners; and enable collaboration on an e-commerce platform to organize all business in a single place.  

What: Japanese International Freight Forwarders Association Conference
When: January 29 and January 30
Where: AP Convention Center, Osaka and JIFFA Office - Across Shinkawa Building, Tokyo, Japan

For further details regarding this conference, visit the Japanese International Freight Forwarders Association here.

About INTTRA
INTTRA is the world’s largest, multi-carrier e-commerce network for the ocean shipping industry. INTTRA professionals work with 40 leading carriers and NVOCCs, 109 software alliance partners, as well as their customers, to streamline and standardize their shipping processes worldwide through a network of more than 200,000 shipping professionals. Over 525,000 container orders are initiated on the INTTRA platform each week, representing more than 18 percent of global ocean container trade.

For further information, contact Win Ross, Marketing Manager, +1.973.917.1509, media@inttra.com.

TRUSTe online privacy certification