Dalton, GA
Sign InEvents
DALTON BUSINESS
Magazine
Our Top 5
DOW
S&P
NASDAQ
Real EstateFinanceTechnologyHealthcareLogisticsStartupsEnergyRetail
● Breaking
Supreme Court Upholds Birthright Citizenship, Rejects Trump OrderPeachtree Road Race Still Open for Late RegistrationsSupreme Court Affirms State Transgender Athlete BansRapid Response Saves Life: Why Emergency Preparedness Matters for Georgia BusinessesWater Safety Concerns Near Dalton Region After Teen DrowningSupreme Court Upholds Birthright Citizenship, Rejects Trump OrderPeachtree Road Race Still Open for Late RegistrationsSupreme Court Affirms State Transgender Athlete BansRapid Response Saves Life: Why Emergency Preparedness Matters for Georgia BusinessesWater Safety Concerns Near Dalton Region After Teen Drowning
Technology
Technology

Highway Positions Itself as Infrastructure Platform for Freight Networks

A freight technology startup aims to simplify fragmented processes in trucking through data connectivity solutions.

Highway Positions Itself as Infrastructure Platform for Freight Networks

Photo via FreightWaves

The freight industry is undergoing a fundamental shift toward digitalization, drawing parallels to the fintech revolution of the previous decade. According to FreightWaves, Highway is positioning itself as a connective infrastructure platform designed to streamline the complex relationships between carriers, shippers, and logistics operators. The startup's approach mirrors how Plaid disrupted financial services by creating seamless data integration where manual processes once dominated.

Chief Commercial Officer Michael [citation continues from source] emphasizes that the fragmented nature of trucking operations—where trust and paperwork handshakes have long substituted for standardized digital workflows—represents a significant opportunity for transformation. By building the foundational technology layer that enables real-time visibility and transaction processing across freight networks, Highway aims to reduce inefficiencies and mitigate operational risks inherent in the current system.

The parallels between this freight transformation and earlier fintech disruption highlight a broader trend in which historically analog industries are ripe for technological modernization. As cargo theft and supply chain vulnerabilities continue to plague the sector, solutions that provide transparency and direct integration between stakeholders could reshape how the trucking industry operates at scale.

freight technologysupply chaindigital infrastructuretrucking innovationlogistics
Related Coverage