{"@context":"https://schema.org","@type":"DefinedTerm","name":"Horizontal Collaboration","description":"Freight forwarders, carriers, and warehouse operators turn to horizontal collaboration when they want to pool capacity, routes, or operational data with peers at the same supply chain level – without merging or surrendering corporate independence. Competing regional hauliers consolidating truck runs to cut empty miles, or rival warehousing firms jointly filling cold-store space during seasonal peaks, are textbook examples. The structural difference from vertical integration is clear: all parties","inDefinedTermSet":{"@type":"DefinedTermSet","name":"Frachtportal Logistics Glossary","url":"https://www.freight-academy.com/en/glossary"},"url":"https://www.freight-academy.com/en/glossary/horizontal-collaboration","inLanguage":"en","dateModified":"2026-06-24T05:35:58.647951","citation":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/business-management/horizontal-collaboration","markdownMirror":"https://www.freight-academy.com/api/md/glossary/en/horizontal-collaboration","provider":{"@type":"Organization","name":"Frachtportal","url":"https://www.freight-academy.com"},"quickSummary":"Horizontal Collaboration · Freight forwarders, carriers, and warehouse operators turn to horizontal collaboration when they want to pool capacity, routes, or operational data with peers at the same supply chain level – without merging or surrendering corporate independence. · Quelle: https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/business-management/horizontal-collaboration"}