Best default for mixed delivery and service operations with moderate exception volume.
Fleet Deck
Sunday 15 March 2026, week 11. Multi-segment route design with detailed planning depth where it matters.
Balance deliveries, service time and return flow in one planner.
Keep the same navigation for every customer, but let the route mode control which KPIs, constraints and warnings are brought forward. This makes the platform easier to learn without flattening the domain detail.
Primary planning focus
Why this shell works
Cross-segment health
Actionable exceptions
Shift two chilled drops into Van 07 or open a late wave after 10:30.
22 stops compete for 6 feasible slots in the central Copenhagen zone.
32 minutes slack can absorb traffic or a same-day insertion.
Spatial overview
Clustered map plus route layers should always be visible. This carries over the strongest element from the current customer screen, but upgrades it from static plotting to decision support.
Planner timeline
The right-hand panel combines execution status, scenario feedback and dispatch-level change points.
931 tasks validated. 12 addresses flagged as close duplicates and grouped into micro-clusters.
Overlapping windows create a conflict burst. System recommends resequencing Route 04 and opening vehicle reserve.
Reserve stays above threshold, which keeps room for acute jobs or return pickups later in the day.
Final lab or medical pickups surface here with exact countdown and expected depot arrival.
Capacity utilization
Show actual capacity pressure by vehicle, not only route length. Volume, weight and temperature zones should be visible when relevant.
Time-window realism
Let planners see where promised windows become mathematically optimistic before the route is released.
Route progression
For outbound flows, the load curve should decline smoothly. For collection, it should rise. For two-way, planners need to see both crossing curves.
Human continuity
When people are the bottleneck, task duration, travel time and repeat-customer continuity must appear as first-class planning objects.
Mixed resource board
This view handles both vehicle-heavy logistics and people-heavy service organizations. The table stays generic, while the badges and health columns adapt to the selected mode.
Scenario shelf
Keep saved routes, but make them easier to compare. This takes the existing “saved route” concept and turns it into a scenario shelf with operational trade-off summaries.
Protects early time windows at the cost of more empty kilometers and less afternoon slack.
Retains employee-customer matching and lowers context switching for field-service teams.
Design principle: generic navigation, specialized insight. The platform should not ask users to choose a different product for each segment. It should let them operate in one environment, then progressively reveal the constraints that matter for their business model.