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Optimize Delivery with Performance Tracking

Performance tracking gives delivery teams the clarity to spot what’s breaking, understand why, and take the next best action to protect on-time performance, cost, and customer experience.

Industry
January 28, 2026
5 minutes
Burq blog Optimize Delivery with Performance Tracking

Delivery performance is only “hard to improve” when it’s hard to see.

Most delivery teams aren’t short on effort; they’re short on clarity. Late orders get blamed on traffic. Costs creep up “somewhere.” Support volume rises without a clear root cause. Without consistent performance tracking, teams end up reacting to symptoms instead of fixing patterns.

Performance tracking creates a baseline and a shared operating language. It helps teams spot risk earlier, tighten execution, and make changes that actually move the numbers without turning the operation into a spreadsheet exercise. Whether you’re running five drivers or managing a network across multiple providers, the goal is the same: understand what’s happening, why it’s happening, and what to do next.

Identifying key delivery performance indicators

Delivery KPIs are the signals that tell you whether the operation is doing what it’s supposed to do: hit commitments, control cost, and keep customers informed. The best KPIs aren’t “nice to have.” They map directly to service levels and customer experience.

A few indicators worth tracking:

  • On-time delivery rate: How often deliveries hit the promised window
  • Delivery success rate: Percent completed without cancellations, failed handoffs, or reattempts
  • Exception rate: How often orders require reroutes, support intervention, or refunds
  • Time to resolve issues: How quickly stalled pickups, failed drops, or missing POD get handled
  • Cost per delivery: True cost across provider fees, driver time, and operational overhead
  • Time per stop / dwell time: Where routes slow down (handoffs, gate codes, loading, signatures)

Choose KPIs based on what you’re trying to protect. If reliability is the priority, focus on on-time rate, exception rate, and resolution speed. If margin is the priority, track cost per delivery, distance per delivery, and dwell time. Start with a small set you can review consistently, then expand once the team is in rhythm.

One important note: single metrics can lie. Drivers can “hit on-time” while customers still feel uninformed. Pair timing data with experience indicators (like customer contact volume or satisfaction feedback) so you can see the full story.

Tools and technologies for tracking performance

The tool matters less than the outcome: can your team see performance clearly, in real time, and act on it without jumping between systems?

Most teams benefit from a platform that consolidates:

  • Live order visibility (status, ETA movement, exceptions)
  • Provider and driver performance tracking
  • Automated alerts when deliveries go off-plan
  • Reporting that ties performance back to cost and customer experience

When evaluating tools, look for practical fit, not a long feature list. A strong system should answer basic questions fast:

  • Are deliveries on track right now?
  • Where do delays start: pickup, in-transit, or drop-off?
  • Which routes, zones, stores, or providers create the most exceptions?
  • What changes actually improved performance week over week?

A few criteria that typically matter most:

  • Setup + adoption: How quickly the team can use it day to day
  • Integrations: Ability to connect to POS, OMS, ecommerce, and support tools
  • Actionability: Alerts and workflows, not just dashboards
  • Scalability: Works for five drivers today and a multi-provider network tomorrow
  • Support: Responsive help and ongoing product improvements

Setting up a tracking process that actually sticks

Tools don’t create accountability, routines do. The simplest tracking process is usually the one that survives busy weeks.

A workable approach:

  1. Pick 2–3 starter KPIs (on-time rate, success rate, exception rate)
  2. Assign ownership (who pulls data, who reviews it, who drives follow-up)
  3. Set a cadence (daily exception recap + weekly performance review is a common combo)
  4. Make it visible (dashboards that dispatchers and operators can understand at a glance)
  5. Create a “next action” rule (every review ends with a specific change to test)

If route efficiency is a goal and nothing improves, don’t just stare at the chart. Use the data to pick one hypothesis to validate: Are delays tied to a store? A time window? A provider? A specific handoff step like loading or signatures? Pair metrics with a quick operational check (ride-along, store walkthrough, driver feedback) to turn numbers into fixes.

Using performance data to improve operations

Data only becomes useful when it changes decisions.

Once performance tracking is in place, look for repeatable patterns:

  • Consistent delays in a specific zone or during a specific hour
  • High exception rates tied to certain pickup locations or delivery types
  • Provider performance that looks fine overall but breaks under certain conditions
  • Drivers with strong volume but high support touchpoints (a hidden cost)

Then act with small, controlled changes:

  • Adjust routing and batching when delays cluster around traffic or handoff timing
  • Update delivery windows if a time slot is consistently unrealistic
  • Tighten operational policies (POD requirements, customer contact flows, reattempt rules)
  • Coach with context (support drivers with targeted training, not blanket pressure)
  • Reward wins (use the data to recognize reliability and great execution)

Example: if deliveries after 6 p.m. consistently miss the window, that’s rarely “just traffic.” It’s usually a combination of longer routes, tighter handoffs, and less buffer. Moving that batch earlier, changing provider mix, or adjusting batching rules can lift on-time performance without adding headcount.

Performance tracking that keeps the operation in rhythm

Performance tracking isn’t a one-time setup. As volume grows, provider mix changes, and customer expectations tighten, the definition of “good” changes too. Teams that build a steady cadence, monitor, review, and adjust avoid big surprises and improve reliability over time.

The goal isn’t perfection. It’s control: fewer blind spots, faster response when things drift, and clearer decisions that protect on-time performance, margin, and customer experience.

For teams that want to move faster without adding manual work, performance tracking is the starting point, and real-time signals are what keep delivery running in rhythm. Burq helps teams turn delivery data into action with live visibility, exception detection, and automated workflows that keep commitments on track.

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