03/05/2026
How Small Automation Wins Add Up in Barge Operations
Some of the most impactful process improvements don’t look impressive at first glance.
In barge operations, a dispatcher might read dozens of emails a day, traffic reports, voyage updates, statements of fact, then manually enter that information into their system. Each task is small but critical to successful operations. Together, they consume hours and introduce errors.
At OpenTug, we treat those small pains like big problems. That philosophy led to BargeOS Autopilot, which automatically extracts operational data from emails and updates voyages without manual entry.
What started as a scrappy solution to a narrow problem became one of our most valuable workflows. Customers got hours back each day, errors dropped, and focus shifted from data entry to decision-making.
The same idea applies on the financial side of operations. Invoices, statements, and supporting documents still arrive through email and PDFs, often requiring teams to manually pull details into spreadsheets before validating charges against contracts and voyage activity.
We’re applying the same automation mindset there too by ingesting invoices directly into BargeOS and reconciling them against the underlying voyage events and contract terms. Instead of re-calculating freight and demurrage by hand months later, teams can see how invoices line up with the operational data that generated them.
This approach shows up across the product. We’re constantly looking for repetitive, high-frequency tasks that drain attention and replacing them with automation that works quietly in the background.
In complex operations, progress isn’t always flashy. Sometimes it’s just removing friction, one small win at a time, until the entire day feels lighter.
Read how our engineer team approaches tasks like these here: https://na2.hubs.ly/H044-Rg0