WHICH ONE ARE YOU?
SOMEONE ON YOUR TEAM HAS BEEN WAITING FOR THIS
We know how these decisions get made. Someone’s been watching the bottleneck for months. Someone else is the one who has to explain the delays. And somebody up the chain is asking why the numbers aren’t moving. Here’s where you fit in.
OPTION 1: Build a 3-bay loading dock addition to your existing facility.
Cost: up to $1M. Timeline (including permits and inspections): 6 to 12 months.
OPTION 2: Install a 3-bay portable cross-docking Platform.
Cost: up to $200K. Timeline (no permits, no inspections): 4 to 8 weeks, start to launch.
Same dock capacity. One-fifth the cost. A fraction of the time.
That $200K and 4-to-8-week timeline doesn’t happen by accident. It happens because someone has already mapped the site, engaged the right contractors, and knows the exact sequence of design, build, and installation.
Start the conversation…
You know before anyone else when a transfer point doesn’t work. Wrong height, bad approach, no room to maneuver. That knowledge has value, and the people making the infrastructure decisions above you need to hear it.
A cross-docking Platform is built to the right height, with the right approach, and enough bay positions to keep you moving. You back in, you load out, and you’re gone. That’s the whole idea.
You may not be the one who makes this call. But you’re the one who knows it needs to be made. Start that conversation — with your dispatcher, your fleet manager, or the operation you’re delivering to. Or fill out the form below and we’ll have it for you.
Start the conversation…
You’re responsible for what happens on this property, and you know better than anyone what the current setup can’t handle.
You don’t touch the building. A modular cross-docking Platform goes in next to it, adds bay positions, and handles the overflow. No permits. No structural modifications. No disruption to what’s already running.
Start the conversation…
A purpose-built cross-docking Platform replaces the improvised transfer point with something that actually works: dedicated bay positions, the right height, the right approach, inbound and outbound moving on schedule.
The delays don’t disappear on their own. But the cause of them does.
Start the conversation…
I’ve got customers I can’t reach and competitors who are getting there first. What’s the play?
Your territory is only as strong as your ability to serve it.
A cross-docking Platform positioned in your territory turns markets that weren’t serviceable into accounts you can now serve. Everybody wins, except for your competition that’s still routing through a warehouse three counties away. You’re not.
Built on Decades of Material Handling Experience
WHAT THIS IS
We design, fabricate, and install custom modular cross-docking infrastructure. We engineer Platforms to your site conditions, fabricate to your specifications, and manage installation from first drawing to final walkthrough.
Our clients have operations where the gap between inbound and outbound freight is a measurable cost: regional distribution centers, manufacturing facilities, 3PL operations, and any site where dock capacity is the constraint. If throughput is your governing variable, the Platform is worth a serious look.
HOW WE WORK

Every engagement starts with your site and your numbers: dock bay requirements, freight volume, site dimensions, timeline, and enclosure needs.
From there, the process runs in three defined phases.
The Design. We survey the site, develop the configuration, and engineer the Platform to your load and layout requirements.
The Build. The Platform is fabricated to spec and inspected before it leaves the shop.
The Installation. Our team manages on-site assembly and brings the Platform into service.
We manage and coordinate each phase end to end, with specialized crews handling fabrication and on-site installation.
One point of contact. One accountable party.
OUR FOUNDER

Jeff Mann has spent more than 30 years building businesses by finding what others were walking past.
As founder and president of The Yard Ramp Guy, Mann built a leading national yard ramp sales and rental operation by doing something his competitors weren’t: saying yes to the inquiries that were getting turned away. Where other sales reps heard “yard ramp rental” and moved on, Mann heard an opportunity. That pattern — identifying the gap and building into it — has defined his career.
His professional background spans intercollegiate athletics, ad specialties, theatre, heating and cooling, desktop publishing, and material handling. His clientele have ranged from Fortune 100 companies to sole proprietors, from government agencies to consumer businesses. He attributes his success less to strategy than to what he calls “desperation and survival.” Which is arguably one of the more honest origin stories in material handling.
Now in what he describes as the fourth quarter of his professional life, Mann has turned his attention to a gap he’s seen throughout his years in material handling: operations that need serious dock infrastructure, on a timeline that permanent construction cannot match. A YRG Modular Cross-Docking Platforms is the answer to that gap.
