Meet Echo — Cargo Intelligence, Simplified

For years, data loggers have promised visibility. They’ve recorded numbers, produced graphs, and left exporters to figure out what those numbers meant — often after the cargo had already arrived.

Echo changes that.

Echo is Suply’s new way of capturing a shipment’s true story — the first Bluetooth-based cargo tracker built to merge sensor data with vessel intelligence and AI interpretation.

Small device, big story

Echo is no bigger than a stick of gum, yet it connects an entire voyage.
Attach it to your cargo, upload the bill of lading, and you’re done. It quietly records temperature, humidity, and motion throughout the journey.

When the container arrives, anyone can scan Echo with a phone — no app, no login. Within seconds, the full record uploads and merges with live vessel data. The result isn’t a chart of numbers — it’s a timeline that tells you exactly what happened, where, and why.

Designed for the real world

Echo is built for the exporters who can’t wait for expensive real-time devices — and for the receivers who need quick answers, not complex tools.

  • No lithium, no DG: safe to ship anywhere.

  • Bluetooth on demand: only connects when needed.

  • Affordable enough for every container: deploy at scale without compromise.

  • Context built in: merges with vessel movements, port events, and weather.

Beyond visibility

Echo does what traditional loggers never could — it understands context. Suply’s AI analyses each journey, distinguishing normal reefer cycles from real temperature breaches, and identifying when an issue was caused by a delay, a port dwell, or poor airflow.

The outcome: faster claims, fewer disputes, and proof that’s clear to everyone involved.

A new standard for exporters

Echo makes monitoring effortless. No dashboards to configure, no reports to decipher — just truth, instantly available when the shipment lands.

Place Echo with your cargo.
We’ll handle the rest.

Echo by Suply. The simplest way to understand your shipment.

Next
Next

Beyond the Thermograph: Why Context is the New Currency in Fresh Produce Logistics