Auto-Callout: Automatic Dispatch
Auto-Callout offers your unassigned
Tours to carriers automatically the moment they are created, so a plan can start finding its carrier without anyone lifting a finger.
Overview
Most tours need a carrier before they can run. You can always assign one by hand, but when the same routine repeats every day that quickly becomes busywork. Auto-Callout automates the first step of dispatch: as soon as a Tour is created, Orbit offers it to suitable carriers on your behalf. When a carrier takes the offer, the tour is assigned to them — you simply see the result.
Key highlights
Unassigned tours are offered to carriers automatically, without manual dispatching.
Two modes: Simple (a quick instant offer to qualified carriers) and Sequence (a multi-step workflow you design).
Offers can be fixed-price instant offers or competitive auctions.
A won offer assigns the carrier to the tour for you — you never edit the tour's carrier directly.
It is optional and off until you switch it on, so your existing way of working is never disturbed.
How Auto-Callout works
When Auto-Callout is switched on, every newly created Tour is picked up automatically and offered to carriers. What "offered" means depends on the mode you choose.
Simple mode
Simple mode sends a straightforward instant offer to the carriers that qualify for the tour. Orbit only offers the work to carriers whose vehicles and region actually match the tour — for example a carrier with a vehicle large enough for the load, operating in the right region, and carrying any required capabilities. This keeps offers relevant and avoids sending work to carriers who could not take it.
Sequence mode
Sequence mode runs a Sequence — a workflow you design in advance for more involved dispatching. A Sequence can select a pool of carriers, rank them, and then send offers in waves over time (for instance: offer to your top-ranked carriers first, wait, then widen to the next group if no one accepts). Sequence mode is the right choice when a single blanket offer is too blunt and you want control over who is offered the work, in what order, and at what price. You build and manage sequences separately, then simply point Auto-Callout at the one you want it to run.
Instant offers and auctions
Whether Auto-Callout offers work through Simple or Sequence mode, each offer takes one of two shapes:
Instant offer — a fixed price on a take-it-or-leave-it basis. The first carrier to accept wins the tour, and it is assigned to them immediately.
Auction — carriers compete on price by placing bids. An auction does not resolve on the first bid; bids accumulate until the auction closes (either you close it on the winning bid, or a deadline does), and the winning carrier is then assigned the tour.
Carriers see and respond to these offers on the carrier side of the platform, in the Marketplace within Orbit Connect. For the full picture of how offers appear to carriers and how their status changes, see the Marketplace article.
How a won offer assigns the tour
You do not set a tour's carrier by hand when Auto-Callout is running. Assignment happens as the outcome of an offer: when a carrier accepts an instant offer, or wins an auction, that offer is marked as won and the tour moves from unassigned to assigned to that carrier automatically. Until an offer is won, the tour stays unassigned while its offers are live — a tour that is unassigned but already has an offer out is mid-dispatch, not overlooked. To read that state, see the Tours article.
Switching it on and configuring it
Auto-Callout is configured by an operator in Orbit MissionControl.
Go to Settings → Marketplace → General and open the Auto-Callout panel.
Switch Auto-Callout on.
Choose a Mode: Simple for a quick instant offer to qualified carriers, or Sequence for a designed workflow.
If you choose Sequence mode, select the active
Sequenceyou want Auto-Callout to run.
Sequences themselves are built and activated under Settings → Marketplace → Sequences. A sequence must be active before Auto-Callout can use it — if the selected sequence is inactive, Auto-Callout pauses until you either activate a sequence or switch back to Simple mode.
Example
Amara runs dispatch for a distribution operator in Lyon. Every morning her team plans dozens of regional tours, and offering each one to carriers by hand was eating the first hour of the day. She opens Settings → Marketplace → General, switches on Auto-Callout, and leaves it in Simple mode so that each new tour goes straight to carriers with a suitable vehicle in the right region.
A few weeks later she wants finer control over her premium routes. She builds a Sequence that offers those tours to her three preferred carriers first as an instant offer, waits thirty minutes, and then opens an auction to the wider pool if none of them accepts. She switches Auto-Callout to Sequence mode and selects that sequence. From then on, premium tours dispatch themselves in waves, and Amara only steps in to review the carrier that won.
FAQ
Do I lose the ability to assign carriers myself? No. Auto-Callout automates the first offer, but you can still assign a carrier directly or send your own offer when you need to. Avoid firing a manual offer on a tour a sequence is already working, though, or you will duplicate the effort.
What is the difference between Simple and Sequence mode? Simple mode sends one instant offer to all qualified carriers at once. Sequence mode runs a workflow you designed — selecting, ranking, and offering to carriers in stages over time, using instant offers and/or auctions.
Why is a tour still unassigned after Auto-Callout ran? Because no carrier has taken the offer yet. The tour stays unassigned while its offers are live or an auction is still open, or while a sequence waits between waves. It becomes assigned the moment an offer is won.
Does every tenant use Auto-Callout? No. It is optional and off until switched on. Many operators dispatch entirely by direct assignment or by sending offers manually, and that is perfectly valid.