HCBFFA: Building the Next Generation Workforce in Customs Brokerage & Freight Forwarding: Compliance, Risk, and Operational Continuity
Learning Objectives
Participants will be able to:
Identify compliance risks associated with inexperienced customs brokerage staff
Describe key competency areas required for entry-level brokerage and forwarding roles
Apply training and onboarding strategies that reduce regulatory risk
Evaluate workforce development as part of a broker’s compliance responsibility
Why this topic matters for licensed brokers:
Aging workforce in brokerage
Increasing regulatory complexity from U.S. Customs and Border Protection
Risk of knowledge gaps impacting compliance
Industry Reality: Workforce Gap Meets Compliance Risk
Objective: Tie hiring directly to brokerage responsibility
Demographic trends in brokerage & forwarding
Where errors occur with inexperienced staff:
HTS misclassification
Entry filing errors
PGA (Partner Government Agency) mistakes
Real compliance consequences:
Fines, delays, audits
Houston-specific context:
Port volume, energy sector imports/exports
Cross-border Mexico trade complexity
Training the Next Generation: What Young Talent Must Know
Objective: Show competency development
Core knowledge areas:
Classification (HTS)
Valuation & duty calculation
Entry types and documentation
Freight forwarding integration:
Air/ocean documentation (B/L, AWB)
Role of intermediaries aligned with International Federation of Freight Forwarders Associations standards
Common training gaps in early-career hires
Structuring onboarding to reduce compliance risk
Practical Strategies for Hiring & Retaining Young Professionals
Objective: Keep it practical but tied to operations
Where to find talent:
Universities, supply chain programs, internships
What attracts younger workforce:
Career progression
Tech-enabled roles
Bridging generational gaps:
Mentorship between licensed brokers and new hires
Embedding compliance culture early: