Shipowners who have never handed vessels to third-party managers often share the same instinctive hesitation: loss of control. For many, the fleet is not just an asset base but the core of their business identity, reputation, and in some cases, family legacy. The idea of delegating day-to-day operations can feel like stepping away from the bridge.
Yet within the global shipmanagement industry, a consistent message has emerged. The strongest argument is not about replacing ownership control, but about absorbing operational complexity.
“Do not outsource control; outsource complexity,” explains Ajay Chaudhry, co-CEO of shipmanagement at Synergy Marine Group. “A good shipmanager strengthens the owner’s authority by bringing systems, expertise, governance, crew capability, data discipline, flexibility and risk management that are difficult to replicate in-house.”
That distinction is becoming increasingly important as shipping evolves. The industry today is far more complex than it was two decades ago, with decarbonisation regulations multiplying, cybersecurity risks expanding, crewing shortages intensifying, and digital reporting obligations becoming continuous. Compliance alone has become a full-scale operational function.
For smaller and mid-sized owners in particular, maintaining that infrastructure internally is becoming harder to justify economically.
Manish Singh of Maris Investments frames the issue around cost visibility and strategic focus. “Do you know what your in-house management really costs when you add up management attention, compliance overhead, IT spend and the capital tied up in crewing and technical infrastructure?” he asks. “Many owners who have never put numbers to it are surprised.”
He adds a second, more fundamental question: “What is your actual edge? Is it owning and operating vessels, or is it trading, commodity flows, or financial structuring?”
That shift in mindset is reinforced by scale. Large third-party managers operate hundreds or even thousands of vessels, allowing them to build procurement power, global recruitment networks, digital systems and operational expertise that are difficult to replicate internally at smaller scale.
Sebastian von Hardenberg, CEO of Bernhard Schulte Shipmanagement and president of InterManager, summarises the proposition: “Third-party management gives you expertise at scale.” He highlights procurement savings, regulatory compliance, digital tools, fuel transition support and operational consistency. “We help you increase vessel availability, reduce opex, manage complexity, reduce risk, and protect asset value while you focus on your commercial strategy.”
Procurement advantages alone can be significant, with large managers negotiating fleet-wide agreements for bunkers, insurance, spares, training and consumables at levels individual owners often cannot access.
However, industry voices stress that cost is only part of the equation. People and talent are increasingly decisive factors.
“Most owners who self-manage do so for control. That is understandable,” says Massimo De Vincenzo, managing director of SeaQuest Shipmanagement. “But running a full shipmanagement operation today – with all the regulatory, technical, and sustainability demands that entails – requires resources and specialised expertise that most in-house teams cannot easily match.”
He also points to a growing structural shift in maritime labour markets. “The best operational talent – superintendents, technical managers, crewing specialists – tends to gravitate toward dedicated management companies, where they can build a proper career and work across a varied fleet.”
That trend is expected to intensify as shipping undergoes its most complex technological transition yet. Alternative fuels such as LNG, methanol, ammonia and hydrogen are reshaping technical and safety requirements, while digitalisation is introducing new demands in data analysis, cybersecurity and emissions monitoring.
Niraj Nanda, chief commercial officer at Anglo-Eastern, says third-party managers are structurally built for this environment. “Third-party shipmanagement is about giving owners peace of mind without compromising strategic control,” he says. “A professional manager brings established processes, experienced teams and regulatory expertise with the scale and capability to meet an ever-evolving operating environment.”
He adds that this translates into resilience for owners, with compliance, operational complexity and commercial pressures handled by specialised teams focused solely on vessel performance.
Still, concerns remain among owners who believe operational care cannot be fully replicated externally.
Tim Ponath, CEO of NSB Group, argues that this perception is outdated. “We shouldn’t feel like an external vendor,” he says. “We operate as a seamless extension of your company, another high-performing department that you have full access to 24/7.”
This integrated model has become central to modern shipmanagement offerings, expanding beyond traditional technical management into procurement, crewing, training, digital optimisation and welfare services.
Flexibility is another key driver. In volatile freight markets, maintaining large in-house structures can become costly during downturns, while outsourced models allow scaling up or down depending on market conditions.
Kuba Szymanski, secretary-general of InterManager, uses a simple analogy: “Who fixes your car – you, or a professional garage?” he asks. “If you trust professionals with your car, why would you not trust professionals with your ships?”
However, not all voices advocate outsourcing as a universal solution.
Vinay Gupta, managing director of Union Marine Management Services, cautions against oversimplification. “There is no pitch,” he says. “Never sell ice to Eskimos.” For him, third-party management only becomes relevant when inefficiencies are clearly recognised by owners themselves. “A good manager doesn’t replace ownership – he strengthens it.”
Ultimately, the industry’s evolving elevator pitch is no longer about cost savings alone. It is about whether shipowners can realistically build and sustain the industrial-scale systems, specialist talent pools, digital infrastructure and regulatory capability required by modern shipping.
For some, the answer remains yes. For a growing number, it is increasingly no.





















