verb
- to place a larger proportion of costs, work, or resources toward the end of a project or time period rather than at the beginning
- to load cargo or freight into the rear or back section of a vehicle or container
Usage: common in business, project management, and finance
Usage: logistics and transportation
Examples
- The company decided to backload the project expenses into the final quarter.
- We backloaded the truck with the heaviest boxes at the rear.
- The contract backloads most of the payments until the second year.
- They backloaded the schedule so that testing would occur near the deadline.
- The airline backloads cargo to balance the aircraft's weight distribution.
- Backloading the budget meant less spending early on but higher costs later.