Some good companies to look at:
Van:
Schneider - good training, military friendly. It's who I drove for before.
Star Transportation (Nashville, not Illinois); Heard mostly good stuff about them. 32 CPM to start.
Flatbed:
Maverick
TMC
Fraley & Schilling
Of course there are others, that is just off the top of my head.
Obtaining A Job - My Personal Situation
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Shinedown1092, May 4, 2014.
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Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
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Quit saying military friendly, It's embarrassing and practically every company is military friendly in 2014, It's the PC thing to do lol.
Seriously, no one gives a crap if you served. It's like a cop asking for free doughnuts in a crowded dunkin dounts. Openly stating want a job / something in exchange like you are owed something
ETA: listed bottom feeders, not smoking you, but holy heck bottom feeders.Last edited: May 5, 2014
Dinomite Thanks this. -
Dude, what is your problem? I guess that is why I served (actually, wearing a uniform as I type this) so you can act like that. You have your freedom and this is what you choose to do with it?
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OP, sounds like your stressin on nothin.. keep it simple,
get your class / cdl in, apply where you'd like, pick one, train and off you goShinedown1092 and GearWarrant Thank this. -
Dinomite Thanks this.
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Shaggy Thanks this.
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In the end, your attitude blowsShaggy Thanks this. -
@fastlanedenny I'm already applied to a private tech school to get my CDL. We're currently working on sorting my GI Bill out. Schneider has recognized them as reputable, and they're almost down the street from each other.
@GearWarrant Yes I'm a Rakkasan. I'm an 11B though, so when I do start applying for jobs, I won't have any real experience as an 88M in the National Guard. I'm still going tell them about it, can't hurt. -
Most, not all, of the companies want me to apply once I am in school or shortly before. Many of them say the app is only good for 30 days. However, that doesn't stop you from calling and talking to them; establishing relationships is part of the key to success in trucking. Make a list of questions and ask them. Don't start off with "How fast will your trucks go?"
Starting pay/Training pay
Orientation
Training (could be tarp training, driving with a trainer, length of the training program etc...)
Will they accept your driving school
Hazmat required?
TWIC required?
Type of equipment - tractors and trailers
Home time (don't start off with that either)
Typical area you'll run in based on your location
You gotta start somewhere and it may be with a mega carrier. If so you can do your time there, stay or move on. When about a year has passed you will pretty well know what you want to do and go make real plans to get to where you want to be.
There are a bunch of us ol' crusty guys out here, but you can usually learn something from all of them. If you don't agree that is fine, but just try to leave any company on good terms.
One last thing, how long is your tech school? Some say you want a 160hr school; there are a couple companies I looked at that want 160hrs. Most just want a regular school 3 weeks or so. If you let the GI Bill pay for it, you will not have to guarantee a company a year with them for their paying your school bill.
There is a host of other considerations, but that will get you started. -
Oh, and don't overlook tanker jobs. They tend to pay better. There is a fellow (Chinatown?) on here that is pretty knowledgeable on the tanker side. He has me looking into it since I read some of his posts.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
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