that wasn't the point, his post didn't say he worked for nothing then wait for the hot load.
Wonder how far newbies have made it?
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by Largecar359, Nov 8, 2014.
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Surprisingly I have yet to be told no for a rate I'm happy with from the fellas at these "obsurd/cheap&heavy/insert negative comment" large brokerages. -
Last edited: Nov 10, 2014
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There's lots of good information in here with lots of good contributors. Let's try and keep it that way. -
I wouldnt call myself a newbie,.. I started driving back in the late 80's and ran for almost 7 yrs. Got out of the truck for my kids.
Years later ended up back in the seat due to changing economic times and hardships beyond my control. Kids are grown now so it made things a bit easier.
I restarted as a company driver. Went through hell with the first company I hired on with. Finally found a great company and the owner encouraged me to going O/O.
I bought my first truck with cash. I leased on to the same company. Not much has changed regarding how I work, I have more say in what I haul, when I go home and for how long I want to stay home. Other then that its pretty much just like it was as a company driver. I'm dispatched by the same person.
I have more expenses now,.. but my settlements are substantially larger now as well. You tend to work twice as hard when you have a vested interest to succeed.
As for growing,.. I do want to eventually get my own authority. It is a goal I'd like to achieve,.. and if/when the time is right I'll go that route. I'm hiring my first driver in January. I'm hoping to be in my second truck between Feb and May.
I dont have grand illusions about being 'Mega' wealthy. My goal is to create something profitable with out growing beyond sustainability and control. I dont want to be driving beyond the age of 60. By then I just want to dispatch my drivers and remain a comfortable size to where everyone is happy. Reality is often much different then what you envision. If it doesnt work out, I know I can roll my own truck and make a living. So its not the end of the world. So far I have transitioned well. I try to keep my expenses in check. Most of what I spend goes back into the truck. This truck is my livelihood after all.
I've managed to go from nothing to hiring my first driver in under 3 yrs. So I can brag that yes it is attainable. It is doable. But you have to work at it, cash is king, never finance or go into debt with out the immediate means to pay off that debt. Think it through and always have a goal with a realistic strategy to achieve that goal. Know exactly where and how you will make your money. Dont assume that just buying a truck will automatically make you money. You need someone to pay you to run that truck and that truck needs fuel and expenditures in order to continue rolling. You have to be willing to work twice as hard as the next guy or you wont survive. If you have a poor work ethic as a company driver,.. dont expect to make it as an O/O. Its much more stressful with much more to lose.
Hurst -
I started in 2006. I was a software engineer and jumped into flatbed trucking with my own authority and no experience at all. I'm still doing ok and happy. Not rich but doing good. I'm surprised how much you can make on your own if you put the effort into it. I've posted before how I ran hard for 2 months straight and really racked up some serious cash.
The one thing I can't get over is the maintenance costs. Things can really creep up on you. Walking around my truck and trailer a few months ago I was saying to myself, gee, time for a few more tires. Then I realized I was going to need 18 all at once. I don't care how small the repair is. The bill is always $1,000
I just went home for a week and went through $5,000 in no time. Stupid stuff but it really adds up.281ric, jmorris3288, Hurst and 2 others Thank this. -
No offense, but this is a irrelevant ratio with in the trucking industry in general and a horrible KPI for business owner's over all. It is used to compare companies that are in very closely matched segments with near (exact- if possible) business models.
Also- if you are a LLC or sole proprietor, your ratio is always 1:1 as wages are included in operating expenses and all remaining revenue is income.
The Statement of Cash flow is probably the best indicator of how you are doing. It eliminates items that affect profitability like depreciation, accounting methods and timing issues by using the cash method in lieu of the accrual method.
People often don't understand why they were "profitable", but could never pay their bills and sooner rather than later went out of business.
Unless you are lucky...people who succeed in business "plan their work and work their plan". They tell their money where to go and don't wonder were it went. -
Its the one part my wife doesnt seem to understand. OTR semi truck and car or pick up at home is like apples and oranges. The miles we run under the conditions and stress we run these trucks at. When you do the math... not counting fuel,.. the semi truck is actually cheaper to run per mile then say a car or pu truck.
200k from steer tires, 300 - 500k from drive tires. 15k - 40k for oil changes. 1 million miles before major over haul.
To put things into perspective, our personal vehicles are throw away scraps of metal.
HurstLepton1, Skate-Board and 6 Speed Thank this.
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