What do you want in a broker?
Discussion in 'Freight Broker Forum' started by Lilbit, Aug 5, 2008.
Page 3 of 7
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
Just saying that things are not always what the appear. Just for the sake of discussion, let's say that a broker offers a load to a trucker for $2.00 a mile. Trucker never shows up....for whatever reason Or took the load and never made delivery, so it's a recovery load. Broker now has a serivice failure which might result in a financial penalty to the broker. Broker still needs to move the load, but needs to cover their loss so the next trucker gets a lower rate. I know on military loads, this is a fact; I have also looked at some broker/shipper contracts that have a similar clause. Not defending bad brokers because we all know they are out there. Just offering some insight to mull over.
FlatbedShipper Thanks this. -
The O/O is OUT there busting his behind to get the load from point A to point B with as little stress as possible. All the while the O/O is paying for the maintenance, fuel, taxes, etc on the truck. Which we all know has gone up right along with the cost of fuel.
When a broker tells you a load pays x amount, and you find out that it pays considerably more, its deceptive and crooked.
Our contract stated that the broker was to get a certain percent of the load, the rest came to us. Well, if the load paid 3.50 a mile, he told us it paid 2.59 a mile and then took another 15% off of that as his "cut", then its just like embezzling in my book.
Its a crooked practice, and I think that you would be surprised at what the shippers are REALLY paying for the loads out there.Brickman Thanks this. -
BHW, your situation is different in that you had a defined contract. I would certainly talk that one over with a lawyer who specializes in transportation law. If anyone is being paid on %, then they should be provided the details of the load. If you were not provided that information, and your contract said you should have receive it, then I would be raising all kinds of H#&&.
However, most brokered loads are offered at a flat rate. -
BHW - you absolutely have the right to obtain the records regarding any load you haul for a broker (been doing more research). Also, as it was a percentage, you may be able to go back on the broker for it. TX Proud has that right - check with a lawyer. OOIDA has a couple of interesting articles regarding the issue of brokers.
Another interesting tidbit I saw today on OOIDA's site is that they are presenting a petition to increase the required bond to at least $300,000 to $500,000 for brokers. -
Joe Dirt Thanks this.
-
bullhaulerswife Thanks this.
-
Wow, I just don't see it the same as you do. I work with some great brokers. I make great money, they make great money and we rinse, repeat. Do I care that one of my usual brokers made $800 (22%) on a load that paid me over $3.00/mile on a legal load? Not a bit. Another broker basically "bought" my truck for a week. Paid $8K to do a lot of sitting and ran about 2000 miles that week. Heck, enjoyed it so much sent the truck back the next week and did it again.
And in the 80's we were leased to a carrier making $.82/mile. So I have to disagree that the rates are the same today as they were in the 80's.
Have I ever encoutered an unscrupulous broker? You betcha. Burned once. Others have tried, but I catch them at their own game BEFORE I haul the load. Actually picked up some great direct customers because of some unscrupulous brokers and bad truckers, too.
Do I care what the broker makes on the load? No. What I care about is what I make on the load.FlatbedShipper and anothercupajoe Thank this. -
-
I disagree with full disclosure in a spot market, which is what all brokered loads are. Just as my financials are not for public disclosure, I would not expect another private business to have to disclose their financials. I'm talking about third party intermediaries only. If you are running as a true independent (own authority), then the onus is on you to make the right decisions for your business, which includes setting your rates. If a load doesn't pay you what you need, then move on to the next call. Look at it this way; let's say you call a broker on a load and you tell them you need $3.00/mile. (You don't say $3/mile, you give them a flat rate). Broker may say yes, or they may say no, or they may counter your rate. On the other hand, if you call the broker and ask "What's that load paying?" then you have lost any leverage you had. They might offer you a low rate.
To say that "honest" brokers are the exception (meaning the majority are unscrupulous) is disheartening to hear. If you really feel that way, then maybe being a lease operator is a better fit. Even if they are offering $.90/mile they also provide a fuel surcharge. In the 80's, the FSC was only $.04.
Regulation is not the answer. More government is not the answer. Enforcement of existing regulations is what is needed. And that has nothing to do with rates, but has everything to do with penalizing brokers who don't pay (stealing) and who operate without credentials (fraud).FlatbedShipper and anothercupajoe Thank this.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 3 of 7