hello, I am hoping to make the jump to OO next spring. I've been driving 5 years, so I have some idea of how the the industry works. I do have many questions, but today I wanted to ask about load boards.
Just using DAT (because it's free and I don't have an MC yet), I'm trying to get a grasp of things. some loads have a rate- is fuel surcharge added on top of that? if so, how would I find that info? also, many loads are without rate, are those negotiable loads? TIA
load
preparing to make the jump
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by Lonweld, Sep 22, 2022.
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Lonweld Thanks this.
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If I had enough money stacked up to get a truck. I would wait till the truck prices bottom and then buy one. Maybe three months after they bottom. I might think about leasing on with some one. Just to get away from. Paying the 10k to start the insurance and it's factoring included in the company. Just a thought. I did alright pulling tankers. But the surge tears up the drive line after a couple of 100k miles.
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You’re looking at the bottom feeder loads, you think the good stuff goes on free pubic load boards.
blairandgretchen Thanks this. -
You should lease on with a company that has their own contracted freight to move and learn the business before getting your own numbers. Being an Independent OO is very different from being just a driver. There's so much to learn and if you jump in now or even a couple months from now the brokers and the market will literally eat you alive.
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cke Thanks this.
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If your still learning, nothing wrong to leasing onto a good company. Learn the market and the business side. Make the jump when your ready. I recommend working out a deal and getting at least one direct customer once you learn your numbers and your future goals. The stability will help. Lasting relationships are important. You may loose a lane, but you may get it back later on. Just business. Some just run the market and operate like sharks. They know the game and play it well. Some look long term for relationships and pursue to build a trucking empire. Some in between and some last for a few years and go out of business. Be careful who you take advice from. Some here have their stuff together and run fleets that employ folks while others don’t even know if you fail to pay tax estimates quarterly you will be fined. It’s all what you make of it.
Midwest Trucker Thanks this. -
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