No it's not a hobby. It's a different way of running the business is all. The world of loadboards being just for backhauls is 15+ years in the past the old days. That's not what it is anymore. If you don't believe me then ask some broker that's been doing it since deregulation how in the 80''s, 90's and '00's they could move just about any lane in the country for a cheap flat backhaul rate really year round versus more recent years where the price swings are wild one way or the other. That's what things have become. And I take it somewhat disrespectful a person telling how I did it for 13 years was a hobby. My customer was the broker. They did my sales work and many of them sought me out for repeat business for years. And that way of running the business ####ing paid for a lot of #### along the way.
Oldeskool has bailed out
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by OldeSkool, Oct 2, 2023.
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Again I am trying to be respectful. But you yourself admitted the juice wasn’t worth the squeeze so you got out. You are also trying to assert the way you were doing was a viable option. These two things contradict each other. -
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@Jubal Early Times and @rollin coal
I see both of yall have solid points. Spot market is being used more than years bygone. Industry is relying on it. Freight payers and carriers. Everyone is getting a little lazy. The gap between spot and contract is dynamic. Yes, now contract generally pays more, but it’s getting closer together. I am getting sorted for bidding and yea, rates will be lower a bit if you want a contract from a food producer/distributer/grocery chain. There are more carriers trying to get on the carrier bid distribution lists, more than ever. Don’t even mention the crazy amount of brokerages soliciting every day!! Loosing to a brokerage is a reality. I just spent the last month soliciting. Much harder this time than 2 years ago. Does relying fully on spot market work? It can, but takes a different approach. Is it risky, yes it is! I have done better with a customer than working the spot market. The consistency and trust equals dollars. But, I also have given much to ensure the truck is “there every time” and then outbid. One can fail at both approaches or be productive. Honestly, it’s darn competitive and you are competing with carriers that don’t understand they are going out of business both on spot or when they get awarded a customer.Midwest Trucker, Siinman, DUNE-T and 3 others Thank this. -
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If I offended anyone it wasn’t my intent. I think we can all agree that there seems to an overwhelming number of people who own a truck and have been granted authority who have zero business acumen. The vast majority of those seem to be in the spot market. We see it everyday on this very forum.
relying strictly on spot market for long term success is a fool’s errand. Can it be a tool? Can it be a stepping stone? Can you make money at times? Yes!! But for a reefer, flat or van carrier to say I’m going to build and grow a trucking company and never pull anything but spot freight is preposterous. Can a one truck guy make a living? Sure he can. But he really won’t do any better financially than if he had a good lease. Some would do better -
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I'd say my load board usage is 80/20. I have contacts from the boom that I get loads from often. Those loads never hit the boards now. During the boom was the time to impress those good brokers who needed help. Normally, those brokers freight ain't on the boards anymore.
IDK about being a hobby trucker? Maybe, 112k miles this year. I just think of it different. I don't want to do the same thing every day. I don't care where I might be tomorrow. Willing to go anywhere, with a caveat. I either want to see the place, or the money is great.
IMO, if you're running load board freight only and want to thrive, you have to be versatile. The more "i ain't gonna" in your resume, you're gonna struggle.Oxbow, Long FLD, Rideandrepair and 2 others Thank this.
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