Beware of WEL companies

Discussion in 'Report A BAD Trucking Company Here' started by Sapphire_Glitter, Feb 26, 2025.

  1. bryan21384

    bryan21384 Road Train Member

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    You have a lot going on there. You've been late a bunch, got an accident, not good with trip planning, you don't seem very experienced. In the last line of your post they marked you late AHEAD of time, that is the ultimate of insults and I actually laughed. I apologize, but in all seriousness, they told you that they don't believe you can do 600 miles in 2 days. An average driver can do that in one day. They basically told you straight up that you suck. They don't think you're cut out for this, and they could be correct.....
     
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  3. Sapphire_Glitter

    Sapphire_Glitter Light Load Member

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    They're the only carrier I've had this problem with, I generally wasn't stuck with bad routes or railroaded into late loads, of every carrier ive been with their pay ultimately was the worst (and factually only place I've ever had sub $600 paychecks every week

    Most of the other places I was 1800-2800miles

    WEL i was lucky to get 1300 miles a week the last 3 months I was there, their lanes were just awful and it being winter didn't help, even the other awful reefer company i worked for could get me 1600miles a week every week

    Not gonna lie think reefer just isn't my thing at this point because I'm making nothing at it, I'm fine at admiting I'm probably just awful at reefer but I was still getting shorted when I wasn't late so no telling even the other company I made money with garunteed despite bad miles but wel never honored it

    Van and tanker i was making adequate money then it just slowed down out of nowhere and I moved on to the next place and the fluctuations in my pay ultimately resulted from poor maintenance with the other companies (every trailer has a blown tire, light out, airbag blown, shocks are out, leaking air)

    Wel had great equipment at least? Only thing good i can say about em but I never got handed anything decent even from the start, never got handed anything over 1000 miles and I honestly don't do well with short distance freight, also the only carrier I've ever been limited to east coast basically. I make my money doing runs from California to NY, Washington to Florida, PA to Nevada/Arizona

    More docks i hit in a week the lower my pay is usually
     
  4. bryan21384

    bryan21384 Road Train Member

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    Ok so you're not all that experienced. You've worked for a bunch of companies in short time.
     
  5. Sapphire_Glitter

    Sapphire_Glitter Light Load Member

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    6 carriers in 4 years, orientation with 4 carriers i didnt sign on with
     
  6. bryan21384

    bryan21384 Road Train Member

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    I think you need to redirect your mindframe. You're looking waayyyyyyyy too far ahead right now. You're saying that you're struggling to even get 2000 miles in your posts, not just WEL Companies, but other companies you've worked for. I think you've got to slow down and pay attention to what's in front of you. Sure it is a downturn in freight, but if you know how to work, you can make a living. I'm not getting the sense that you know how to work. Your miles are slowing because you're not proving yourself reliable. They give you those BS loads to make you fail, and ultimately quit. I'm thinking that you didn't prove to them that you could be on time, with a well planned load. My dispatcher tells me, if he gets a driver that isn't any good, he will run him 1800 miles weekly til he quits. If a company takes you on, you've got to work on trip planning. Also, you will have to show a willingness to work at any point around the clock, dont matter what sector you go into. You need to get good at this first, then you can start making other moves.
     
  7. bryan21384

    bryan21384 Road Train Member

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    You gotta show consistency. That's what he's saying. Consistency gets rewarded in this industry. It don't matter where you go, it's all in what you put into it. These companies are pretty much the same. How well you do out here is contingent on you. If you're good, then you get miles. If you stink, then you get no miles. That's regardless of who you work for.
     
  8. Sapphire_Glitter

    Sapphire_Glitter Light Load Member

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    I know i can do long distance 1500+ miles loads, I proved reliable on them, i was good with FedEx freight and 24/7 drop and hooks

    Tanker was easy and made money every time except winter or when I was doing the port run BS or permit loads (paid diffently, low miles but fair pay)

    Tanker i know i did my job, was great at it and often got in a day or 2 early

    Van, Drop&Hook and team freight i did my job

    Reefer was just low miles altogether, east coast low miles

    My best money is running anything west of I65 and anything east of I-5

    I know the lanes i make money, I just can't get them consistently
     
  9. bryan21384

    bryan21384 Road Train Member

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    It doesn't make a difference whether you hit more docks in a week or not. I can hit 4 docks in a week and still hit 3000 miles. Drivers think the long hauls are the only way to make money. The long hauls are easy. That's it. The best drivers out here are the ones that can deliver loads in crunch time. For example, if you pick up a load in New Orleans on a Monday morning for ChicagoLand, and the load info says you can get off Tuesday or Wednesday. Its roughly about 930 miles or so. If you're good at your job, you’ll burn out your clock and drive as close to 650 miles or more Monday. Shut down, get up early, and then take it on in, and you still have time to reload on Tuesday. The 700 to 900 mile runs that you can get off the net day, especially if they're drop and hook, that's where your money is these days. Those long hauls, mostly teams do those, and they gotta grind. One long haul may only yield a 2300 mile week, because you run the risk of companies putting too much time on those loads. Sometimes, those long hauls can be a double edged sword.
     
  10. bryan21384

    bryan21384 Road Train Member

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    You can make money on any lane. It's all about planning.
     
  11. Sapphire_Glitter

    Sapphire_Glitter Light Load Member

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    Long loads with tanker wasnt a problem, haul it early, if they won't take early collect layover if your company does right by its drivers or take a part day off if it's still same day delivery

    The fedex freight i did my original co driver and I were hitting 2800-4000 miles a week each we had the grind, was good and we worked well but we later went solo

    I do a lot better with high amount of drop and hooks for van

    tanker i still got decent money because I figured out my routes, and nomatter the company food grade had identical customers and practices

    I never liked the close time loads simply because if a hiccup does occur you get blamed for the planning, and I'm not one to take the fall for a planner in an office

    Did better with the freight that's basically get there any time before on time which is mostly what my Van and tanker experience was

    Now I know what you're gonna say why not do LTL? I don't really like the whole uniform jockey thing or daycabs otherwise I would

    (If yall actually know any LTL companies with linehaul that have solo sleeper cab and no uniform requirement I'd actually be interested in hearing)
     
    Last edited: Mar 3, 2025
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