Your twisted.......
I like that
You've been-----\/\/\/\-----Thunderstruck!!!
With a ThunderStick
dock time
Discussion in 'Shippers & Receivers - Good or Bad' started by robdogtn, Jun 7, 2011.
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Kindness does have it's rewards, both for the driver and the office/warehouse personel. As a warehouse lead, I faced rude drivers all the time. It made me really appreciate the kind drivers, to the point I would call the company to compliment the driver. Why? Kind drivers made my day. A driver that took the extra steps to chitchat and shake hands with me stood out above the rest, and I would personally make sure his/her freight was loaded ASAP. A simple "sir, ma'am" dialect also goes a long way.
Your appearance said alot to me also, and this included the appearance of your truck. You may not think about it, but a clean shaven, clean cut, driver wearing a clean tucked in polo with clean jeans got treated differently than the driver that looked like they fell off the ugly tree and hit every branch on the way down. If you take the time to take care of your appearance, that told me you were going to take care of the truck and freight as well. It still does to this day. -
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On the runs where I was able to I always ran it hard to get there early, and then I would call the warehouse when I was about 8 hours out to see if they could schedule me in. If they could that was great, if not I rested up and relaxed somewhere close by often managing to get a 34 on some of the longer runs (1 my DM got me a few times was from Baltimore to LA).
I also found that showing a little good manners when checking in, as well as after backing in went a long way. Even at plants where drivers weren't allowed on dock I would doublecheck after backing in (even if I knew it looked good from the outside) to make sure I was straight on for their dockplate to be good. Usually it was a quick yes and we'll have you out soon, but it also showed the dock workers I was checking to make sure I had things as good as I could from my end. I had some loads that were multi-pickup and single drop, that got done faster than other drivers who were single load single drop that were from the previous time slot. -
Wow after reading all this I never realized what trouble you could cause being early lol I always thought early was good.
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I had one place in ALA. That I called about 6 hours out and asked if they could move me up until the next morning which would have been 12 hours early! the guy says how soon can you be here 6 hrs he says come on in we need you. I explained that I would only have an hour to unload or I would be out of hours. No Problem. I roll in he unloads and I'm gone 15 mins. later. Nice place nice people and close to a truck stop just can't remember the dang name! Drugs there gonna be the death of me yet.
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Piece of advice:
If you're early by a day or more, and you can't get a hold of the customer; contact your dispatcher and work out a drop option. The main OTR carriers have multiple drop yards around the country and you're bound to be near one of them. Don't stay with the load longer than you need to. Drop it and keep rolling instead of burning time waiting for the appoitment window to open. You may not have this option as a company driver as you're under forced dispatch, but you do as a IC or O/O. If you're a IC and your wheeles aren't rolling, you're loosing money.Tazz Thanks this. -
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stupid shipping and receiving clerks. lol
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All of this is good BUT, if things were properly scheduled, there would be NO reason for a driver coming in a day early. JMHO
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