I have wondered what is the average age of a truck driver. I ask this because I started with a small company that trained me in house starting with bobtail flat beds and work my way up to a tractor trailer. This does not seem to happen any more. The access to trucks is through "driver mills" like JB Hunt, SNL, Werner etc. They seem to run off 10 times as many as they hire. I wonder if the people they run off return to driving through another company or get out driving all together. It would seem that in another 10-15 years the o/o will be gone or getting what they want to haul freight. I put this in the experienced area because I have only been driving for 14 years; not long enough to see industry trends.
Baby boomers retiring and truck driver mills
Discussion in 'Experienced Truckers' Advice' started by VARITHMS, Apr 10, 2012.
Page 1 of 2
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
Most carriers that baby boomers retire from require at least a couple of years experience . The better carriers have drivers with 5 or more years experience applying.
There are still tens of thousands of experienced drivers out of work . The "Stay with a bottom feeder for a year then you can move up " line is a big myth . There are many more times BFI drivers with a year experience than there is opening jobs for them. -
There are many former drivers out there that refuse to put up with what the industry hands them, or drive for the wages it pays now.
I doubt there are that many experienced drivers out of work, unless they choose to be.
It's simple economics.
Why pay more when there's a line around the block of people that will (try) the job.
Basic law of supply and demand. -
Other shippers give quality of service a priority and pay a rate that allows carriers to hire and keep experienced drivers by payiing higher pay .
We have drivers that have been working with the same shippers for 5 to 10 years. -
-
just for info...the average lifespan of a career OTR driver is 62... I guess I beat the average. The lifespan of the average American male is 73... we don't do to good in that area.
Many big outfits have a 90% yearly turnover... some 100%... the driver pool is getting older no doubt. Some of it has to do with older drivers starting a second career (can you call it that?)... some are just old like me. -
I am with a 'mill'.
I have no service failures, I have damaged no property or freight, I am professional and get the load there safely and on time. I am always polite and respectful to clients, even when the opposite may not always be true.
So tell me, how do the companies that charge more claim to give better service - or to be worth more?
Just how is the 'quality of service' higher than what I, or the company I work for, provide?
In the end, it's a pretty simple job.
Get to the shipper on time and get loaded or pick up the load.
Transport that load safely and in a reasonable time frame to the destination.
Rinse and repeat.
If one company can do it just as well for less cost, well, that's simply called competition. Others had simply better step up to the plate and give it their best swing, or forfeit the game.
And if the 'mills' were not providing the 'high end quality service', they would not still be in business.
Would they?
Oh, by the way.
I am one of those baby boomers.
(And I doubt that I will be dead by 62. Although, $#!t happens) -
Moosetek13 Thanks this.
-
-
I have a drop and hook that is just over 600 miles in each direction . It pays me $425 going out , $375 coming back .Why doesn't one of your mills jump in and steal it with a cheaper rate ?
We just got 15 new Peterbilts in . One of our customers did try a mill carrie on a new contract . Lesson learned. We are getting that contract and they won't make that mistake again .
.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 1 of 2