Go be an oilwell troubleshooter. Get paid for every hour in that week, after the first 40, it's 1.5X standard rate. You work 1wk on, 1wk off. Get benefits and company F350. Not bad.
We're in the wrong industry.
$20/hr minimum
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Anonymoususerreport, Jan 13, 2013.
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Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
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we affectionately call him T-4 (T-4 is what companies here issue you annually for your income tax reporting) because of the number of jobs he's had in the past year alone.
He's proof you'd be wrong about the job hopping and not making the money doing it..
The days of loyalty and staying with one company for 20 yrs are long gone. -
snafu Thanks this.
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Don't preach to me about sacrifice! I run my own business, I graduated college, I've earned a black belt, traveled the world, learned to fly...j
I KNOW hard work.
I also know that line you preach is mostly a bunch of garbage. If it was so horrible building a business, nobody would try it. It's exagerated nonsense from a ditto head. -
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Businesses don't spring up from nothing...somebody has to put in the hard work and sacrifice....and when that hard work and sacrifice finally pays off and the business starts generating revenue, everybody else wants a piece of it without taking any risks and without putting forth the effort.
People are willing to take risks, work hard, and sacrifice to start their own businesses because they are working to better themselves and their families. They see the potential in their endeavor and are willing to put in long hours to make it happen. The alternative is to work for somebody else, which is where most entrepreneurs start out...acquiring the knowledge, skills, and the capital they will need to start their own business. Of course if your idea is good enough to find investors, you can start the business with other people's money...but then you aren't really working for yourself. -
I will say one thing... This conversation has gone way beyond the level of being on the "questions from new drivers" section.
Whatever you do and however you view different segments of the industry, I personally would not touch a steering wheel for less than .50 per mile and $20 an hour for everything else based of my experience and record.
If I couldn't make that, barring it was just a job I wanted, I would leave the industry. Like a few others in this conversation have said, I'm also a college grad - just wanted to drive so I did. To this day I make more per year easily than most of the other college grads in my circle of friends and they have serious degrees. Factor in they are almost all contracted my career path is exponentially better because I have benefits..
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 10 of 16