I never look at flatbed freight. Only dry van. I quote $4 and $5 a mile rates to places like OK, KS, and Florida with reckless abandon and sometimes get the job. About as good as you will ever see loads like those post is around $2.80 a mile, maybe $3 on a good day, otherwise it'll typically be around $2 a mile. So much easier getting right back off a $4+ rate than it is to gnash your teeth over accepting $3 then discovering reload options nearby or far out are really on the edge mostly not justifying that $3 a mile as a good decision. With $4+ there's hardly any negotiation necessary on the reload, or if you will a 200-300 mile bounce is painless. There's no such thing as "one way" or "deadend" in my operation. Every outbound pays good or we sit at the house and toss steaks on the grill until one does.
I see why trucking is going the way it is...
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by BAYOU, May 23, 2014.
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BigKid2, SL3406, Oscar the KW and 3 others Thank this.
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Some say this is not a good strategy, if I'm going home I should put even $1pm freight on my truck cause I'm going that way anyway but I couldn't bring myself to haul anybody's freight for that. I have a hard enough time hauling it for $3 as I'm delaying getting home for the next high dollar opportunity.
I based my business model on risk and opportunity, per mile sometimes plays a factor but I think a business based on per mile alone doesn't factor in the realistic cost, risk and level of opportunity or lack of. My freight isn't typical of the norm either, it's not uncommon for us to have $12 or $18 million dollars worth of cargo on the trailer which is compleatly based on risk. -
Aside from hating the term Back Haul, The So called back haul is someones prime move. so why the rate cutting. Cut the rate on the "prime /back haul " move and he in turn cuts your move and so on until it is from $4 down to $1.20 mile. Also the large carriers will call one of their prime shippers if they have too many drivers in an area and offer to ship loads at a discounted rate.
I have seen this done in CA. Large carrier had 12 trucks in Ontario TA. Needed to move them . Called the same shipper I was going to. I showed another driver how to get there. His load was not there. gone. He was very upset. so I asked shipping clerk why? I was told it was due to another large carrier that had many drivers in the area and would move all the loads they had going anywhere in the US for .50 cts a mile. -
Holly cheap freight batman!milskired Thanks this. -
The load I'm doing now I told a customer new one at that a price they said wow that's cheap you sure that's enough money....he said last shipper was $3,200 more than me for the same run....WOW!! I'm talking about a run I'm charging $5,800 on and these are round trip loads. -
You don't have to lower it a penny and I'm not advocating you do, all I was saying is you can if you're COL is lower, that's all., nothing more... -
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Once again, I own this truck or business, (if you will). Broker or shipper has a load, I haul the load for what I think is a fair price. If I can't get what I think is a fair price then I don't haul the load. That simple. I really could care less what he makes on the load as long as I get what I want. Nothing unfair about it.
The Realtor can charge whatever % he wants. He may not get much business if he is charging to high of a percentage. And if he is somehow getting more than his agreed upon percentage then he is acting unethically. Now if you were hauling loads for a percentage it would be different and you would have the right to know what the shipper is paying but since you are hauling for a flat rate then it is really none of your business what the shipper pays. Same as if you went to a realtor and said sell my house and get me $200000. If he sold it for $300000 it shouldn't concern you because you got what you ask for. Learn to negotiate with shippers and brokers and if your not happy with the price don't haul the load. Don't spend to much time worrying about how much someone else made on it. It will drive you crazy.281ric Thanks this. -
Thanks for the thread guys; I'm new, learned a lot!
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