Hello! I had a thread in the general new driver question section but this is section seems much better for my constant questions that are specific to Schneider. I am a new driver, going bulk in the next couple of weeks. I had asked before about realistic first year earnings. I have read on this board, and other boards, that 40-55k is the range. Does that sound right? If you're currently running bulk, how do you like it? Any challenges you see regularly? I know the general stuff, but anything specific to Schneider or the bulk division I should be aware of?
Thanks to all of you for your thoughts. You guys, and girls, are great. Over the last year you have all helped me make this decision. The good, the bad, and the ugly all comes out here and it's been huge!
SNBC Newbie
Discussion in 'Schneider' started by pumpkindriving, Jun 13, 2014.
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I just reached my six month mark. It's a good place to start. They will train you as it is a training company. Also, the treatment is fair over all. Communication and on time delivery are the keys to success. By the way, The starting pay is crap. I average $550.00 a week net. So, I'd be lucky to make 30k at that rate which is slavery.
Do NOT divide the number of hours you put in each week to figure out your hourly pay. You don't want to know. I'm the 2% of my class that is still here. Most get training and move on. They recently bumped my CPM up .06 so it's getting better. Good luck.d o g, pumpkindriving and knuckledragger Thank this. -
Can you think of what might have caused you to only make what you did Handog? Also, can you tell me what part of the country you operate out of? I am in the northeast.
Thanks for the information!! -
Why do New drivers believe that they will make 40-50k their first year. I wish everyone the best but 36k is more likely just starting out and 30k is probably realistic. It's like any other job you have to learn the ins and outs and work your way up. These recruiters should have to guarantee 1st year drivers salary out of their pocket then they'd tell the truth to recruits.
pumpkindriving, d o g, knuckledragger and 1 other person Thank this. -
TennMan you bring up a good point about accountability with recruiters. As for why new drivers believe they will make 40-50k their first year, you summed it up with your last sentence. That's why so many of us come on here and ask to talk to current drivers with the company, in the specific division we are going. This is one of the best places to find people who can give some info and help us make a decision, or help us realize what's coming down the road.
knuckledragger, d o g and Chinatown Thank this. -
When someone is paid on percentage for the number of warm bodies they can get in the door that's what you get. I made 50k my first year at Superior which is exactly what my recruiter told me. My recruiter is also my terminal manager who has more skin in the game than the professional liars many companies employ.
pumpkindriving, Chinatown and knuckledragger Thank this. -
wsyrob that makes a lot of sense. It sounds like you got exactly what you were told. I hear many people say that they make what they were told. Many more tell a different story but it is reasonable to assume that if everything is "fine" you don't have a lot of motivation to post about it. If things are bad, or not what you were told/expected, then there is much more motivation to jump on the board and shred a company. Make sense?
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Understand, the good pay starts after the training period. It's not accurate to look at the first year with a company that included orientation and training. It's the 12 months after you're cut loose on your own that gives you the best idea of what to expect in the future. Two new CDL grads pulling hazmat/tankers where I worked bumped $60K their first 12 months as solo. These drivers were hauling acid 48 states & Canada with lots of good assessorial pays.
pumpkindriving, harlycharly55 and knuckledragger Thank this. -
Like, where & when you can drop a trailer loaded, get another, and run instead of sitting around (unpaid) waiting to unload.
Alot of little things learned, add-up to more $ over time. It is not practical to type such things at length in a forum like this.
You are going to a good company to learn and get experience. Not a good place to make alot of money.
After year one or 2. You can take your experience & knowledge to another place for what comes next.
I drove 12 years with SNBC. That was about 10 years too many.pumpkindriving and knuckledragger Thank this. -
Schneider doesn't teach you how to make money. You will figure that out as you go and become more proficient. The pay goes up pretty quickly. Also, There are expenses that you can be reimbursed for that are seemingly kept secret. If you don't send a request they certainly won't remind you. Talk to the experienced drivers. The little things add up.harlycharly55, pumpkindriving and knuckledragger Thank this.
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