O/O Pay

Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by natanishe, Sep 18, 2016.

  1. natanishe

    natanishe Light Load Member

    109
    20
    Jan 17, 2015
    Los Angeles
    0
    Do you do your own picks and drops? or you come just to pick up the trailer and drop it off? Is you don't mind me asking how many miles per month do you make with them? How many days on the road per month?
     
  2. Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.

  3. RStewart

    RStewart Road Train Member

    3,165
    5,041
    Aug 21, 2015
    Norman, OK
    0
    It's about 95% drop & hook. I try to run the least amount of miles I can, usually between 8500-10000 miles a month. The amount of time I spend on the road varies. Just depends on what I've got going on & how long I want to stay out.
     
  4. thejackal

    thejackal Road Train Member

    1,359
    1,456
    Mar 1, 2014
    detroit mi
    0
    Define sucessful.
     
  5. Inthedark

    Inthedark Light Load Member

    98
    91
    Jul 12, 2016
    springfield MO
    0
    But these companies pay rookies under 35k "use em and abuse em". They dont pay good wages, so they can afford to run cheap freight. Which in turn hurts every freight business on the road. IMO

    They run good ads promising miles/wages that they rarely deliver. I know this for a fact, it's hard to get decent wages when you have less than a year OTR time. So we take our beating, get the needed experience and move on.
     
    Last edited: Sep 19, 2016
    Lone Ranger 13 and Canned Spam Thank this.
  6. Robert85006

    Robert85006 Medium Load Member

    359
    398
    Aug 20, 2013
    Southwest USA
    0
    If you were worth the amount of money the Moyes family is worth, you would be considered a business success.
     
  7. m16ty

    m16ty Road Train Member

    2,274
    4,964
    Jan 22, 2016
    0
    I read somewhere that most of the big companies get such a good deal on new trucks that they can run them a couple of years and sell the used truck for almost as much as they paid for it. They get fuel dirt cheap too. As a O/O it's hard to compete with them.
     
    thejackal Thanks this.
  8. Robert85006

    Robert85006 Medium Load Member

    359
    398
    Aug 20, 2013
    Southwest USA
    0
    As an O/O I don't compete for cheap loads the Megas run. They can run all the 40K freight all day.....I'll stick with light loads (under 25K) that run the SHORTEST amount of miles. If I can book a load that delivers across street I'll take it every time (if it pays good)
     
  9. Robert85006

    Robert85006 Medium Load Member

    359
    398
    Aug 20, 2013
    Southwest USA
    0
    I spoke with a sales rep from Kenworth, he told me Swift buys around 140 brand new trucks a year and they constantly swap them out before the warranty is up.
     
  10. Ridgeline

    Ridgeline Road Train Member

    22,720
    123,239
    Dec 18, 2011
    Michigan
    0
    You have to start somewhere and because the liability of a new driver is high, the compensation is fair. $35k is still better than $15k at a fast food place. I think the problem is that people expect something for nothing. They are told what to pick up! Where to go and how to do it, a lot of hand holding so that seems to be a fair wage.

    Oh by the way it gets tiring about the cheap freight crap. It isn't those large high volume companies pulling the rates down, it's the uneducated owners and fleets who use load boards that try to capture freight by bidding low and just hoping to get work. Want to see rates go up?

    Make getting an authority hard again, they will go up.
     
    rollin coal and redoctober83 Thank this.
  11. Dryver

    Dryver Road Train Member

    2,818
    2,576
    Nov 30, 2008
    Sioux Falls, SD
    0
    You really believe they became successful running 1.25 loads? I'm speechless.
     
    thejackal and rollin coal Thank this.
  • Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.