What has four eyes but can't see?
So I emptied in Atlanta this morning.
Lots of loads and lots of calls! I posted my truck and posted NC SC GA AL MS TN and Minimum Rate $950. Got calls almost left and right. So after we discussed details they either asked "what would you need for this?" Or they just told me their rate. On both instances I kindly pointed out that my minimum rate was listed in my comments section. "Oh...I didn't see that...But now I do....Well thanks anyways..." click.
One load I even went so far as to book it to the point where she was going to send carrier packet. And during a lull in the Convo, I asked "So... You can agree on my posted rate, right?"
"Ummm..."
"$900" and at this point I lowered my rate a little.
"I only have $500 in it!"
"Oh...Well I can't help you then today...Sorry!"
Story of the day. Lots of loads, lots of trucks, must have taken 30 or 40 calls over a 3 hour period, and made about 20 myself.
Ended up taking a TQL load that they had posted 17 ways to Sunday. 72 empty, 332 loaded, to MS for $825. Took me 2 hours to get this load. They posted it, I called, only wanted to pay $700, then they called on my truck later on, asked me $750, then the load disappeared for about 45 mins. Then it popped back up. So I called again. They had a whole group working on covering this load. Calling everyone in a 100 mile radius. I guess I ended up being the sucker. I said look, I've called on this twice and you still need a truck. I can do it for $850 no less. They went up to $800, I said look, meet me at $825, man. And they did. I REALLY wanted to twist their arm so badly on this one knowing it was already well after lunch, but I knew they had resources, the manpower, to cover this in time for their rate or close to it. So they win but at the same time it wasn't that bad. I told tons of people $1000 today. Trying to put some upward pressure on these rates. Got a lot of $400-$500 quotes. Had one guy with a load to Nashville wanting to know how it costs me $800 a day to operate. I'm not a local company, I don't have piece of #### equipment and I pay myself better than a local driver, and my service is of considerably higher quality.
Oh well. Best day I've had on the phone really getting my ears wet with these clowns. Most all of them were polite. Landstar never called me, though, and I didn't bother calling them either. I had fun today doing it. Little frustrating, because there's always that chance that I'll leave myself out in the cold. And then I sometimes feel my boss breathing down my neck wanting me to book but I rejected the 3 that he found for me. Our dispatcher was on vacation for couple days so he was alone trying to book 5 trucks.
Anyways, I'm at $3175 for the week on 1500 all miles. Think I might try for St Louis tomorrow from MS then to FL from there.
@rollin coal likes to talk about load volume. There were like over 1200 listings within 100 mile radius at its highest point. But there were probably a lot of trucks, too. High volume highish capacity keeping rates from breaking the ceiling. It will get there, just not today.
Finally got my own truck
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by BoyWander, Jan 1, 2017.
Page 60 of 226
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Bean Jr., CaptainDaveG, RollingRecaps and 1 other person Thank this.
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BoyWander Thanks this.
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You should post your truck, usually the best loads come from the brokers who call you.
If the load is good, I usually book it, then I check the broker rating with factoring company. If they turn it down, I just tell broker "sorry, your credit rating sucks" or ask for money upfront. One dude paid me 75% upfront of $2200 load, I am sure he was nervous before the load got delivered lol -
Upfront? Heck! I did not know you can do that with them.
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I just like the challenge. That is the only thing I miss about having dedicated accounts, after my contract is negotiated, it's done. I do like the stability a lot more tho. I still wouldn't want to go back to dealing with brokers.
TallJoe and RollingRecaps Thank this. -
1,200 van loads in a 100 miles is not very busy for ATL. For a big area like Atlanta I look at 150 miles. 2,500-3,000 loads is busy. Watch what it does the closer we get to the end of the month. Watch the last couple of days in the month and then the leftovers on April 1st then things normally drop back down some.
Make sure to set yourself up to be empty on March 31st (it will be on a friday) and have absolutely no mercy quoting rates to anyone that day. Even the week leading up to the 31st should be decent. When you get stupid questions asking why!?!? on your quote hang up and take the next caller. No time for whiners and rookie brokers who have never heard such.
That's a day when you can get $5 a mile on 600 mile 1p1d van loads. Best thing to do is quote very high on 150-200 mile runs then deadhead right back to that same loading point as soon as you are empty to get another one the following day. That's how you make bank in a hot market day after day. Leave the long haul stuff for others. The following Monday 4-3-17 will also likely be busy from Friday overflow not covered on that Friday & the weekend.Last edited: Mar 16, 2017
barnmonkey, CaptainDaveG, BoyWander and 8 others Thank this. -
On March 31 all the brokers gonna be like "WTF is going on" when all the people reading this thread gonna start asking for $5 per mile
MarkH129, Bean Jr. and diesel drinker Thank this. -
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stuckinthemud Thanks this.
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