Thanks so much, y'all are awesome! I'm going to fill out the applications of the companies you suggesested, and have him follow up with Old Dominion, XPO, and SAIA since I know I already filled those three out. Maybe even "gently" try and get him to come in on the forums to get input as he's really leaning towards PTG on the hope of upward mobility.
Help me help my hubby make a good choice
Discussion in 'LTL and Local Delivery Trucking Forum' started by Cruella, Sep 21, 2020.
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McUzi and Gearjammin' Penguin Thank this.
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firemedic2816 Thanks this.
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Cruella, Gearjammin' Penguin and jmz Thank this.
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Does your husband have a degree?
It does not matter what the field is, it’s having that degree that matters if he seriously wants management.
That was the requirement at Dayton Freight Lines, during the time I worked there. Not sure of other companies, but as most of the original founders of these companies are handing off to the younger generation’s, most of these young punks are college frat boys and they demand all managers below them have some sort of a degree.
At the age of 50, as you state your husband is, I am afraid that ‘ship has left the harbor’.
Thats what happened to me, I am 58 and applied for every mngt. position at my last employer, got 1 phone interview over the years. Watched younger, recent hires promoted all around me. And some of those were new to the industry I was in at the time.
In closing, to others that may aspire to be manager, do it early in your career.Cruella Thanks this. -
Saia is showing two openings in Vegas, one linehaul, one p&d, that's a cool terminal too, one of my favorites to go to when I ran systems, always freindly there.
The Shadow, Cruella, Texas_hwy_287 and 3 others Thank this. -
Like you, I've seen the same thing over the years. They take schooling over experience because well, these kids are young and dumb. They think because they sat in a classroom, they actually know something about the industry they are working -- and this is in general, not just in trucking. I've watched it in my industry as well. Kids get hired right out of college without an ounce of real-world experience, and then they have no idea what to do, or how to lead the people doing it. I was a human resources manager for years, and I valued hands-on experience over college any day, so when companies started changing their stance, I got out.Gearjammin' Penguin Thanks this. -
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