Now....Now.....There is a need for the "Bottom-Feeders"....
Yeah...I used to have an issue with them.....But no longer....
Who the Hell is gonna haul that tarped lumber for a buck a mile if they don't?.....
I see it this way....Let them do it....That makes them happy and the low rate brokers happy....The rest of us (The smarter ones) will get the great paying loads......
And payback....Well......We have seen payback.....
The dump biz in Cali....The Brokers and the contractors effed themselves....They both insisted paying cheap...Like $50/H for a low-sides and no minimums back in '08....That sector hasn't recovered yet.....
Now just about every contractor or contract administrator I know and used to work for, all say the same sad story: They can't find one dump op that knows how to work in the field.....
Yep....you get what you pay for.....You want cheap....Prepare to get cheap....And....Get lazy....and stupid....
There should be a law... rates on load boards
Discussion in 'Freight Broker Forum' started by windsmith, May 28, 2012.
Page 4 of 8
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syva Thanks this.
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The broker KNOWS what the shipper is paying, and KNOWS how much he can pay (including FSC) and still make his "pound of flesh". Like any BUSINESS, brokers aren't in this to "help" the carrier - they're in this to MAKE MONEY.
While it would be "nice" to get whatever YOUR RATE IS - PLUS 100% of the FSC - from a negotiating standpoint, I'd rather go right for the BOTTOM LINE - and make sure the accessorials (detention, tarping, TOLLS) are agreed upon and signed off on the rate confirmation. An O/O should know what it takes to run his truck - where his break-even point it, what additional expenses of the run are going to be, etc. - and negotiate from an EDUCATED POSITION - not solely from what's posted on the board.
As far as the "new law" goes - the additional bond is going to "shake out" the fly-by-nights that can't afford to post it - leave the carriers a little more protection from a hit-n-run broker that decides to go beat 20 loads worth out of carriers, expend his bond, close up shop - start a new corp, post a new bond, get a new authority and DO IT TO US ALL OVER AGAIN.
Too much regulation does suck - but the increased broker bond could PROTECT US MORE in the long run, than it hurts us.
Rick -
$250,000 is not a lot of money in this business. The same folks who would collect zilch from a $10,000 bond, through their own lack of due dilligence, will likely not collect on a $250,000 one. This is no different than someone going into a lease purchase agreement eyes wide shut, ending up broke and bankrupted, then crying foul after the fact.
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Under capitalization leads to desperate moves taking substandard rates to keep cash flow coming in to just keep doors open to prolong the end. This is very bad for the industry that drives rates in general down due to those that pray on this weakness with cheap freight brokerages and factoring companies or both.Grumman Thanks this. -
Is this not still America? I don't want anyone to tell me I can't risk it all. And it is on me to make sure that I am willing to extend credit to those I do business with.
rollin coal and SheepDog Thank this. -
Risk away but no bailouts, Large or small.SheepDog Thanks this. -
Here at Landstar, the FSC means a lot. We get 100% of the fsc so the difference between it being $500 LH/$200 FSC and just $700 LH is $54 out of my pocket. You used to be able to get an agent to slip and extra $50-$100 into the fsc rate, but now even LS has a mandated fsc rate each week that they have to go by. Sometimes it gets a little crazy
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And a lot more of the LH but that is a different topic.
Farm2Fleet Truckingvolvodriver01 and SHC Thank this.
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