Was never saying one form of ownership or non ownership is better or worse... on size does not fit all, except in hats, to each his own, mean no disrespect...just the way I and the guys I run with in the oilfields see it today not 30 yrs ago.
Why am I a owner operator..........it's simple
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by BAYOU, Sep 23, 2014.
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There is the definition of these terms, and then there is how people perceive these terms. I'm not big on pecking order or status thinking. I generally refer to myself as a truck driver.
However, what a few here tried to tell you is true. If you own and operate a truck you are an owner operator. Authority has nothing to do with that term. If you feel the need to discriminate, you would use the term independent owner operator or motor carrier as you mentioned. -
Well it's not discrimination, that's absurd. It is merely a opinion. ..needless to say this dead horse has been throughly beat.
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I have my own authority true. But I used to say I am an independent owner operator. I then realized how much I rely on the help of others in this industry so I am now just a O/O plain and simple.
timc1134 Thanks this. -
I simply just don't want to be classified as the same as someone leased to someone else "the easy road" but these days Mormor people think that they could just go out and get donuts 40 and make more money than being released to someone, if you plan on running 100% broker freight you're not going to make any more money then being leased to a reputable carrier...it's not easy at all being a single truck owner operator operating under his own authority.
Everytime I go home I don't get to relax and spend time with my family it's I've got this to six on the truck I've got that to fix on the trailer I've got to go through paperwork I've got to see what invoices have been paid what has not been paid what is late what is do what haven't I done if the list just goes on and on and on, No my wife does not do all of that nor does she find or book me loads I do everything from the front seat of my truck. The only thing that keeps me going is the direct customers I have.
The load I started my week out with this past week is a smaller size business they understand the problems small people have with cash flow and staying afloat it's a customer that I only do one load for once a month or every other month but when I pick the load up they have a check waiting on me! Some customers say that I'm way too high and others say I'm way too cheap.
My numbers this year have averaged between $2.45/$2.87 all miles for there year at the end of Aug was $2.67 I have not had a chance to close out September yet and not sure which way that number will fall i've had a lot of deadhead miles the last two months. Next week I'm doing some loads for a customer they want four loads from Mississippi back to Beaumont and want them all done in the timeframe of next week which sucks for me because I can't haul freight over there in order to pick them loads up so I'll just turn and burn all of them 385 miles there 385 back that's why I charge what I do and at $4.40/mi its to cheap because it still drawls down my all miles for the year.dannythetrucker, Cetane+ and timc1134 Thank this. -
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And one more thing I just said this on FB so I'd like to add here there's more then being in a owner operator with his own authority and driving a truck you also must be a salesman if you can't sell yourself you will not get any kind of direct customer base!
fortycalglock, dannythetrucker, tsavory and 1 other person Thank this. -
barnmonkey, dannythetrucker, tsavory and 2 others Thank this.
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I do it two ways depending on what wagon I'm hooked to. 99 percent of my cattle loads are direct, after being stiffed 15 grand last year by a 15 year customer that filed bankruptcy all loads are COD. With the hopper its all brokered, 8 percent comes right out the top but we settle once a week whether we need to or not. I wish all weeks were as good as this week, unfortunately they are not. Most my loads are exempt commodities there is that occasional load of sand to texas that pays well.
I agree with Bayou the work is never done you just have to prioritize it and put the rest off till a better day. Having my son aboard has really helped more than anything -
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