new to expidite

Ragman

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Not much. Expedite is a very different game than general trucking. The vast majority are o/o or drive for a fleet owner as an independent contractor.

Go to the newbie section of this forum, search the threads and the answers to many of your questions will be there.
 

letsdrive

Seasoned Expediter
Lol dont forget sitting and waiting and then load canceling but with that said all the struggles that come with expediting id say love my job wouldn't have it any other way

Sent from my SPH-L520 using EO Forums mobile app
 

Ragman

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
You guys are missing the point. He said he wants to be a company driver.
 

zorry

Veteran Expediter
I saw that. When you told him to read back, I was sure that will be covered once, or twice, or 855 times.
 

ttruck

Expert Expediter
Owner/Operator
if u can stand to stay in the trk. considering its a decent trk. to live in 6weeks out is where you should start them for sure u will know I found that u make more on average because u are not worried about getting home, but as time goes on it gets old.
 

mjmsprt40

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
If you're looking to be a COMPANY driver, I have bad news for you. I don't think there are any company expedited drivers. We're all O/O independent contractors out here. As Ragman says, it's a whole different game.

First thing you have to do before you do anything else is: Burn your "employee mindset" at the stake. If the fire department shows up, give them marshmallows and some long sticks. You're not an employee anymore, you're in business for yourself and from now on that's the way you have to think. Your truck/van/Sprinter/whatever is your business.

Expect a lot of sitting. That seems to trip up a lot of company men, they come into expediting expecting the same thing they had a company drivers where you work a certain number of hours every day. The over 10K GVWR crowd still have to watch their hours, BUT--- nobody guarantees you'll get work every day. You might sit for a few days, then have to weigh the cost of a deadhead move to a better area against the cost of just waiting it out where you're at. Sometimes it's a no-brainer, certain locations have a reputation for no freight so you move, other places are considered hot, so you wait. Sometimes you flip a coin and take your chances.

You're in business for yourself, so all the expenses of your vehicle are yours. Fuel, maintenance, tolls, so on and so on-- all yours. Consider that while deciding which runs you can do and which you'll take a pass on. A run that has a lot of deadhead and goes to a place where freight doesn't happen can be a losing proposition, the only reason for taking that is if you have family in the place you're going to. A run that goes to a relatively good area could be good even if the rate on that particular run isn't great-- it's going to a good area so you might decide to take it.

Living arrangements: You'll have to get used to sleeping in a relatively small place. The sleepers on the big straights and T/Ts offer a bit more room than a CV does, but none of these are going to be "just like home". It's small. It's maybe a bit cramped. You have to be self-sufficient as far as power goes, and you'll need power for air conditioning during the summer, heat during the winter and some form of entertainment while you're waiting for the next run.

About that power: Turtle is our resident expert here on batteries, you can do yourself a great favor by getting as much information as you can from him about setting up house batteries, isolators, inverters and so on. Setting up a generator can be done too, and for some things I would hazard a guess that the genset is the better option. Both will require care though, so don't be afraid to ask the experts.

Don't let us scare you away from this. It's a great life if you don't weaken.
 
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