What is the size of the time critical "road" freight market?

Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
BUT when you come down to it, it seems you have to actually read carefully with what I say as this is what I'm told which is not by drivers or owners or even recruiters but people looking at the numbers...
That's gold right there, man. Makes no sense whatsoever, but sounds awesome. :D
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
Well given all the crap I have dealt with this past week, that is the best I can do and if you don't like it, well ...
 

x06col

Veteran Expediter
Charter Member
Retired Expediter
US Army
A Sony Vaio and an iPad and both are fine with the default black font. With the drop in contrast of the blue color and the smaller size font combination it makes Cheri and Jack and anyone else doing that very difficult to read, comparatively.

Try a Puter ther Leo. You can adjust the font to 200%.
 

Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
Well given all the crap I have dealt with this past week, that is the best I can do and if you don't like it, well ...
I do like it. "gold", "awesome", big smile :D.
Did you not get that?
 

LDB

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Yes, my posts are whatever the forum defaults are and that's blue for links. The black is clearer than the blue. The green side is easier to read than the red side. My optometrist verified that's how it's supposed to be.
 

Moot

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
From the sounds of it, expedited freight is much more intertwined with "normal" freight.

It seems like everything in the transportation industry is becoming intertwined and even trying to pigeon hole a specific service like expedite with a narrow definition is nearly impossible. But, my definition of expedited freight is freight that requires: Nonstop, dock to dock, exclusive use service with on demand, 24/7 pick-up and delivery times. This definition includes ground and air freight service and a combination of both.

Most large LTL companies offer some form of expedited freight service. These services may include "expedite" in the name or priority, premium, platinum or some other adjective, but don't meet my definition of expedite freight. When an LTL carrier is about to incur a service failure on it's higher priced "expedite" freight they call in a true expedite carrier to save their butt.

Once you can come up with a working definition of expedite freight to fit your particular situation you can start looking for statistics. You mentioned in a prior post that your boss would be happy. If you are with some type of transportation company your company may subscribe to various transportation rags. Traffic World has done numerous articles on expediting, many by John D. Schulz. A Traffic World subscription will get you access to their on-line library. Another source for expedite statistics is Satish Jindel of SJ Consulting Group. Do some on-line research starting with these two leads. Good luck and please post a condensed version of your findings here on E.O.
 

x06col

Veteran Expediter
Charter Member
Retired Expediter
US Army
It seems like everything in the transportation industry is becoming intertwined and even trying to pigeon hole a specific service like expedite with a narrow definition is nearly impossible. But, my definition of expedited freight is freight that requires: Nonstop, dock to dock, exclusive use service with on demand, 24/7 pick-up and delivery times. This definition includes ground and air freight service and a combination of both.

Most large LTL companies offer some form of expedited freight service. These services may include "expedite" in the name or priority, premium, platinum or some other adjective, but don't meet my definition of expedite freight. When an LTL carrier is about to incur a service failure on it's higher priced "expedite" freight they call in a true expedite carrier to save their butt.

Once you can come up with a working definition of expedite freight to fit your particular situation you can start looking for statistics. You mentioned in a prior post that your boss would be happy. If you are with some type of transportation company your company may subscribe to various transportation rags. Traffic World has done numerous articles on expediting, many by John D. Schulz. A Traffic World subscription will get you access to their on-line library. Another source for expedite statistics is Satish Jindel of SJ Consulting Group. Do some on-line research starting with these two leads. Good luck and please post a condensed version of your findings here on E.O.

The onlypick I have with ya Moot is.............. exclusive use. So what???? I always offered (and delivered) non-stop, dock to dock, on demand 24/7, with air , if needed. So what is the problem here. Exclusive use???? WTF???? As long as the customers (all) are taken care of????? All should be happy, yo????
 

Moot

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
If a shipper is paying top dollar for exclusive use then he should be able to throw a seal on the truck and not worry about some moron at your next pickup spearing his freight with a forklift tine. Or another shipment containing a 55 gallon drum of urine samples from a drug testing consortium leaking and damaging his freight. Exclusive use lessens the chance of these thing occurring.
 

mcavoy33

Seasoned Expediter
If a shipper is paying top dollar for exclusive use then he should be able to throw a seal on the truck and not worry about some moron at your next pickup spearing his freight with a forklift tine. Or another shipment containing a 55 gallon drum of urine samples from a drug testing consortium leaking and damaging his freight. Exclusive use lessens the chance of these thing occurring.

I always thought that the shipper was paying the premium for the speed and quickness of the delivery, not for exclusive use of my van?

However, I would think that making another stop would not be as quick as what possible. But I don't recall exclusive use being part of any delivery I have ever made. But I'm just a noob, I honestly have no clue.
 

Moot

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
I always thought that the shipper was paying the premium for the speed and quickness of the delivery, not for exclusive use of my van?

Speed and quickness are part of exclusive use. You can't honestly sell dock to dock service if you are picking up other customer's freight also. If you pick up a 1000 pound skid from a customer and have a delivery time based on 47 mph and go to another customer to pick up another 1000 pound skid and get delayed for several hours and then get delayed trying to unload that second skid which is of course on the tail of your van, chances are you will miss the protect time for the original customer's delivery.

I guess it all comes down to a company's definition of what expedite service means and how their service is defined in their tariffs.
 

softwareguy

Active Expediter
Ooooooooooh, excuse me for bringing this thread back on topic!

How dare you!

It seems like everything in the transportation industry is becoming intertwined and even trying to pigeon hole a specific service like expedite with a narrow definition is nearly impossible. But, my definition of expedited freight is freight that requires: Nonstop, dock to dock, exclusive use service with on demand, 24/7 pick-up and delivery times. This definition includes ground and air freight service and a combination of both.

Most large LTL companies offer some form of expedited freight service. These services may include "expedite" in the name or priority, premium, platinum or some other adjective, but don't meet my definition of expedite freight. When an LTL carrier is about to incur a service failure on it's higher priced "expedite" freight they call in a true expedite carrier to save their butt.

Once you can come up with a working definition of expedite freight to fit your particular situation you can start looking for statistics. You mentioned in a prior post that your boss would be happy. If you are with some type of transportation company your company may subscribe to various transportation rags. Traffic World has done numerous articles on expediting, many by John D. Schulz. A Traffic World subscription will get you access to their on-line library. Another source for expedite statistics is Satish Jindel of SJ Consulting Group. Do some on-line research starting with these two leads. Good luck and please post a condensed version of your findings here on E.O.

Thank you very much for pointing me in the direction of those magazines. I will check them out and definitely update the thread once I have done so.
 

Moot

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
Again you must define "expedite". That $3.4 billion includes TL and LTL carriers' "expedite" service, which I consider to be outside the scope of my narrower definition.
 

Jack_Berry

Moderator Emeritus
software guy.....i think last year our avg haul was 1.3 pieces at 850 lbs.
this year we are at 1.33 and 641 lbs.
empty miles are 73 and loaded avg is 853.

go figure. oh, you will won't ya?


made larger for leo's benefit.
 
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softwareguy

Active Expediter
Again you must define "expedite". That $3.4 billion includes TL and LTL carriers' "expedite" service, which I consider to be outside the scope of my narrower definition.

Absolutely. And I will do that research after presenting the more "optimistic" numbers to the people funding the project ;)

The market has gone through a lot since 2005.

Posted with my Droid EO Forum App

Hopefully you'll be able to say the same next year about 2011, only "a lot" being "a lot more".
 

mcavoy33

Seasoned Expediter
software guy.....i think last year our avg haul was 1.3 pieces at 850 lbs.
this year we are at 1.33 and 641 lbs.
empty miles are 73 and loaded avg is 853.

As a company driver, I've been keeping track of my mileage and stuff so I have my own figures to use but I'm starting to think that I should keep track of absolutely everything.

I hate paperwork but you can never have enough information.
 

softwareguy

Active Expediter
As a company driver, I've been keeping track of my mileage and stuff so I have my own figures to use but I'm starting to think that I should keep track of absolutely everything.

I hate paperwork but you can never have enough information.

We call that 'data porn' and the more we have, the happier we get :)
 
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