Thanks to the ATeam you really clarified everything for us. That helps us to know and have a true underatanding in which direction we want to go. Please feel free to offer in other advice that maybe helpful for newbies. Again, a sincere thanks
Which direction have you decided to go? Readers will be able to offer better travel tips (so to speak) if they know where you are headed.
A general thought:
It is often said that expediters should treat their business as a business, and most expediters would agree with that statement and may even say of course they do that. But do you really? What does it mean exactly to treat your business as a business? That question is not so easy to answer if you have never owned and operated a business before.
The trick is to separate yourself from the business and view the business as if you were another person or as if you were looking at the business from afar. Imagine that you are not looking at your business but at another expediter's business. If you were evaluating another expediter's business, like a banker or accountant or business consultant would, you would look at that person's time management, work habits, ongoing business skill development, bookkeeping practices and, of course, the books and records of the business itself.
Even if you operate a sole proprietorship, it's not about how you are doing, it's how the business is doing. It's not about how you feel or what you believe about how other people (dispatchers, shippers, EO forum participants) treat you. It's about the health of the business. You gauge that by looking at your business numbers (tax returns, operating costs, % of time in service, etc.).
There are expediters that will argue otherwise, but I suggest the most important number of all is the bottom line on your personal balance sheet. At the end of the reporting period (generally a year, more often if you wish), did your business revenue and expenses add to or detract from your personal net worth?
If a team was in business for say three years and that team's net worth stayed even or declined in that time, is that a business you would buy? Is that a business you would recommend the team continue?
Treating your business like a business is about the numbers. It is not about the emotional rewards of seeing the country or spending time together (two of Diane's and my reasons for getting into expediting). Expediting is a for-profit business and it should be treated as such if you want to improve your financial lot in life.