Teflon, I'm with ya. The inefficiencies can drive ya crazy. I can only winder how many additional loads the company could have hauled if they didn't have so many hours wasted by trucks deadheading and then sitting and doing nothing while waiting to pick up non-existent freight.
As for border crossings, a dedicated team in the office for that is a must. Panther, and probably other companies, often have a misplaced sense of urgency at times. You get a load from South Carolina to Chicago and the pester the pee out of you the whole way, god forbid you stop for fuel or something and they want to know if everything is alright cause you're ignition is showing as off.
But, get a load that crosses the border, a load that demands a great sense of urgency and attention, and they are remarkably casual, disinterested, detached, unresponsive.
That's because, at 47 miles an hour, you're not running late. And that's the problem with having normal dispatch handling a critical load like a border crossing, where a sense of urgency is crucial.
An awful lot of money is at stake with each and every border crossing. If, as a carrier (and for that matter, a driver) you can routinely cross the border in a timely fashion without any problems, then there is plenty of money to be made there. On the other hand, it's a place where a simple mistake can cost thousands in fines, not to mention lost customers. One would think that the utmost sense of urgency and an anal attention to detail would be the standard operating procedure on border crossings.
There should be a dedicated Border Crossing Team in dispatch to handle border crossings exclusively. And there should be at least one person on the team for each shift that knows the procedures cold. There should also be a single person on the team assigned to a given load, making sure everything is in order. When I accept a load offer that involves a border crossing, then any QC communications from me should be directed specifically to the computer screen of the person who is assigned my PRO, and any replies I get will always be from the same person, who is on the same page as me, and will see all of the messages between us in context. No more wasting time having conversations with 4 different people, 3 of whom are lost in Qualcomm translation.
The efficiencies of such a method cannot help but to increase revenue, both in more time available for trucks for loads, as well as more people wanting to take loads that cross the border due to the lack of hassles normally associated with it, or at the very least, a much reduced level of driver stress associated with crossing the border.
Driver Council - get to work on that right away.
As for border crossings, a dedicated team in the office for that is a must. Panther, and probably other companies, often have a misplaced sense of urgency at times. You get a load from South Carolina to Chicago and the pester the pee out of you the whole way, god forbid you stop for fuel or something and they want to know if everything is alright cause you're ignition is showing as off.
But, get a load that crosses the border, a load that demands a great sense of urgency and attention, and they are remarkably casual, disinterested, detached, unresponsive.
That's because, at 47 miles an hour, you're not running late. And that's the problem with having normal dispatch handling a critical load like a border crossing, where a sense of urgency is crucial.
An awful lot of money is at stake with each and every border crossing. If, as a carrier (and for that matter, a driver) you can routinely cross the border in a timely fashion without any problems, then there is plenty of money to be made there. On the other hand, it's a place where a simple mistake can cost thousands in fines, not to mention lost customers. One would think that the utmost sense of urgency and an anal attention to detail would be the standard operating procedure on border crossings.
There should be a dedicated Border Crossing Team in dispatch to handle border crossings exclusively. And there should be at least one person on the team for each shift that knows the procedures cold. There should also be a single person on the team assigned to a given load, making sure everything is in order. When I accept a load offer that involves a border crossing, then any QC communications from me should be directed specifically to the computer screen of the person who is assigned my PRO, and any replies I get will always be from the same person, who is on the same page as me, and will see all of the messages between us in context. No more wasting time having conversations with 4 different people, 3 of whom are lost in Qualcomm translation.
The efficiencies of such a method cannot help but to increase revenue, both in more time available for trucks for loads, as well as more people wanting to take loads that cross the border due to the lack of hassles normally associated with it, or at the very least, a much reduced level of driver stress associated with crossing the border.
Driver Council - get to work on that right away.