Without numbers hard to get an answer. Miles and rate...Just signed on with a company, I'll leave them nameless for now, frieghts cheap , and hard to cone by, they are telling the the markets weak. Anyone else having trouble right now? (In cargo van)
I consider anything below 85 a bad rate, last three runs where under 300 miles and under 75
I'd take a buck in and 75 out for a rolling average of about .87....Maybe out of Laredo if I got $1.25 or better going down
Then that's good eh?Don't forget to divide all your gross by 2, then that is most likely what you really earned.
Ouch.I consider anything below 85 a bad rate, last three runs where under 300 miles and under 75
Just signed on with a company, I'll leave them nameless for now, frieghts cheap , and hard to cone by, they are telling the the markets weak. Anyone else having trouble right now? (In cargo van)
Thing is you don't know under what conditions those loads were eaccepted under!
I dispatch. Today I bid a van load out of Phoenix to El Paso for a small straight that was happy to get fuel money. Bid it at .59 and a van bid lower. Bid another out of Tucson to Roswell NM at .72, broker said he got it covered cheaper. How anyone with a van can stay in business is beyond me. Deadheaded the small straight to El Paso.
Why not? What's your problem? If a cv has a cpm of .30 he is making a .29 profit .... Not a lot mind you but it is a profit.... And it's his business to run as he pleasesDoes any of those make it ok?
Drive home empty because I refuse to run cheap. All miles put wear and tear on my van, but driving home empty does not put any wear and tear on my van. When you run a load for 60 cents per mile, and you then tack on the 50 cent per mile write off at the end of the year, you're actually making 1.10 per mile. Not bad, not bad at all!Here's an example; you are in Laredo, it's Tuesday ,you must be home by the weekend a load opportunity comes up going to Kansas City ...right close to home problem is shipper only wants to pay $.60 a mile what do you do ?