From Thompson Financial News this morning:
"Oil prices have soared by almost 20 percent since the beginning of the month, extending a long-term rally that has seen prices more than double since the beginning of 2007."
At the pumps, diesel prices have not matched crude oil prices exactly but are following the same trend.
National average retail price per gallon for on-highway diesel fuel (all types):
$4.497 May 19, 2008
$2.803 May 21, 2007
In other words, you are paying 60.4% more for diesel fuel today than you were a year ago.
1. How many cents per mile does fuel add to your total cost per mile?
2. Of your total costs per mile, what percentage is now attributable to fuel?
3. A year ago, how much did you require your carrier or customers to pay per mile to move your truck?
4. Today, how much do you require your carrier or customers to pay per mile to move your truck?
5. How much does it cost you per day to sit (fixed costs)?
Say you delivered in a marginal freight center on Friday afternoon. It is unlikely that you will be dispatched on a load out of there over the weekend. If you do not relocate, you could be there until Tuesday or Wednesday before a pickup in that area is dispatched to you. Also say a busy freight center is 400 miles away. If you deadhead there, you might get a load dispatched to you over the weekend. If not, it is very likely that you will get freight to haul on Monday.
How will you decide what to do? Do you have the cost per mile and fixed cost numbers to use?
The business of expediting is not as forgiving as it used to be. Owner-operators who can answer these questions are better equipped to make money-making decisions. If you cannot answer these questions, your business may be swirling in the bowl and you may not even know it. By the time you realize you are going down the drain, it will be too late to do anything about it.
If you do not know what your cost per mile and fixed costs are, and how much you need to charge to earn a profit, one of the best things you can do with your spare time this week is figure it out.
Or, you can pass yet another day reading EO, watching TV,
talking on the phone, and talking with other drivers about how tough the times are. The choice is yours. Only, when you wash out of the business, don't talk only about how fuel prices increased. Talk also about how your business skills didn't.
Your free time is exactly that; free. It will not cost you a dime to study your expenses and figure out your fixed costs and cost per mile. But doing so can be one of the most lucrative things you ever do.
"Oil prices have soared by almost 20 percent since the beginning of the month, extending a long-term rally that has seen prices more than double since the beginning of 2007."
At the pumps, diesel prices have not matched crude oil prices exactly but are following the same trend.
National average retail price per gallon for on-highway diesel fuel (all types):
$4.497 May 19, 2008
$2.803 May 21, 2007
In other words, you are paying 60.4% more for diesel fuel today than you were a year ago.
1. How many cents per mile does fuel add to your total cost per mile?
2. Of your total costs per mile, what percentage is now attributable to fuel?
3. A year ago, how much did you require your carrier or customers to pay per mile to move your truck?
4. Today, how much do you require your carrier or customers to pay per mile to move your truck?
5. How much does it cost you per day to sit (fixed costs)?
Say you delivered in a marginal freight center on Friday afternoon. It is unlikely that you will be dispatched on a load out of there over the weekend. If you do not relocate, you could be there until Tuesday or Wednesday before a pickup in that area is dispatched to you. Also say a busy freight center is 400 miles away. If you deadhead there, you might get a load dispatched to you over the weekend. If not, it is very likely that you will get freight to haul on Monday.
How will you decide what to do? Do you have the cost per mile and fixed cost numbers to use?
The business of expediting is not as forgiving as it used to be. Owner-operators who can answer these questions are better equipped to make money-making decisions. If you cannot answer these questions, your business may be swirling in the bowl and you may not even know it. By the time you realize you are going down the drain, it will be too late to do anything about it.
If you do not know what your cost per mile and fixed costs are, and how much you need to charge to earn a profit, one of the best things you can do with your spare time this week is figure it out.
Or, you can pass yet another day reading EO, watching TV,
talking on the phone, and talking with other drivers about how tough the times are. The choice is yours. Only, when you wash out of the business, don't talk only about how fuel prices increased. Talk also about how your business skills didn't.
Your free time is exactly that; free. It will not cost you a dime to study your expenses and figure out your fixed costs and cost per mile. But doing so can be one of the most lucrative things you ever do.
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