exactly Edster...a paid mile is a paid mile......no DH there
That's an elegant way to put it. Instead of thinking about loaded miles and empty miles, think about paid miles and unpaid miles.
Scenario 1: (true story) Agent calls and askes us to "deadhead" from home in Minnesota (near Twin Cities) to Northern Minnesota to pick up a load and deliver it in remote Canada. Closest freight centers from there are Minneapolis or Seattle. Our price: $1.95 for all miles. That includes deadhead (running empty) from home to the pickup, loaded to the delivery and another 1,000+ "deadhead" miles to Seattle.
Result: All miles were paid miles. Revenue-wise, it did not matter how many miles we had freight on the truck. It mattered only how much we were paid for the load.
Scenario 2 (true story): Back when we were with FedEx Custom Critical we received a load offer to deadhead from Chicago to pick up in New Hampshire (about 1,000 miles) and run loaded from there to a California delivery (about 3,000 miles). FedEx specifically calculated the deadhead miles rate and the loaded miles rate and paid us that combined amount. The deadhead rate was significantly lower than the loaded miles rate but overall, the load paid enough to make it worth taking.
Result: All miles were paid miles. We ignored the deadhead and loaded distinction and instead looked at total miles and total pay. Looking at those two numbers only we made the accept/decline decision. While FedEx made a distinction between deadhead and loaded, we considered the offer in terms of the paid miles that began in Chicago and ended in California.
Scenario 3 (hypothetical): You receive a load offer to deadhead few if any miles from your present location to the pick up. The load pays say $2.00 a mile for 1,000 miles but delivers in Billings, Montana where next-load prospects are poor. Your carrier sucks when it comes to getting freight in western states so the best strategy is to deadhead 800 miles to Minneapolis after the delivery.
Result: All miles are paid miles. You consider all miles. One thousand miles to Billings plus 800 to Minneapolis. That gives you $2,000 pay for 1,800 miles, or $1.11 per mile when all miles are viewed as paid miles. Knowing your cost per mile, you can decide if that $2,000 is worth earning or not.
Scenario 4 (hypothetical): You are lay over a weekend in Memphis after delivering there in Friday. You drive 15 miles from your Memphis delivery to West Memphis to get to the truck stops. You drive another 15 miles on Sunday to get groceries and return to the truck stops. On Monday ymorning you wake up in service and available but get skunked. Now upset, you decide to drive 400 miles to get home and wait for freight there.
Result: All 430 miles are unpaid miles; 30s miles in and around Memphis while on layover, 400 miles to get home.