So Tom, I wonder where I fall into this?
I am not the lucky driver or a fleet owner but a persistent owner who sees the opportunities all over the place and I have to think outside of the box to survive. I also set my own rules, they fit my needs as I define my needs which were not created by some expert who never left their comfort zone.
I am not with a company like FedEx where I am just part of the fleet and don't have to just put in where I want to layover into the qualcomm and wait for a call.
I'm part of a company where there is an accountability only to myself simply because I have to sell myself and my truck to people who either call me or don't with their loads based on my salesmanship. If I can't sell what I have to offer, I fail but haven't yet. I don't have that luxury to have the employee mentality that a number of companies like many of their drivers to have, I have had to learn quickly about the realities of this business and make decisions to change things on the fly. My reality is that I compete with vans more often than not because of my size and what I can haul and I have to make sure that I am doing whats right for me first, customer second.
My truck is old but it works and knowing that that the shipper does not ever care what hauls the freight, I have not trapped myself by some shallow vanity or a sick form of elitism that is prevalent within some companies and groups in this business.
I was called a failure by the "expert" who neither had to deal with competition nor worked outside of the box of their comfort zone. I complain not to complain but to find solutions through responses by others and the outcome is sometimes people learn from my reality.
By the way Tom, I found out there are a lot of people in this business just like me. They have weathered the storm not being a driver or a fleet owner but being a plain old truck owner and driver. They learned to think outside of the box that help them survive and leverage opportunities that others can not.
Excellent post greg.