LastChance2
Active Expediter
I say beating a dead horse, but I'm not here to get advice about multiple carriers, but rather to debunk a fairly recent post I read from another member about how he would have to have proof that running for multiple carriers is more lucrative than running for one good one.
Well, I can only speak for myself and two drivers that I have, but this is my experience, take it for what it's worth.
We had been driving for another owner for a while and then bought two units of our own and put them on the road in April and then August of this past year.
We started out running for the same two carriers that we had run with with the other owner (who lost his rear end in this business for whatever reason) and then I beat the bushes and found two more to add a couple of months into it.
Without naming names, here were our totals for the year (since April anyway) of 2012.
Carrier 1: $11,974.99 gross (original broker)
Carrier 2: $15,809.00 gross (original broker)
Carrier 3: $16,185.45 gross (broker added June)
Carrier 4: $9,127.20 gross (broker added in August)
We had another broker that I didn't list because we only did one run for them, and they have been discussed on here ad nauseum and I won't go there at this time. Just see posts about a broker who doesn't believe that a driver has the right to know what the load pay is until they get their paycheck. We don't work for free and wait for a surprise when we get paid, no way, no how.
Now, I have of course shared more information on there than most people would on themselves or would feel comfortable doing, but I don't mind, because it doesn't hurt me to tell you how we're doing.
I don't think running for one broker could have grossed us the $54,000 we made in just eight months that running for four has.
Of course, this is just an opinion and my own personal experience, but I like having all four of our brokers call our drivers and ask to bid on the same load. Some are set in their rates, and some have a good enough reputation in order to get a higher rate, so let them fight it out. Believe it or not, the broker who usually bids it at our higher rate is usually the one who gets it. Not sure why, but I figure reputation has a lot to do with it. We don't run for a single sponsor of this site and the four we run for have had good things said about them on here (and of course there are always the disheartened who have something ugly to say, that's their prerogative).
So to those who think that running for one good carrier can be as lucrative as running for multiple carriers, this is our experience and maybe we're just an exception to the rule, but I think not.
Have a great day everyone. Have one truck headed to Louisiana and another to Dallas. My two units already have approximately 3,500 miles between them for this new year and I'm hoping for greater things to come!
Well, I can only speak for myself and two drivers that I have, but this is my experience, take it for what it's worth.
We had been driving for another owner for a while and then bought two units of our own and put them on the road in April and then August of this past year.
We started out running for the same two carriers that we had run with with the other owner (who lost his rear end in this business for whatever reason) and then I beat the bushes and found two more to add a couple of months into it.
Without naming names, here were our totals for the year (since April anyway) of 2012.
Carrier 1: $11,974.99 gross (original broker)
Carrier 2: $15,809.00 gross (original broker)
Carrier 3: $16,185.45 gross (broker added June)
Carrier 4: $9,127.20 gross (broker added in August)
We had another broker that I didn't list because we only did one run for them, and they have been discussed on here ad nauseum and I won't go there at this time. Just see posts about a broker who doesn't believe that a driver has the right to know what the load pay is until they get their paycheck. We don't work for free and wait for a surprise when we get paid, no way, no how.
Now, I have of course shared more information on there than most people would on themselves or would feel comfortable doing, but I don't mind, because it doesn't hurt me to tell you how we're doing.
I don't think running for one broker could have grossed us the $54,000 we made in just eight months that running for four has.
Of course, this is just an opinion and my own personal experience, but I like having all four of our brokers call our drivers and ask to bid on the same load. Some are set in their rates, and some have a good enough reputation in order to get a higher rate, so let them fight it out. Believe it or not, the broker who usually bids it at our higher rate is usually the one who gets it. Not sure why, but I figure reputation has a lot to do with it. We don't run for a single sponsor of this site and the four we run for have had good things said about them on here (and of course there are always the disheartened who have something ugly to say, that's their prerogative).
So to those who think that running for one good carrier can be as lucrative as running for multiple carriers, this is our experience and maybe we're just an exception to the rule, but I think not.
Have a great day everyone. Have one truck headed to Louisiana and another to Dallas. My two units already have approximately 3,500 miles between them for this new year and I'm hoping for greater things to come!