I once came out here with a van, a sleeping bag, a lap top, and 600 dollars in my pocket. I used five hundred of that to drive from CA to Bolt headquarters in OH. Left on Friday night and was just in time for orientation at 5 AM the following Monday morning. I pulled into Toledo sometime late Sunday night, took a shower, got some sleep and there I was. I lived off advances for 6-7 weeks and worked every single day until I had finally made 12k in savings. It can be done, but you have to be crazy to do what I did. No money in the bank, and no credit cards. One breakdown, heck, just one blown tire would have left me stranded and out of business. Looking back now just lets me know how stupid I really was. I didn't care about the read this many pages, or have this backup money, or any logic. I just made it happen. But I was one lucky SOB. I'd never attempt to try that again.
You have to figure out what the business is before you try and conquer it as a company owner. You need to have your DOT number active for at least a year before most carriers will even agree to sign you on as a partner carrier. That means no business for the first year, but a big expense in insurance payments. Getting signed on as a partner carrier might seem like a big deal, but it's merely the beginning. A lot of carriers have a small handful of companies that they automatically award their loads to as long as the bid is competitive. Even if your bid is better, they will still award the load to their favorite carrier. That is because they don't know you and don't trust you yet. One day, they will have no one else to call upon and they will finally accept your bid, perhaps for a shorter load. Then you will begin to prove yourself to them over a few more loads. That is when you will finally become a player. Also, every broker will pay at different times and you have to hunt down your own money. Sometimes you will straight up get ripped off.
A carrier/broker is going to pay all of their biggest accounts/customers first. They could care less about a new start-up carrier getting paid. They will hold off as long as possible on paying you your money. Not all are like this. Load -1, Panther, and even quite a few of the smaller carriers also have good reputations for paying in 30 days. Bolt is another carrier that pays promptly. I know which carriers pay and which ones are slow because I've dealt with them all. This is a crazy game to get into. If you're just going to operate your own truck, it might simply be cheaper to run for a carrier. You have to have more than one truck on the road to make owning a company worth it. How are you going to book new loads while you're driving and sleeping? Just owning a company, you can be online booking loads for 18 hours a day. There's little time for anything else. Some of these loads are posted and already awarded to carriers within seconds of being posted. You have to be lightening fast. Sometimes you will bid on 30 loads a day and not even get one response. It is a brutal business.
That being said. This is how it can be done. You get your company set up, LLC or INC. Then you get your insurance and operating authority DOT number. While you're aging your company, you sign onto a carrier that allows you to run for them or even them and other carriers. If you choose to run for one solid carrier, you need to find one that requires their O/O's to provide their own cargo insurance. You will be able to run for them even if you are your own carrier with your own authority. That is how you build up your time in business while learning the ropes and making money at the same time. From there, ask a lot of questions. Learn as much as you can about the source of the loads you are moving. Then start to build up your business. That is the only way you're going to be able to do it.