Too many headaches for my liking. I could possibly get my own customers, but with only one van to service them there are bound to be problems. So, running under another carrier's authorities makes good sense for me anyway. I negotiate a contract with ONE customer, namely the carrier I drive for, and the company handles the rest of it from there.
One thing that I notice in talks with my guy, is that it's not just how much per mile you're making, but when are you gonna get paid. Some of these customers have as much as 100 days between when you performed the service and when they pay you for it. That's a lot of time to sit on a receivable, and while the money may be coming the problem is that you have to pay for fuel, maintenance, tollway fares and all the rest of it up front. You need a huge amount of money behind you before even thinking of opening up as a one-man carrier, just to get you through the first months of having to spend money like it's water and getting paid in--- a while. It's hard enough driving for somebody else as an IC, but at least when you're driving for a carrier rather than as one, you have somebody else doing the work of getting/keeping customers, getting those customers to pay and so on. The good ones get you insured as well, so you have that monkey taken off of your back. That's something to think about.