My personal best telephone wait time with the Cat for "All of our professionals are busy helping others..." to answer my call is 27 minutes. I am sure others can top this. Are all Expedite companies like this?
No, dancorn, all expedite companies are not like this.
FedEx Custom Critical was slow to answer the phone and often indirect or evasive when we called them for info but when we moved to Landstar, that stopped. The difference is in the system and in the respect companies have for their contractors.
At Landstar, self-employed independent agents get the business and dispatch the trucks. The company takes care of things like compliance, recruiting, orientation, HAZMAT training, etc. When we'd call the company about such things, we seldom were put on hold for long. If the phone was not answered and we left a message, calls were promptly returned.
Communication about loads was spectacular because the agents who dispatch the trucks are the same agents who call on customers to book the business. Agents do not work at the company headquarters building. They work in small offices at locations all over the country. In the interests of customer service, these agents know the importance of answering the phone quickly and they always had the needed information at hand.
It was often the case at Landstar pickups that the shipper had personally met the agent we were dealing with. That is because, to develop the account, the agent had visited the company, met the people and toured the site.
Staff at FedEx CC is often recruited from the high school nearby or customer service positions at other companies in the area. Those who stick around work their way up through the ranks and some become dispatchers. That gives you a system where dispatchers who have not even been in, say New Mexico, are serving customers there. With Landstar, it is almost certain that the agent who is dispatching freight from a large New Mexico shipper is personally familiar with the shipper's facility because he or she has been there.
Another difference is in what Landstar expects of and trusts its contractors with that FedEx CC did not. It was refreshing to talk directly with shippers and consignees to do our own pick up and delivery confirmation calls. They can provided directions and parking tips in ways no one else can. Often, they provided additional info about the load that enabled us to adjust schedules for the better. We did not have to call dispatch for such info because we talked directly to the customers we served.
Think about it. If you are a company that dispatches 500 loads a day and you require your drivers to make departure calls and dispatchers to make confirmation calls on every pickup and delivery, that is 1,500 phone calls going into and out of dispatch every day; 1,500 phone calls!!!
How many people do you have to hire and support to handle that many calls? At Landstar HQ, the answer is zero because agents manage the phone calling, not centralized dispatch.
At the agencies, the phone call count is greatly reduced because the drivers make the confirmation calls and departure calls are not required. Some agents liked to be notified when a pickup was made and drivers would call then if they wanted their fuel card loaded by the agent. But beyond that, the call count is greatly reduced.
When we made such calls, they were brief. "This is Phil in Truck 3772. Your pickup at (shipper name and location) is complete. We are on our way. Thank you (agent name) for this piece of business." If we got voice mail, that was the message we left. There was no need to hold and no need to call back.
If something happened like the consgnee called to change the delivery time, there was no need to notify anyone. The consignee already knew and we knew. The agent cared only that the consgnee was well served. This reduced the number of calls and freed up everyone's telephone for other uses. One agent told us once that she could tell when someone had come to Landstar new from FedEx because the newbies always felt the need to notify her about every little thing. It took a little adjusting to get past that and get used to the idea that we were trusted and empowered with more at Landstar.
Companies with large, centralized dispatch systems are more complex and less direct. Where you have dispatchers, you also have managers and managers above them. Where Landstar agents are on the street developing good customers and on the phone developing good relationships with drivers, a hierarchy of managers at a large, centralized-dispatch company is continually viewing the cost center and profit center numbers and fiddling around with policy changes intended to make the managers look good.
Such companies end up with dispatch departments that feature voluminous policy manuals, employee scorecards, scheduled reviews, company parties to improve employee morale and other such bureaucratic trappings. Landstar agencies are small in comparison, often tiny such that some very big agents work out of their home offices.
A network of independent BCO's (contractors) and independent agents (seasoned professionals who have developed a strong book over the years) is naturally predisposed to be more efficient and effective in telephone use than companies that have large, centralized dispatch systems.