This is a reply to CCDriver's post in the FedEx Custom Critical forum in which only FCC people can post (thus my post here).
CCDriver, your detailed post about the things FCC dispatchers do or are expected to do highlight the difference between that system and the system we immediately appreciated more when we changed from FCC to Landstar Express America.
The core difference is that at LEAM, the agent who books the load with the customer is the same person who books the truck for the load. The same person is talking to driver and shipper both so the attention to detail and courtesies you seek are more easily provided.
Another core difference is that LEAM trusts its contractors (BCO's) to talk to customers and do directly the load confirms. This made things so much better for us. We loved it.
Examples:
In our usual practice of confirming delivery soon after the pick up, we learned from the consignee that while delivery could not be completed until the morning, we could park at the dock and spend the night there. The dock was behind a locked gate and the consignee gave us the combination to the lock so we could let ourselves in.
It happened occasionally that the consignee would be working late and was pleased to accept delivery that evening instead of waiting to accept delivery in the morning.
It happened occasionally that a load was straight-through but the consignee told us that they were closed overnight and delivery could not be made until morning. That gave us time to sleep, do laundry or do whatever else made sense in the new schedule to use that time.
Shippers and consignees are usually delighted to provide very specific directions about the best routes to take into the plant and where to park. When needed, it was great to talk directly to people on the ground about such things. And we found that this was not at all unusual for the people at the docks. They are quite accustomed to taking confirmation calls from drivers.
New to the industry when we joined FCC, we had little occasion to question their dispatch system. We simply went with the flow and thought it normal that someone other than the driver would confirm pick ups and deliveries with shippers and consignees. It was quite something to see it different when we changed carriers.
CCDriver, your detailed post about the things FCC dispatchers do or are expected to do highlight the difference between that system and the system we immediately appreciated more when we changed from FCC to Landstar Express America.
The core difference is that at LEAM, the agent who books the load with the customer is the same person who books the truck for the load. The same person is talking to driver and shipper both so the attention to detail and courtesies you seek are more easily provided.
Another core difference is that LEAM trusts its contractors (BCO's) to talk to customers and do directly the load confirms. This made things so much better for us. We loved it.
Examples:
In our usual practice of confirming delivery soon after the pick up, we learned from the consignee that while delivery could not be completed until the morning, we could park at the dock and spend the night there. The dock was behind a locked gate and the consignee gave us the combination to the lock so we could let ourselves in.
It happened occasionally that the consignee would be working late and was pleased to accept delivery that evening instead of waiting to accept delivery in the morning.
It happened occasionally that a load was straight-through but the consignee told us that they were closed overnight and delivery could not be made until morning. That gave us time to sleep, do laundry or do whatever else made sense in the new schedule to use that time.
Shippers and consignees are usually delighted to provide very specific directions about the best routes to take into the plant and where to park. When needed, it was great to talk directly to people on the ground about such things. And we found that this was not at all unusual for the people at the docks. They are quite accustomed to taking confirmation calls from drivers.
New to the industry when we joined FCC, we had little occasion to question their dispatch system. We simply went with the flow and thought it normal that someone other than the driver would confirm pick ups and deliveries with shippers and consignees. It was quite something to see it different when we changed carriers.
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