lightning66
Rookie Expediter
What should i pay a salesman for getting me new jobs for expediting? if commision how much? and do i pay once or continue as long as the job lasts?
When you use the term "salesman", do you mean a broker that procures freight for you to haul or a recruiter that finds a fleet owner to drive for or to lease on with a carrier the recruiter represents?
no.. i just have a guy thats good at sales going to cold call factorys and walk ins..any imput would help.... thank you
Selling Expediting Services........
Might want to look into getting your Brokerage Permits First..........
You don't have to be a broker to solicit direct work from shippers. All you need to have is contract carrier authority and your liability and cargo insurance up to date. You can't legally broker out any loads that you can't cover with one of your own trucks. But as long as it is one of your company trucks picking up the load directly from the shipper, all you need is the contract carrier authority.
Thanks blizzard he and i are both going to drive my vans too .. but if he gets us jobs say even by word of mouth what would be fair to pay him?
One inexperienced hand leading the other to the poor house.
If your supplying the insurance and his expenses, the going rate for a broker salesman is 10-15% off the top of the bill. Thats in my area. That's for every load you haul from his account. So whats the difference between paying him than paying someone who is experienced and can get you backhauls?
I hope you're not calling me inexperienced. I have more experience than a lot of people on EO combined. Just because I got sick, went into the hospital, and had to sign off on one of my companies doesn't mean I'm inexperienced. And as for the percentages, it all depends on the company. Also, you have to pay your salesman his percentage for as long as that customer uses you to move their freight.
I usually pay the salesman/broker agent 60 percent if the salesman/broker agent books the loads and monitors them. If the salesman/broker agent just wants to find the customers, set up the accounts, and do nothing in the way of booking, brokering, or managing those accounts, I would pay that salesman 20-30 percent for finding the account.
Sometimes having a good sales agent can make a big difference in how fast your company grows. Also make sure you have the infrastructure in place to handle all of the business that will be coming in. You can't manage 15 loads a day as a single person operation. You are going to need dispatchers, salesman, and dedicated customer service representatives. If you try and get too big too fast you will not provide good customer service and you will lose the new accounts. I hope this helps some.
Where in blue blazes do you see your name anywhere on that post. Your in Michigan I'm in SC and all depends on what the salemans job entails. Stop taking everything personnel.