It is kind of dumb running for two or three carriers. Not to mention the fact that you have to pay extremely high insurance rates just to make .85 cents per mile. It's much better to work for one company than it is to deal with three different dispatch teams each and every day. Then you have some of the companies who claim they allow you to work with other carriers, but they get mad when you take a load from someone else. They end up dropping you because you only do one or two loads for them a month. Or they end up dropping you because you turn down short rums. When you are paying for primary liability insurance and cargo insurance, you have the right to turn any load down.
The audacity of these small companies forcing you to pay for your own cargo insurance and then acting like they own your truck. That right there is bull. Then you have to worry about tracking your money down from three different payroll departments. Not to mention the fact that a lot of the smaller companies are going belly up all of the time. Why would you risk your money by working with a rinky dink company operating on a shoestring budget?
The only reason why a smaller company would need to share their trucks with another carrier is because they don't have enough business to keep their trucks busy. Also, a lot of the guys who run for multiple carriers aren't professional enough to work for the bigger companies. They jump carriers a lot, they are foreigners, they sometimes have criminal backgrounds, and they have older equipment that the bigger companies won't even touch. I know, I used to run one of those small companies.
You might feel like an outlaw running for multiple carriers, but in the end you're just spinning your wheels. You're aren't going to make any more or less than a driver who is leased on with one really good carrier. You're calling tons of people every day and working twice as hard just to earn a living. And for those one guy in a cargo van deals running their own loads. You are going to spend 400 a month in insurance, 250 for Sylectus, and all of the other bills that come with being a carrier just to make an extra ten cents per mile. Then that extra ten cents per miles that you earn goes right back out in insurance bills and factoring fees.
Just find one really good company, lease on with them, and hang in there. The best company I've worked for to date is Bolt Express. I made money there and they never played games with me. They made driving my truck easy and fun. It should be fun when you're out there on the road. You should never have to worry about whether or not you're going to get paid, you should get fuel advances, and you should never have to worry about trying to serve and please 3 different dispatch offices. When things are slow, even having 10 dispatchers isn't going to get you a load! Some people might bash me for changing my tune, but I have seen the light!