Turning Over In Their Seats

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
Partial article...
Turning Over In Their Seats | Journal of Commerce
William B. Cassidy | Dec 19, 2011 5:00AM GMT
The Journal of Commerce Magazine - News Story


Truck drivers are leaving their jobs at a breakneck rate, leaving carriers scrambling to keep up with rising demand

Need proof the economy is on the mend? The driver turnover rate at large truckload carriers hit 89 percent in the third quarter, and it’s heading higher as trucking speeds toward......
 

ATeam

Senior Member
Retired Expediter
Be careful about how you interpret driver turnover statistics.

From a single carrier's point of view, a driver who comes in and quits in the same year has a 100 percent turnover rate. But where does the driver go? Does he or she leave the business or go to another carrier? Carrier turnover statistics do not say. Carrier turnover statistics only talk about the drivers who come and go from a particular carrier. A job-hopping driver who joins and leaves three carriers in a year would produce the individual 100 percent statistic three times in the same year.

Consider the case of Expediter Services where they moved a number of trucks from Express-1 to FedEx Custom Critical, and then did it again by moving a number of trucks from Panther to FedEx Custom Critical. The multiple exits from Panther and Express-1 would show up in their turnover stats but regarding the number of trucks and drivers in the industry, did anything change at all?

I am told that the surge of red trucks moving into FedEx Custom Critical prompted a number of contractors to leave. While their departure would show up in FedEx's turnover statistics, most of them would have gone to other carriers. Again, the turnover stats were affected, but industry-wide, did anything change at all?

With new people coming in and old people retiring or moving on to different careers, there will always be a certain amount of industry turnover. But the fact that drivers are moving frequently among carriers does not necessarily mean they are lost to the industry.

Carrier turnover and industry turnover are two different things and I have never seen an industry turnover stat. Driver turnover within a carrier is what it is. The combined turnover stats of all carriers are what they are.

However, high driver turnover stats do not indicate that a driver shortage is at hand. Indicators of a driver shortage would be freight sitting on docks because drivers cannot be found to move it, and trucks sitting idle in carrier yards because people cannot be found to drive them, and companies calling expediting carriers desperate to move freight at any price and offering $4.00 a mile to get Diane and me to haul their freight and not someone else's.

As I look around, I see the freight still moving and the trucks still rolling. Carrier profits are rising because truck capacity is tightening but trucks are not sitting for lack of drivers. High driver turnover, yes. But an industry wide driver shortage? I'm not so sure.

The Journal of Commerce article suggests that the turnover rate is proof that the economy is on the mend. While I agree that the economy is on the mend, I don't see how the driver turnover rate reported by carriers indicates it.
 
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OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
There was a corresponding partial article about calculating the turnover rate...

I see the housing market has slowwwly increased since October...which is a good sign...
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
OVM,

If you are going to provide links to some article, make sure that we don't have to be a member to see them. :eek:

I agree with Phil, if there was anything close to a driver shortage, we would see freight sitting on thee docks. I feel the fallacy is more of a driver who is willing to work for nothing shortage more than anything else.
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
OVM,

If you are going to provide links to some article, make sure that we don't have to be a member to see them. :eek:

I agree with Phil, if there was anything close to a driver shortage, we would see freight sitting on thee docks. I feel the fallacy is more of a driver who is willing to work for nothing shortage more than anything else.

I figured....since we have a few "experts" here...they'd finish the story with their own ending...;)
 

blizzard2014

Veteran Expediter
Driver
I generally turn-over in my seat when i'm taking a cat nap at a rest area and I get tired of the arm rest poking my ribs. lol.

I hope driver turn-over is not calculated in the same way that the federal government calculates the unemployment rate. ha ha...then those numbers could be a lot higher than what is actually being reported. It's kind of like trying to plug a hole on a small fishing boat.
 
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Monty

Expert Expediter
It's called "churning" ... any carrier out there will haver at least 10-15% of the bottom of their drivers change.

When one looks at the top percentages, we find drivers and operators that have a long, happy relationship with most carriers.
 

Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
Turnover rate is a measure of driver retention. The high turnover rate doesn't indicate a driver shortage per se, but rather indicates an increased demand and competition for drivers. Due to the economic recovery, as well as CSA regulations, the market for good, quality drivers tightens up, and turnover rates increase. As demand for freight continues to rise, you can expect the need for quality drivers to become more acute going forward, especially if (and as) regulations either force current drivers out of the industry or force fleets to put more trucks on the road to cover the increased freight demand.

Essentially, the high turnover rate can be mostly attributed to competition for top-notch drivers at large trucking companies, which has steadily picked up over the past year. Since trucking companies continually try to lure drivers with more benefits and signing and driver referral bonuses, drivers hop from company to company in search of better compensation.
 
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