Tennesseehawk said,
>Scott is giving straight scoop. My biggest logic for the
>business is:
>There comes a point in time that sitting ends up costing
>more than the fuel to dh back to the zone. Everyone of us
>has to figure out that point.
That's true. Also note that expediters run with different carriers, run in different size trucks, and run in truck that are equipped differently than others; and some drivers have different credentials than others.
A carrier with a national reach may be able to keep a truck quite busy in California where California would be dead-man's land for a regional carrier that runs mostly East. Team drivers often get longer range loads than solo drivers do. Some carriers make HAZMAT training available that rises above the standard CDL HAZMAT endorsement. Drivers that have it avail themselves to more loads than drivers that don't. A reefer-equipped truck opens drivers to freight non-reefers cannot haul. A D-unit can carry loads a C or B unit cannot. A lift gate on the truck opens you to yet another class of freight.
While there may be six trucks on the board in a given location, if you are the only truck with certain equipment or credentials, your next-load prospects may well be better than the others.
Newbies should know that there is no final answer as to what areas are good or bad, until you know what carrier you are running for, what kind of truck you will be driving, what your credentials will be, and how your truck will be equipped. An area that is dead for one carrier may be quite busy for another. A particular city may be slow some days, days of the week (weekends), or seasons and very busy on others.
No matter how your truck is equipped or what carrier you run with, there will be days where you will have to make the sit-or-deadhead decision. And it's not just freight availability that enters in. In the example I gave above, one factor that entered into our decision to sit was our need to stop running for a bit and get started on your year-end paperwork. In this case, time sitting was put to productive use. In other cases, time sitting may be used to take in a tourist attraction or simply to rest.
Freight rates also enter in. If you are willing to run say a D-unit at a dollar a mile, you will stay busy as a bee...until you go broke. Sometimes it is wiser to decline cheap freight, even if it means sitting a while more. Other times a dollar-a-mile load may be gladly received (OK, maybe not gladly, but accepted just the same) because it gets you out of a slow area.
It is common for expediter wannabees to say they are willing to run the wheels off their truck once they get in it; and they are sincere. Newbies should also note that waiting for freight is a fact of life in expediting. Be prepared to do it.