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By the same token, as a broker I don't mark up a shipment that can be covered in one call the same as one that is a real pain in the butt and needs babysitting.
In general what do you all carriers like to see, 1.60-1.65-1.70-1.75-1.80?
I am talking about both inbound and outbound combined.
Looking for general opinion.
Thanks!
i would guess that poor roca is another mileage based trucker trying to figure out why hard work is not paying off, and is curious to find out what shippers are paying.i guess these rates are why thers no money in trucking .i burn 1ltr a mile thats $1.20 a mile if the rate was 1.80 a mile the .60 cents left over is for retierment. some people arnt helping the industy. 4.00 a mile to the truck
yeah I've notice you can cover 700 miles to the carolinas for $1000 but can't move to MA or CT for $1000 lol, full loads.
So I guess rates really depend on the carrier and on the day.
Roca, there are many factors we use to rate our service. I think it would be very difficult to give you an average rate per mile that would be of any use. There are just too many variables such as below.
1. Mileage
2. Fuel cost for the region
3. Tolls / taxes
4. Team or Single drivers
5. Commodity/weight
6. Load value/insurance requirement
7. Customer Payment Terms/History
8. Return Loads
9. Shipper/Consignee hours of operation
10. Loading/Unloading time
11. Stat holidays
12. Security
13. Staging/handling
14. Appointments
We are fortunate enough to keep the bulk of our fleet moving with dedicated clients. This has limited our availability for 3rd party freight but we have not forgotten our roots. If not for the better Brokers we would not be here today. Thank you all and yes we are always looking for outbound.
You forgot to include a profit in your rate. Profit is not dirty word lol...
Most of today's carriers don't operate for profit, I think they do it to get out of the house and keep the cob-webs off the truck. The best information I was ever told was by an old truck company owner back in the late 70's and it was quote " What ever fuel cost per gallon is how much you have to be paid per mile other-wise leave it parked" end quote. This is a very good base for figuring your mileage rates. Remember the truck cost just as much out-bound as it does in-bound.
Good theroy Rick but fuel was 70 cpg and even BJ and the Bear wanted a buck a mile!!
In general what do you all carriers like to see, 1.60-1.65-1.70-1.75-1.80?
I am talking about both inbound and outbound combined.
Looking for general opinion.
Thanks!
I'm relieved that not one person has said "Way of the road" yet.
I think a lot of carriers forget that when you quote competitively, profit becomes less of a factor and it becomes more about getting business (or keeping it as the case may be.) You may find yourself bidding on something and getting it, and then someone else thinks "that's cheap." One person's cheap is another person's competitive. It depends on where you think your competition is at, or what rates they are really pitching. This is why automotive carriers will not survive the next downturn because they expect everyone to pay what GM and Ford pays, but finds out that the open market (brokers on Link Logistics) do not pay those kinds of rates. They should make their profit while they can because they're going to need it. Profit can exist while being competitive. The trouble is some carriers that try to increase profit by reducing cost (read: laying off drivers and staff) end up shortchanging themselves in the end by capacity issues and overworking staff, rather than making money by doing things smarter.
Here's what I see is the problem, summarized:
Drivers work for someone and say, "I'm not making any money. I'm going to buy my own truck and be an owner-operator. Then I'll make money."
Owner-operators work for someone and say, "I'm not making any money. I'm going to buy a few trucks, put drivers in them and then I'll make money."
Those guys become trucking company owners and say, "I'm not making any money. I'm going to buy another trucking company and then I'll make money."
The trouble is that they all say they don't make money and part of it is not realizing they ARE making money, just not Donald Trump money. The other part is what expectations are. Some drivers want more than 42 cents a mile and some owners don't think 25% gross profit on a truckload is enough. So do these people know what is realistic? You'd think not.