Successful owner-operators know that simply running hard is not enough. If it were that easy, anyone could do the job and expect the profits to roll in.
Understand it pays to slow down and that there is a trade-off in higher costs, not to mention the increased risk, for driving fast. If driving slower takes time away from you, you can find ways of managing your time to get some of it back.
For example, you can take vacation time or plan major work on your tractor during the first week or two of the quarter (early January, April, July and October). Never take time off during the last two weeks of the quarter (or the last week of the month), when freight typically is abundant.
Sometimes it works to your advantage to look for loads that take you “through” home rather than “to” home. The latter can interrupt your revenue stream and require additional time to get back up to full speed again. As an owner-operator, you should look at time off differently from a company driver.
If a company driver takes a week off, he loses only the opportunity to make a weekly paycheck. When an owner-operator takes a week off, he has fixed expenses to pay and won’t be earning a paycheck. When he returns to work, he not only has to replace the lost income, he also must quickly cover the fixed expenses that were spent during his time off. For example, for an owner-operator with fixed costs of $100 per day, seven days off would cost $700 in payments that still have to be made.
Though truly long-haul work remains the bread and butter of many an owner-operator, opportunity in regional- and short-haul work continues to expand as average length of haul declines, as it has markedly in dry van – and, increasingly, refrigerated.
A huge move in the dry van business in the middle part of the last decade saw average length of haul fall from between 800-1,300 miles down to 400-500 miles. Over that same period, overall yearly miles also fell and income rose slightly for ATBS clients hauling dry van, continuing into the most recent years. Between 2010 and 2012, ATBS numbers show operators’ annual dry van miles fell 1.4 percent to 115,050, while annual income rose $3,688 to $48,556.
Shorter hauls take more time, and they cost more money on a per-mile, per-load basis. While carrier pay packages adjust to shorter hauls with premium per-mile rates or other compensation tactics, they’re not always quick to follow the freight trends. As freight regionalization continues to hit other segments, close work on the part of owner-operators and their customers and dispatch assumes much greater importance in maximizing income.
THE SUCCESSFUL OWNER-OPERATOR’S DAY PLANNER
Smart owner-operators make every single week as profitable as possible. One trip is not enough time to be considered profitable or unprofitable, and an entire month may be too much time to manage. One week is the right amount of time to deal with efficiently. To do so, look at the advantages and disadvantages of every day of the week.
• Match trip length to the optimum day of the week.
• Plan to deliver on the day you have the best opportunity of getting a load.
• Plan to drive under a load on days when it typically is harder to get a load.
Your plan will vary depending on the weekly delivery/flow cycle of your region, typical length of haul, personal requirements and other factors. The needs of customers and dispatch have to be considered and often will determine how your time is used. What’s important is to have a specific weekly plan that helps you be successful.
SUNDAY
It’s like getting in an extra day if you can pick up or deliver on Sunday, since this typically isn’t a day for either task. Being able to make the most of Sunday gives you a good head start on the week.
MONDAY
Profitable owner-operators deliver on Monday. Why? Delivering the first load of the week on Monday lets you start your week with miles already generated and leaves time to be profitable during the rest of the week. On Monday you’ll find more load opportunities than Tuesday, too.
TUESDAY
Unless it’s a 2,000-mile trip, delivering the first load of the week on Tuesday means the week usually won’t be profitable. Tuesday is the day to take a hard look at how many miles you have driven and how many more you need to have a profitable week.
WEDNESDAY
It’s hump day. By now, about half of your gross revenue for the week already should be in hand.
THURSDAY
This can be the make-or-break day of the week. A load picked up on Thursday should either be short enough (less than 600 miles) to deliver on Friday, or provide enough miles (at least 1,600) to carry you through the weekend. Try to average 550-600 miles per day for the trip, although on Thursday it’s almost always better to take a 350-mile trip and deliver it on Friday. Turning down a short run just because it would mean laying over until Friday is an expensive mistake.
FRIDAY
This usually is the best day of the week for freight. Being under a load with the longest possible miles over the weekend will make the best use of your time.
SATURDAY
The week is over, and your work and planning should have resulted in a profitable operation. But like Sunday, Saturday is an extra day if you can pick up or deliver a load.
Many an independent owner-operator has realized high freight rates by being the 911 service on the weekend for a trusted broker. If you’re using load boards on the spot market and can make yourself available on Saturday or Sunday by posting your truck, you might be surprised by the good results. A variation on the day planner specifically related to spot market rates is available via Overdrive’s interactive rates tool at http://ift.tt/1G2hx0h. Find highlights on the adjacent page. Data there is derived from the Truckstop.com load board’s collected rates in year 2014, analyzed by the service and Overdrive.
INCREASING EFFICIENCY
Make the most of your waiting time, such as while loading or unloading, getting your truck washed, stopping at the scale house, etc.
Take care of your rig. Check your tires and lights, and clean windows. Review maintenance records.
Take care of yourself. Take a walk if you can leave the rig. If you aren’t able to leave, do stretches or exercises in the cab. Answer mail, write letters and pay bills. Cook a healthy meal in your microwave, or read a book.
Plan ahead. Wipe off reflective tape while waiting or while doing a pre-trip; you’ll be more visible and invite fewer inspections. Organize any clutter, especially on top of the dashboard; a cluttered dash is an open invitation to be inspected by law enforcement. Update your logs, especially the recap; not maintaining the recap is a major reason why operators unexpectedly run out of hours – a situation that is expensive and frustrating.
Otherwise, follow these steps for maximum efficiency.
Deliver on time. If you deliver late, the consignee may assign your dock door to another driver and put you last on the list. Delivering 15 minutes late can cost a whole day or even an entire weekend.
Deliver as early in the day as possible so that you have a time cushion to get dispatched to your next load. On appointment loads, deliver 30 minutes early. An empty trailer gives you plenty of options, but a load sitting on your trailer gives you only one option – waiting to deliver. You have to manage the cost of fuel and fuel taxes, as well as the cost of time to fuel, which usually is about 45 minutes per stop. The typical owner-operator carries 200 gallons of fuel or more but buys only 100 gallons at a time. Often it saves time to put 175 gallons in the tanks instead of continually topping off with 100 gallons or less.
Plan your trip and work out the timing in advance. Ask for directions to every stop, or use mapping software such as ProMiles software or the many truck-specific GPS units now on the market from Rand McNally, Teletype, ALK Technologies, TomTom, Garmin and others. Use the fuel/route-optimization tools at fuelsurchargeindex.org as well.
Try to depart early, especially when winter weather poses potential delays. Leaving late is the major reason for service failures – such as running out of hours on the morning of a delivery.
Be prepared to deadhead instead of laying over. The time and money lost to a layover can almost never be made up. If the deadhead can get you to a good load within 24 hours, it might make sense.
If you’re leased, don’t surprise your fleet manager. Keep him or her informed of every detail that affects service and your schedule. Set a personal and reasonable goal each week for the miles you want to run and tell your fleet manager or dispatcher. Work with him or her to improve your miles and revenue.
from Overdrive http://ift.tt/1GLr47M
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