Aug 22, 2015 at 08:59 PM CST
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Posted by a private BulkLoads.com member.
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Posted by a private BulkLoads.com member.
How do I find out how much the loads pay ? Thankyou
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Replied on Sat, Aug 22, 2015 at 10:20 PM CST
+ 1
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Posted by a private BulkLoads.com member.
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Posted by a private BulkLoads.com member.
It would be nice if more brokers posted some kind of price. But the easy way is to figure what you need to haul that load with no return load. Than cut in half, and call about load and they will tell you its half that. And that's all they can pay and they do it that cheap every day.
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Replied on Sat, Aug 22, 2015 at 10:36 PM CST
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Posted by a private BulkLoads.com member.
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Posted by a private BulkLoads.com member.
Quote: "It would be nice if more brokers posted some kind of price. But the easy way is to figure what you need to haul that load with no return load. Than cut in half, and call about load and they will tell you its half that. And that's all they can pay and they do it that cheap every day."
The following was in a message I got today.
[color=#BF0000]"XXXX" delivers most shipments on a back haul basis, helping the carriers in the system a way back to their terminal or next order. Needless to say I was.less than impressed. [/color] |
Replied on Sun, Aug 23, 2015 at 04:48 PM CST
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Posted by a private BulkLoads.com member.
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Posted by a private BulkLoads.com member.
Call on the loads the brokers will be more than happy to tell you what they pay, or what they don't..
Go Brokers, it's your birthday, have a hey day. Rock it all the way until you run those truckers out of business. What's you going to do when you have no more trucks to sell your freight to? |
Replied on Mon, Aug 24, 2015 at 04:50 PM CST
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Posted by a private BulkLoads.com member.
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Posted by a private BulkLoads.com member.
You would want to contact either the shipper or the broker handling the load and verify the information first, loaded miles, locations, etc. You would want to have a good idea what you want to run that lane given your in and out loads so that when rate gets discussed you can save your time and end the conversation quickly to get on to sourcing the next load. you can also source history of loads similar and see what was historically paid, i believe this site has that capabulities and also there is a reload feature to give you an idea of what loads you can either go in or out of. |
Replied on Tue, Aug 25, 2015 at 09:25 AM CST
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Posted by a private BulkLoads.com member.
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Posted by a private BulkLoads.com member.
I had an interesting experiance negociating a van load with a broker last week. Chicago to Nebraska 625 miles. They offered $850. I said I couldn't do it for that. She asked how much? I told her I would look at it and get back to her. I was looking at $1,425. Thinking...no way will they go for that. I call her back anyway and told her $1,250. She put me on hold then come back asking if I could do $1,100. I said no. On hold again. Then another person comes on, sounding a little defeated and asks if I could do $1,200. I told him my desired number was $1,425 so I need to stick with $1,250. I got the load. Read into it what you want. I have done business with this company before. I'll get paid.
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Replied on Thu, Aug 27, 2015 at 08:49 AM CST
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Posted by a private BulkLoads.com member.
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Posted by a private BulkLoads.com member.
Quote: "The following was in a message I got today.
[color=#BF0000]"XXXX" delivers most shipments on a back haul basis, helping the carriers in the system a way back to their terminal or next order. Needless to say I was.less than impressed.
[/color]
"
Nice
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