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Trucker To Trucker
Strategies for Success
It is the dream of most company hired truck
drivers to become a successful Independent owner operator.Truck Drivers will often
work as an employee of a company for several years with their eventual goal of becoming an independent owner
operator and contract with one or several companies.
With skyrocketing fuel prices, rising insurance and equipment costs and an
often grueling schedule, finding and maintaining meaningful success in an
owner operator truck driving job is a challenge for even the most skilled
owner operator truck drivers.
On the surface, it sounds easy to acquire a Kenworth or Peterbilt semi truck,
find all the profitable truck driver jobs
you can handle, and make $100,000 per year after taxes. The fact of the matter is that most owner operators are not
nearly this successful. Rather, it is estimated that less than 10% of independent owner operator truck drivers make
this kind of money.
Inexperienced or new owner-operators are the most susceptible and vulnerable to
this financial management challenge during the initial 0-24 month period
after they choose to dive into ownership. Unfortunately, the trucking
industry has a terrible reputation of chewing up and spitting out
individuals taking on new, independent truck driving jobs as either owner operators or expeditors like a tobacco
chewing cowboy at a rodeo.
For years, the Trucking industry has failed miserably to cultivate, train, and
nurture drivers to help them manage the financial side of the business and avoid the pitfalls associated within the
ranks of semi truck driving owner operators. The most important similarity
among all successful independent owner operator truck drivers have in common is that they have set aside an
emergency cash fund.
Emergency Cash Fund
An Important Key to Success
Because the primary key to any successful business is managing cash flow,
nothing is more important to the profitability of your trucking business than good business decisions in this area.
As an independent owner
operator truck driver, you and you alone are responsible for managing every aspect of your business cash
flow.
Effective cash flow management is what determines your profitability at the end
of the month. Most successful owner operators we interviewed recommend that
individual truck drivers have 3 to 6 months of after tax cash in a fund for
emergencies such as a loss of job or unexpected major expenditure. The emergency cash fund should include all of
your business expenses stashed away including truck payment, insurance, maintenance, etc.
Here are some emergency fund guidelines for owner operators. A recent trucking
magazine survey found that:
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Almost 60% of owner operators
surveyed have emergency funds that average $11,500. |
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Among those who have established
such a fund, about 65% felt comfortable with an emergency fund closer to $14,000 |
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Owner operators indicated the
emergency fund should equal about 33% of your operating income (revenue - expenses = operating
income) |
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Newbie owner operators usually
accept the risk reward ratio with nothing more than God's blessing and a thoughtful prayer support
group. Emergency funds at star-up are usually non-existent. |
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Saving for the unexpected requires
detailed record keeping and unwavering discipline. |
In summary, two key points to take on the road
with you. First, discipline yourself to immediately establish and maintain a 3-6 month emergency cash fund that
includes all of your operating expenses.Second, pay for all emergencies with cash that has been earning
interest for you rather than with cash for
which you'll pay someone else.
We'll see you next time with more independent owner operator truck driver secrets to
success.
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