There are good transport contracts, and bad transport contracts
learn more about the main differences between them!
The Best and Worst Transport Contracts
If you are working in the haulage industry, whether you are an
owner operator or a salaried employee, you'll know enough about
transport contracts to know that no two jobs are the same.
You'll have had jobs where everything went right, and loads that
you simply couldn't wait to be rid of.
Sometimes it is hard to foresee which one will turn out to be
unpleasant until you've signed on the dotted line other times,
the signs are there from the outset that there is going to be
trouble! Of course, there are also the dream jobs where a
company treats you right, pays you well, and you have a
straightforward, stress free drive to your destination and back.
But while it may not always be possible to know whether a job
will be heaven or hell before you take it, there are a few
common characteristics of good and bad transport jobs...
A Good Job Means...
You'll be working with a decent company that takes care of its
drivers, issues professional transport contracts, pays a decent
wage and legally complies with all the necessary industry
regulations. If they are providing the vehicle, it will be well
maintained. They will give you clear instructions, communicate
with you in a coherent fashion, and the loading and unloading
process will be nice and smooth. There's nothing worse than
wasting time sitting around waiting to load or unload!
On a good job, you'll have a secure load that isn't fragile,
and that is evenly weighted so that it doesn't cause problems
with your vehicle's handling. An ideal job will give you plenty
of opportunities to pick up backloads for your return journey,
and might even have one of these built into the contract.
Another final little perk is to be given a scenic route to drive
through spending your whole day on the road is made more
enjoyable if you've got some decent scenery to look at along the
way!
A Bad Job Means...
Above all else, if you've got an unpleasant job it is usually
because your employer isn't up to scratch. Their transport
contracts will be filled with small print that is seemingly
designed to make your life a nightmare. If they provide a
vehicle, it'll be poorly maintained and potentially dangerous to
drive. They will be difficult to deal with, and there will be
endless delays and huge amounts of paperwork every step of the
way.
You'll be dispatched to the middle of nowhere with unclear
instructions and no chance of picking up a backload on your way
back, and the load you've got will be poorly secured and liable
to shift around and break along the way. If you are sent abroad
on a nightmare job, you'll be sent somewhere with overzealous
police and complicated regulations to comply with. The entire
job will be time consuming hassle from start to finish, and to
cap it all off, they will be late paying you once you do finally
finish your work!
Every haulage worker will have to deal with good jobs and bad
jobs but if you learn to recognise the signs of good transport
contracts, you'll have a much better chance of picking up the
right kind of jobs!
About the Author: Lyall Cresswell is the Managing Director of
Haulage Exchange, the leading online trade network for the road
transport industry across the UK and Europe. It provides
services and transport contracts
(http://www.haulageexchange.co.uk/) to buy and sell road
transport and freight exchange in the domesti