The #1 Reason New Truck Dispatchers Fail (And How to Avoid It)
Most new dispatchers think the job is just finding loads on DAT or Truckstop⦠but thatās actually the easy part. The real reason beginners fail is because they donāt understand carrier capacity management. So here's what that really means: 1. Matching the Right Loads to the Right Equipment Every truck is NOT the same. If you donāt understand weight limits, driver preferences, delivery windows, or equipment type (reefer, dry van, flatbed), youāll book loads that look good but cost the driver money. It can get confusing when managing multiple drivers which is why it is recommended to start out with 1-2 carriers to fully learn what it takes to dispatch and take good care of one carrier at a time. 2. Knowing the Driverās āGolden Laneā Every driver has routes where: - deadhead is low - fuel is cheaper - loads move fast - outbound freight is strong If you ignore this and send them into weak markets, their cost per mile (CPM) rises ā and their profit per mile falls. This is one of the biggest silent killers for new dispatchers. 3. Weak Rate Negotiation Most dispatchers donāt negotiate. They just accept the posted rate. A real dispatcher: - calls multiple brokers - uses lane market data - knows average RPM for that lane - pushes for fuel surcharges or accessorials Strong negotiation = higher RPM = happier drivers. 4. Not Tracking KPIs (Key Performance Indicators) You canāt improve what you donāt measure which is why a real dispatcher tracks: - Cost per mile (CPM) - Deadhead % - Average RPM - Lane profitability - Weekly gross - Broker scorecards This is what separates a real dispatch business from a āfind a random loadā hobby. 5. No Long-Term Broker Relationships Anyone can book a load; it takes a real professional to build relationships. This gets you: - first-call freight - better rates - recovery options - faster problem solving - priority during tight markets Relationships = leverage. BOTTOM LINE - Truck dispatching is not about clicking loads, but rather about understanding markets, lanes, and profitability.