If you just joined and you’re looking at Skool thinking, “Okay… what do I do now?” — don’t worry. That’s normal.
This community is here to help you learn dispatch step by step, ask real questions, understand the trucking business, and get around people who are also learning the same thing.
You do not need to be an expert to participate here.
Actually, some of the best members in a dispatch community are the ones who ask good questions, share what they’re learning, and help other beginners when they can.
How Skool Works
On Skool, you will see levels next to people’s names.
Those levels go up when members participate and other people like their posts or comments.
So if you post something useful, ask a good question, answer someone, share a helpful dispatch tip, or give value to the group, people may like your post — and that helps you level up.
But don’t look at this like a game where you just try to collect points.
The real goal is simple:
Help people. Learn dispatch. Get better every week.
The levels are just a reflection of how active and helpful you are inside the community.
What You Should Post Here
This is a dispatch community, so keep your posts connected to trucking, dispatch, freight, brokers, drivers, carriers, shippers, receivers, load boards, lanes, rates, and learning the business.
Good examples of posts:
“Can someone explain what RPM means in simple words?”
“I found this load from Chicago to Atlanta. How would you evaluate it?”
“What should I say if a broker asks for my MC number?”
“How do you know if a lane is good or bad?”
“What is the difference between dry van, reefer, flatbed, box truck, and hotshot?”
“What should a dispatcher check before booking a load?”
“I made this mistake when looking at a load. Here is what I learned.”
Those kinds of posts help everybody, especially beginners.
How to Level Up the Right Way
The fastest way to grow here is not by spamming posts.
It is not by dropping random links.
It is not by trying to sound smarter than everybody.
The best way to grow here is to be useful.
If someone asks a beginner question and you know the answer, help them.
If you learned something from a class, post your takeaway.
If you watched a dispatch video and something clicked for you, share it.
If you made a mistake, talk about it so others can avoid it.
If someone shares a win, congratulate them.
If you see a question about broker calls, load boards, lanes, rate negotiation, paperwork, detention, layover, or driver communication — jump in if you can add something helpful.
You do not have to know everything.
Even if you are only one step ahead of someone else, you can still help them.
What Good Content Looks Like Here
Good content does not have to be long.
It just has to be useful.
For example:
A simple dispatch tip.
A real situation you ran into.
A question about a load.
A broker call example.
A mistake you made while learning.
A screenshot of something you do not understand — but please hide private information first.
A short explanation of something that confused you before.
A lesson from class that helped you understand dispatch better.
That is the type of content that makes this community valuable.
What Does Not Work Here
Posting just to post.
Copy-pasting random answers.
Dropping links without context.
Promoting your own service without helping first.
Arguing with people.
Making fun of beginner questions.
Acting like you know everything when you are still learning.
This is not that kind of community.
We are here to learn dispatch seriously, but in a way where beginners feel comfortable asking questions.
Everybody starts somewhere.
Why This Matters
Dispatch is not something you learn by only reading definitions.
You learn it by seeing real situations, asking questions, making decisions, understanding mistakes, and getting corrected.
That is why this community exists.
One day you may be asking:
“What does this load mean?”
“What should I say to the broker?”
“Is this a good rate?”
“Should I send my driver here?”
“Why did the receiver reject this?”
Then later, you may be the person answering those questions for someone new.
That is how you grow.
That is how the community grows.
Start Here Today
Here is what I want you to do:
Introduce yourself if you have not already.
Comment on one post where you can add something useful.
Ask one real question about dispatch, trucking, brokers, drivers, or load boards.
Share one thing you are currently trying to understand.
Do not be shy.
There are no stupid beginner questions here, especially if you are serious about learning.
I built this community so you can learn, ask, practice, and grow alongside others who are also trying to understand the dispatch business.
Show up. Ask questions. Help when you can. Stay consistent.
That is how you get better.
Welcome again — glad to have you here.
— Dispatch Coach Michael