Volume 1 Issue 5

In this issue:

Retention
: Who's Job Is It?

Bring Sanity Back to Hiring

Trucking Must Compete with Construction Industry for Workers

Driver Sound Off

Homegrown Drivers

Highway Bill to Boost Driver Training, Recruiting

Legislation Removes Barrier to Diabetic Drivers

It's the Little Things that Count

President Bush Acknowledges NTDAW

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Question of the Day

When it comes to recruiting new drivers, what do you consider the single most effective selling tool?

? Competitive pay and benefits. When it comes to recruiting drivers, nothing speaks louder than money.

? Good mileage, consistent freight. Drivers aren't stupid. If the mileage isn't there, they know the money won't be there.

? Home time. More and more drivers are concerned about quality-of-life issues, and getting home regularly is a top priority.

? Company culture. More than anything, drivers are looking for a solid company that keeps its promises and treats them with respect.

Click Here to Vote

In our last newsletter, we asked readers the following question:

Do truck driving schools do a good job of training new truck drivers?

Here are the results:

? Yes. While some schools do a better job than others, the majority of them turn out qualified truck drivers: 68 percent

? No. A few weeks of training doesn't cut it. I've seen very few people come out of driver school who were ready to drive a truck: 32 percent

? Who cares? The trucking industry needs all the drivers it can get, and we can train them right once they have their CDL: 0 percent

Note: Inside Trucking polls are surveys of those who choose to participate and are therefore not valid statistical samples.

Is there a question regarding driver recruitment and retention you would like to ask the trucking industry? Send suggestions to: phorner@otrprotrucker.com

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Quote of the Day

"You must be the change you wish to see in the world."

-- Mahatma Gandhi

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Contact:
Peter Horner
Editor, 
            Inside Trucking
phorner@otrprotrucker.com

 

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Retention: Who's Job Is It?

Recruiting and safety directors can't be the only ones at your company concerned about driver retention. Everyone who works for a carrier -- regardless of their job description -- must realize that his or her paycheck ultimately depends on the guy driving the truck. Companies that have high retention rates and low driver turnover rates understand this concept, and make sure that every employee is reminded of it every day.

We started the last issue of Inside Trucking off by declaring that retention is "everybody's business." What does that mean? It means that all employees -- not just recruiting directors -- should appreciate the importance of a company-wide retention culture and do everything within their power to foster it.

Who greets your truckers as heroes when they walk through the door following a long, tough run? Everybody should. Does everybody at your company treat drivers with the respect they deserve, knowing it's the driver that makes the company go? They better.

The mission of Inside Trucking is to help you and your company boost driver retention. You can't develop a retention culture single-handedly. It must be a company-wide, team effort. Since driver retention is everyone's business, and Inside Trucking is all about driver retention, who else in your company should be receiving this newsletter? Go ahead and sign them up at the top of this page, and we'll make sure they receive their own copy of Inside Trucking. Together we can help spread a driver retention culture throughout your company. Top-of-mind awareness of driver retention is everyone's full-time job.

-- Marvin Shefsky, Publisher/CEO, mshefsky@otrprotrucker.com, 800-878-0311 x101

Bring Sanity Back to Hiring


By Adam Mertz

They say the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again expecting a different outcome. If that?s the case, we need to bring sanity back to the hiring process as many recruiters continue to hire today as if it were 1975. While demographics, the economy and the very nature of the trucking industry have all changed, how we source and hire drivers has changed very little over the past 30 years.

Growing turnover is the No. 1 sign that sourcing and recruiting strategies need to change. For example, large truckload carriers reported a record-breaking average annual turnover of 121 percent last year ? a number that continues to grow. Further, on the verge of a forecasted labor shortage of 111,000 drivers by 2014, carriers need to revamp their recruiting and hiring processes in order to remain competitive.

Recruiters are often focused on finding an answer to today?s immediate need: an empty truck needing a driver. However, by implementing a few key tactics and strategies, recruiters can address a carrier?s long-term goals without sacrificing in the short-run.

While we see many other areas of the business innovating in order to adapt to changing market conditions, here are several easily implemented solutions for carriers to innovate in the area of recruiting, bringing the practice into the 21st century.

Taking it to the next level: Automation

Historically, HR documentation, including employment applications, has been used for single-event decisions like who to hire, fire or promote. Valuable information was locked away in paper files where their content was underutilized. Simply by transferring this information from paper to the computer allows pre-employment data analysis, unlocking a rich source of information about the driver pool and a company?s workforce.

Industry leaders are doing just this, mining data as diverse as screening questions and exit evaluations, allowing them to tie performance and tenure back to hiring decisions. Continually measuring and adjusting your processes based on this information will positively influence your driver retention.

For example, in a survey conducted at the TCA conference, it was found that while only 21 percent of respondents had automated any portion of the hiring process, those that had integrated screening and hiring through automation reported an average driver turnover of 23 percent, compared to an average turnover of 69 percent for carriers still relying on a paper-based hiring system.

Do more than the bare minimum. Screen for quality.

Although hiring automation is just starting to gain awareness as a way to battle the driver shortage, I often get asked how a carrier can be more strategic in the selection of drivers. Because most drivers are simply moving from one carrier to the next, the key to addressing the driver shortage is through retention. One way to learn more about a driver?s propensity to stay with your organization is through the use of advanced screening tools, such as assessing behaviors related to retention, like dependability and work motivation.

Advanced screening tools will help you measure not only what a driver has done in the past, but what they can do and what they want to do. Add measures of ability, environmental fit and safety history tailored to your business to find candidates who exhibit behaviors you want in your organization. By quickly identifying these potential drivers early in the hiring process, you can easily prioritize your recruiter?s time, allowing them to focus on the best of the best, not wasting time with candidates who would clearly not work out.

Measure, measure, measure

While you can?t improve what you don?t measure, automation coupled with a data repository can give carriers the tools to assess every angle of their sourcing and hiring processes. For example, by measuring sourcing channels by region, recruiters can determine which sources work best for which audiences in which areas ? a level of detail that was not easily accessed before. Use your calculations to determine where your quality drivers are coming from in order to find more like them. This is a guaranteed key to operational improvement and will help lower turnover.

In addition to these strategies and tactics, there are many other established best-practices to evolve recruiting. Several of these include:

·        Accepting the workforce trends and turning them into your competitive advantage.

·        Setting clear, quantifiable goals for finding the best-fit drivers who meet not just the DOT minimum requirements, but the retention requirements of your organization.

·        Using new sourcing strategies that address changing demographics, e.g., extensive use of the Internet, community outreach and candidate relationship management programs.

·        Hiring people who exhibit behaviors and interests proven to correlate to longer retention.

·        Using technology to deliver and prioritize the best applicants for your recruiters.

With an industry-wide shortage, constant driver churn creates an environment where hiring standards are at a minimum and operators are willing to hire anyone who meets the base job requirements. As an industry, let?s work to move beyond the ?fog-the-mirror? test to find the best available talent. After all, drivers carry the industry?s reputation on their shoulders just as they are the front-line of your business, your brand on the road, and the interface to your customers. Start with the right driver criteria and recruiting processes to make sure that you are both headed in the right direction.

Adam Mertz Sr. is manager of Transportation Workforce Solutions, Unicru. He can be reached via e-mail at: amertz@unicru.com, or by phone at: 503-596-3144.

A new report prepared for the American Trucking Associations by Global Insight offers a glimpse of demographic trends that will affect trucking in the years ahead. Among the findings of particular interest to recruiting and safety directors:

? The white male population aged 35 to 54 will decline by more than 3 million by 2014. This population currently provides more than half of the workers in the industry.

? During the next decade, the trucking industry will need an extra 320,000 workers due to economic growth.

? At least another 219,000 workers must be found to replace workers over 55 who will retire and the younger workers who will leave the industry.

Since trucking considers itself a competitor with the construction industry for labor, the report recommends that motor carriers raise salaries to above the 10 percent wage discrepancy with construction. The report also expects wage gains in long-haul trucking to average 6 to 7 percent per year during the next three years.

Construction has two advantages that motor carriers should be aware of when recruiting workers. First is the quality-of-life issue. Construction workers, for the most part, do not spend time away from home while on the job. Many trucking companies are working on innovative ways to allow truckers to spend more time with family. Secondly, many construction workers enter the field by age 18, whereas truckers must be at least 21 to obtain a CDL. Still, if carriers can offer competitive wages and benefits, the lure of trucking over construction may be more enticing to those who like more autonomy and less heavy labor.

Source: ATA

Is the driver shortage real, imagined or just a matter of drivers hopping from one company to another? Recruiting and safety directors certainly have their opinion, but what do the drivers think? To find out, Over the Road and Pro Trucker magazines asked a random sample of drivers the following question:

Do you think there's a shortage or drivers?

Here are some of the responses:

"There might be a shortage of quality drivers. The quality of the older drivers is pretty good, but I don't know if the new guys coming in are getting the training they need. I wonder about some of these driving schools. I've been driving a truck since 1957, and I'm still learning things. The people who go through these schools think they know what it's like to be a truck driver after six weeks. They have no idea."

-- Jim Bridges, 65, Middletown, OH, Professional driving experience: 48 years

 

"Yes, I do. Every company I know is advertising for more drivers. I'm not sure where they're all supposed to come from, but everyone seems to be looking for them."

-- Heath Evans, 35, New Market, IN, Professional driving experience: 12 years

 

"I think there's a shortage of good drivers. I think the drivers who are hopping around from job to job, creating a shortage, probably aren't being honest with themselves. In general, the grass is the same color on both sides of the fence, but no one wants to believe that. Some drivers just get tired of hearing the same old song and dance so they move on."

-- Duane Slick, 42, Freeport, IL, Professional driving experience: 18 years

 

"I don't know. If there is a driver shortage, it's because drivers are moving from company to company so much. There might be a shortage for a company that loses a driver that week, but I don't think there's an industry-wide shortage. It's supply and demand."

-- Ray Dunn, 56, Huntingford, IN, Professional driving experience: 27 years

 

"As an owner-operator with other drivers leased on, I can say there's a shortage of good drivers. There are lots of people behind the steering wheel who don't realize that driving is a career. They just look at it as a moneymaker for that week. Clearly, there aren't enough good, professional drivers."

-- Kym Yeager, 40, Stoutsville, OH, Professional driving experience: 11 years

Homegrown Drivers

New England Motor Freight (NEMF) is betting that opening its own driving school will help create ?good, solid employees for the future.? In addition to attending classes for free, students are offered a job while they complete their training.

?Whatever it has to do with this industry, we train them,? says Thomas J. Hartley, director of safety at NEMF. ?We teach them our history, so when these guys come out the door, they?re not just a good, safe driver; they?re a good, safe NEMF driver.?

In return, students agree to work at NEMF for three years once they obtain their CDL. If they do not fulfill their commitment, they must reimburse NEMF $3,600, an amount considered less than the cost of the typical independent truck-driver training school.

NEMF may be at the forefront of a trend, as more motor carriers start their own driver-training schools. One trucking director said more companies are starting their own schools because of the driver shortage ? they set up the schools ?so they know they have a good and safe driver before they offer them a job.?

NEMF has started schools at four terminals. Start-up costs at each school were about $110,000, which went toward a trainer for each location, a tractor, and audio-visual equipment and other materials. But NEMF believes its investment will pay off. ?We want to be able to hire people and train them in our way of doing things. Safe and dedicated and loyal,? Hartley says. ?I just think we will be a step ahead of everybody by producing those kinds of drivers.?

Source: Roemer Report

 

Highway Bill to Boost Driver Training, Recruiting

The $286.4 billion highway bill recently signed into law by President Bush failed to codify hours-of-service regulations, but it did include the following provisions that should be of particular interest to recruiters and safety directors:

? Driver training. To boost the number of people entering the profession, $5 million is earmarked for truck driver training.

? Pre-employment screening. Motor carriers will be able to access a database containing driver-related safety information, such as accident reports and inspection reports.

? Background checks for hazmat drivers. The Transportation Security Administration will notify carriers if hazmat drivers do not meet security criteria.

? Medical program. The law creates a new medical oversight program to advise the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration on driver medical standards and guidelines. (See related story on drivers and diabetes elsewhere in this newsletter.)

 

Legislation Removes Barrier to Diabetic Truckers

The transportation legislation passed by both the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate and signed into law by President Bush contains an important provision that will help end discrimination against people with diabetes who seek employment as commercial drivers, claims the American Diabetes Association (ADA).

The ADA led a coalition to enable qualified individuals who must use insulin to properly manage their diabetes to operate commercial motor vehicles in interstate commerce. Language in the legislation eliminates a provision in the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration's (FMCSA) 2003 Diabetes Exemption Program that made it almost impossible for anyone with insulin-treated diabetes to even apply to drive commercially and replaces it with a medically sound system for individual assessment. As a result, the intent of the Diabetes Exemption Program will be realized, and qualified people with insulin-treated diabetes will be able to drive commercial motor vehicles.

In September of 2003, FMCSA announced a Diabetes Exemption Program to end the 33-year-old blanket ban on operating a commercial motor vehicle in interstate commerce for people who use insulin and replace it with a case-by-case assessment that includes more than 50 important safety provisions.

Despite strenuous opposition of the American Diabetes Association, Congress, industry, labor organizations and even FMCSA's own expert medical panel also included a "three-year rule" that prevented the vast majority of people with diabetes from even applying under the program.

This Catch 22 provision requires applicants to have driven a commercial vehicle while using insulin for the three years before applying for an exemption under the program. Because of the prior federal blanket ban, no one could fulfill this requirement through past interstate driving, and it was virtually impossible to fulfill it through intrastate driving. In the nearly two years since FMCSA announced this program, not a single diabetes exemption has been issued, primarily because of the three-year rule which has prevented most qualified drivers from applying.

"Our nation's trucking laws should reflect our current knowledge of diabetes and the current practice of diabetes management," says L. Hunter Limbaugh, chair of the American Diabetes Association's National Advocacy Committee. "This Congressional action is a win-win that will prevent discrimination against people with insulin-treated diabetes while also providing additional commercial truck drivers for industry. Congress deserves credit for putting sound medical science above politics."

Diabetes is one of this nation's most prevalent, debilitating, deadly and costly diseases. While 18.2 million Americans live with diabetes today, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that one in three Americans born in 2000 will develop diabetes in their lifetime.

Source: American Diabetes Association

 

It's the Little Things that Count

When it comes to driver retention, sometimes it's the little things that count.

In 2004, Carroll Fulmer Logistics celebrated its 50th year in business. On Oct. 27-30 of this year, the company will honor the people who worked hard as a team to make Carroll Fulmer Logistics successful: the company's drivers and employees.

The event begins on Thursday, Oct. 27 when the company's drivers, managers and spouses begin arriving at company headquarters in Groveland, FL. The company's Groveland terminal will be open all night as volunteers start cooking on an open pit for Friday's barbecue.

Friday is Driver/Employee Appreciation Day for all of the company's 300-plus drivers and owner-operators, as well as its more than 200 employees and guests. Along with serving barbecue lunch throughout the day, the company has organized informative driver safety meetings as well as smaller meetings to discuss the current and future of the company so that drivers can interact with managers and staff either on a one-and-one or small-group basis. The company will treat everyone to dinner on Friday night.

For Saturday, the company has planned outings, complete with chartered buses and tickets, to either Universal Studios or City Walk. The company will also host a golf tournament. Guests will have Saturday night to themselves before Sunday's departure.

OK, throwing a three-day party for 500 guests is not exactly a "little thing," but the time and expense that go into it pales in comparison to the goodwill the effort will generate. As company president Philip R. Fulmer knows, it's all part of building a company-wide driver retention culture that will pay off time and time again somewhere down the road.

 

President Bush Acknowledges NTDAW

President Bush joined with dozens of governors and other politicians in congratulating truck drivers and fleets during National Truck Driver Appreciation Week.

"Across America, professional truck drivers keep our country moving and support our citizens as they conduct business," Bush stated. "Our nation relies on the men and women of our transportation industry to sustain critical networks of commerce and advance our economy.

"I applaud professional truck drivers and their motor carrier employers for your hard work and dedication to promoting high standards of safety," the president continued. "Your commitment to excellence increases efficiency and production across our nation and advances American prosperity. Your efforts also reflect the values that make our country strong."

National Truck Driver Appreciation Week was observed Aug. 21-27. During the week, the nation's motor carriers, state trucking associations and trucking industry manufacturers and suppliers honored drivers in various ways -- million-mile and safety awards, cash bonuses or gifts, an extra paid day off, a cup of coffee, even a simple windshield cleaning.

 

 

Inside Trucking is freely distributed by the publishers of Over the Road and Pro Trucker magazines as a service to help our clients strengthen their driver recruiting and retention efforts.