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Greg M.'s Comment
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Awesome. That happened quick.

What sort of training program are they putting you through?

BJess's Comment
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Awesome. That happened quick.

What sort of training program are they putting you through?

I will be doing the minimum 200 hours BTW training with a mentor/trainer. Should take about 4 weeks unless we run team a little sooner. I’ll keep updates as I have them. They told me to expect to leave as early as Wednesday afternoon. We will see how it goes!

BJess's Comment
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Well being at Swift orientation Monday turned out to be a “right place...right time for me!” More to come on that...

It also pays that I’ve learned to listen closely to everything said thanks to the TT. All of the support given on this website is truly amazing and I thank you all.

It’s blew my mind how many people show up at orientation looking sloppy and yapping the pie hole. Not clean and complaining before they are actually even hired. Saying things like “I’ll just leave and go home” or “I’m just here to get a few months under my belt” before they’re actually even hired. If you’re all that why are you even here superstar???

As has been said on TT time and time again It turns out that Looking professional, paying attention, and asking questions is quite important. Everyone’s trying to outdo the other on things that mean nothing. All the while annoying the people who are hiring you to do a job.

Long story even longer....

I signed up for OTR because I knew I had to earn my stripes. I knew I was going 4-6 weeks of OTR training. I knew I would run OTR after that training and I was fine with it. I was just trying to get back in the seat and control my own destiny. Well it turns out that because I listen and do what is asked of me in a punctual manner, I will be training on a dedicated regional route that will put me on that account after training. It will also give me an “in” on the Walmart dedicated out of my home town that I mentioned a few days ago.

Brett, G-Town, Old School, Navvy, Errol, and everyone....I thank you!

Even “TODD” from the military and smooth roads in Germany gets a thumbs up!

Thanks for being grown ups and guiding me! I owe my success to you!

BJess

Regional:

Regional Route

Usually refers to a driver hauling freight within one particular region of the country. You might be in the "Southeast Regional Division" or "Midwest Regional". Regional route drivers often get home on the weekends which is one of the main appeals for this type of route.

OTR:

Over The Road

OTR driving normally means you'll be hauling freight to various customers throughout your company's hauling region. It often entails being gone from home for two to three weeks at a time.

BJess's Comment
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Been on the road training since Sunday afternoon. So I’m really enjoying this and my trainer is very laid back. He has 35+ years experience and really just loves his job and his family. Makes things much more relaxed as I work on my skills.

Doing good on handling the truck on the road and better than I thought I would do on backing since it’s been a while since I drove. Gotta log 200 hours behind the wheel to get signed on solo so a good 3 weeks to go yet as we go home for our 34 hour reset Friday afternoon. Ask my trainer to set aside some time at one of our accounts to let me practice different backing maneuvers as we have a setting to avoid that counting as driving time. We’ll be working on that as much as possible even though he feels that I will have it down fairly good just doing the daily routine. I’m looking forward to next week when we start running somewhat of a team so I can observe how he handles the truck driving and backing. So far I’ve driven all but maybe 30 miles of our 1600 and should easily do 2600-2800 for the week by Friday AM.

We haven’t left Florida yet as I am being trained on the dedicated account he runs which I will also be on once training completes. Has been no shortage of drive time as I’ve exhausted my 11 hours of drive time for each 14 hours. Mostly all drop and hook so it’s nonstop running then take the 10. Little bit of a layover at the terminal today but my trainer got to go home for 14 hours and I got some much needed sleep. With my pick up here I was able to go have a good lunch and pick up a few items from Publix to put in the fridge. Heading to Miami tonight then back up to Lakeland to complete my next 11 hours of driving.

One thing about this gig is that if you don’t like night driving it’s not for you. I personally love it. From Punta Gorda to I-75 and Florida Turnpike junction I probably didn’t see 40 vehicles on the north bound side.

I’m very thankful that I chose to go back to Swift after all these years out of the business. So far everything I was told by my recruiter or local Ocala staff has been as good or better than promised.

More to come!

Terminal:

A facility where trucking companies operate out of, or their "home base" if you will. A lot of major companies have multiple terminals around the country which usually consist of the main office building, a drop lot for trailers, and sometimes a repair shop and wash facilities.

Drop And Hook:

Drop and hook means the driver will drop one trailer and hook to another one.

In order to speed up the pickup and delivery process a driver may be instructed to drop their empty trailer and hook to one that is already loaded, or drop their loaded trailer and hook to one that is already empty. That way the driver will not have to wait for a trailer to be loaded or unloaded.

HOS:

Hours Of Service

HOS refers to the logbook hours of service regulations.
Rob T.'s Comment
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Things sound like they're going very well. It makes me very happy to hear that your trainer is training for the right reasons. Unfortunately far too often we hear about the unsafe, unprofessional drivers that train for the additional income and don't really train. Keep the updates coming!

BJess's Comment
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Things sound like they're going very well. It makes me very happy to hear that your trainer is training for the right reasons. Unfortunately far too often we hear about the unsafe, unprofessional drivers that train for the additional income and don't really train. Keep the updates coming!

Yeah that’s for sure. When I trained with Swift 20 years ago I had a very good trainer. I was a very successful driver for them back then before I left for the local gig. Fast forward 20 years and I got lucky again.

As much as team driving doesn’t really appeal to me I’m looking forward to getting home Friday for our reset so we get back at Sunday as a team operation for the next 3 weeks. It will give me the invaluable experience of planning and making decisions for my leg of the day while having a seasoned veteran to bail me out should I get myself in a bind.

It may be that I’ve gotten lucky in my experience but I personally feel that Swift has a good program for those who choose to take it seriously and fully understand what they’re signing up for. While I have no experience with their driving school I would expect that it would set you up well to succeed with their company policies.

HOS:

Hours Of Service

HOS refers to the logbook hours of service regulations.

OOS:

When a violation by either a driver or company is confirmed, an out-of-service order removes either the driver or the vehicle from the roadway until the violation is corrected.

BJess's Comment
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Week 2 of training complete and home for the weekend. Things are going well. I continue to get more comfortable handling the truck and figuring out little things like how I like my seat types of easy food to bring during training. Got myself a blue parrot headset for hands free phone use so I can keep in touch with friends and family while driving.

Still trying to get more comfortable with my backing but most places we go has a ton of room. I haven’t gotten brave enough to challenge the truck stop parking yet but since we’re running team now there isn’t much parking going on. I have been doing well backing in between trailers at shipping and receiving yards so confidence is building.

As for training it is going well. My trainer really lets me get myself in and out of my own jams. He answers any questions I have and after I struggle to do something the right way he then tells me how he would’ve approached it. I appreciate this style as I’m figuring things out for myself and then get the lesson to help do better the next time.

Finally got out of Florida the other day taking a load up to Athens, Ga. going back there for. Midnight delivery tomorrow. The dedicated account is really nice and consistent. Also going to the same places a lot makes it real easy. I drove around 2400 miles last week from Sunday afternoon to Thursday night. I’m at 94 hours of the needed 200 to get my own truck. My trainer says we’ll go in a talk to our manager for the dedicated route this Friday. He’ll be working on getting me a truck lined up and we’re gonna see if I can park my rig at the Walmart DC near home since we pull chep pallets out of there and back to Jacksonville. My manager is in charge of the pallet thing along with the water account.

More to come....

Dedicated Route:

A driver or carrier who transports cargo between regular, prescribed routes. Normally it means a driver will be dedicated to working for one particular customer like Walmart or Home Depot and they will only haul freight for that customer. You'll often hear drivers say something like, "I'm on the Walmart dedicated account."

PackRat's Comment
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Good to read your updates, BJess.

Auggie69's Comment
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I have been out of business for a good 10 years. I drove OTR for about a year and then locally for about 9 years. The 9 years lead to sales jobs that lead to restaurant management and wife kids house dogs etc.

My question: can anyone give me some direction on what companies will bring me into their driver trainee program to get me back on the road. I’m open to whatever gets me back in the seat but would prefer a company I could stick with for a while/long term versus jumping ship after I get the 3-6 months most every company want to hire pretty much any driver with clean and safe record. Any help is much appreciated!

Just who are you running for?

OTR:

Over The Road

OTR driving normally means you'll be hauling freight to various customers throughout your company's hauling region. It often entails being gone from home for two to three weeks at a time.

BJess's Comment
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double-quotes-end.png

Just who are you running for?

I went with Swift and quite happy that I did. The overall opportunities were the best option for me. I’ll be running a dedicated account once I finish up training. I like the dedicated thing. I see how my trainer has built relationships at many of the shippers and receivers. He also knows a lot of the truck stop employees because he’s in the same places so often. It makes things fairly routine. The new trucks with tv and refrigerators are really nice too. Hopefully I will run the east coast of Florida a lot so I can get by the house a couple times a week for my off duty time to shower eat and sleep. The 34 hour reset will always be at home.

Shipper:

The customer who is shipping the freight. This is where the driver will pick up a load and then deliver it to the receiver or consignee.

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