Industry Voices: What trucking can learn from the airlines

Avatar photo

For-hire trucking could learn a few things from the airlines, because they have finally figured out how to make money in a deregulated environment.

Love ’em or hate ’em, commercial airlines are the most time- and cost-effective way — even comfortable if you compare an Airbus A320 to a cattle truck — of moving our butts back and forth across the country. While passengers may be unhappy with being nickeled-and-dimed to death, they are paying the endless list of fees and surcharges, and the airlines are racking up record revenue increases.

The Associated Press reports that U.S.-based airlines hauled in $3.4 billion in baggage fees in 2010, a 24-percent increase over 2009. By the end of the third quarter 2011, 17 major U.S. airlines had collected $2.6 billion for checking luggage. Not bad for something that used to be free.

Rather than face an uprising over fare increases, the airlines downloaded the problem to the passengers, who must now duke it out in the cabin to see who gets their humongous suitcase into the overhead luggage bin first.

The airlines are actually a great example of how to recover otherwise lost revenue by tacking on fees and surcharges where they are warranted. Want a beer? Seven bucks. A sandwich? Eight bucks. You won’t get a free lunch anywhere else, so why should you expect one on an airplane?

The airlines use a complex pricing system called “yield management,” which is rather concisely defined by Wikipedia, as the process of understanding, anticipating and influencing consumer behavior in order to maximize yield or profits from a fixed, perishable resource (such as airline seats or hotel room reservations).

The term was coined by Robert Crandall, former chairman and CEO of American Airlines, who called it, “the single most important technical development in transportation management since we entered deregulation.”

Back in the days when the Interstate Commerce Commission actually enforced tariffs, trucking had the luxury of charging customers based on a menu of service offerings. Today, flat-rate pricing is the norm — especially when dealing with freight brokers — and that limits our ability to charge for certain services, or to recovers costs incurred in providing such services. 

You Want it When?

I’ll grant that there are differences between an aircraft in scheduled service leaving the gate with unsold seats — that’s lost revenue — and a truck running down the road for an agreed-to flat rate. But when you consider all we do that’s above and beyond getting freight from one loading dock to another, I think we’re leaving a lot of money on the table too. 

There are the obvious examples such as inadequate fuel surcharges and unbilled detention time, but what about things like cancelled loads, deliveries to remote destinations, day-of-the-week or time-of-day load/unload premiums? You know delivering in Los Angeles on a Friday means a weekend layover. How might you convince your customer to load a few days early so you can deliver on Wednesday? Charging a premium for delivering on a day, or time of day, that limits your reloading potential would be a good way of influencing the customer’s decision. 

Ever had a load cancelled once the truck is en-route to the pick up? The driver has begun his or her workday and has started the 14-hour duty cycle. Diverting or sitting that truck is going to cost the driver and the carrier something. Why shouldn’t the customer pay for its lack of foresight?

Weight is another big issue. In the truckload world, a load is a load. A to B = X dollars. If you’re dragging a van around, it doesn’t matter how many boxes are stuffed into the trailer, what matters to the carrier is weight. How many carriers (and brokers, for that matter) charge a flat rate for a truckload whether the weight is 10,000 pounds or 50,000? Weight sure matters to the guy paying for the fuel. The customer should pay accordingly. 

Tons of other extras spring quickly to mind that carriers could and should be billing for, such as driver load or unload, special handling, destinations where reloads are difficult, scheduled appointments, team service, temperature-controlled service, multiple-drop, re-consigned loads, weekend deliveries, residential deliveries, security fees, paperwork preparation, scale tickets … The list of possibilities is a long one indeed.

Many carriers are now charging what have come to be known as accessorial charges, but many are not. I hear carriers that do levy accessorial charges are having varying degrees of success at collecting those charges, but that’s another story. 

My question is, why would you not charge extra fees for legitimate services? It apparently hasn’t hurt the airlines. 

Shippers would still have choices if motor carriers were to charge for everything they do. Shippers that choose to move trucks in and out promptly would not have to pay delay fees. Shippers that insist on 3 a.m. delivery appointment should have to pay for the lost time between the delivery and a potential reload during normal business hours. Loads that deliver to out-of-the-way locations should pay a location charge to cover the deadhead miles back to civilization. 

We can offer our customers choices too. Pay me now, upfront, or pay me later when I’ve finished tallying up all the extra charges for things I had to do to get your load delivered. If trucking adopted the airline pricing model, I think $3.4 billion in recovered revenue would be drop in a bucket. 

There’s a great description of Yield Management in this article on Wikipedia, if you care to dig a little deeper into the mechanics of this revenue preservation tool. 

Avatar photo

Jim Park was a CDL driver and owner-operator from 1978 until 1998, when he began his second career as a trucking journalist. During that career transition, he hosted an overnight radio show on a Hamilton, Ontario radio station and later went on to anchor the trucking news in SiriusXM's Road Dog Trucking channel. Jim is a regular contributor to Today's Trucking and Trucknews.com, and produces Focus On and On the Spot test drive videos.


Have your say


This is a moderated forum. Comments will no longer be published unless they are accompanied by a first and last name and a verifiable email address. (Today's Trucking will not publish or share the email address.) Profane language and content deemed to be libelous, racist, or threatening in nature will not be published under any circumstances.

*