Create a free Overdrive account to continue reading

Walkabout Transport: Hotshot as downsized pandemic refuge

user-gravatar Headshot
Updated Sep 24, 2021

Find all the pieces of this series in the anchor story at this link: Hotshot trucking retains its fundamental allure

Plenty of truckers choose hotshot over heavier trucking niches for factors such as lower equipment costs, less advanced driving skills, easier equipment serviceability and more. Such aspects of downsizing were a refuge from the topsy-turvy Class 8 freight spot market for longtime independent owner-operator Debbie Desiderato, who recently returned to the small-truck world.

While truckers in May were protesting dirt-cheap rates and brokers’ alleged “reverse price gouging” as coronavirus slowdowns took hold, the downtrend wasn’t all that new for the Walkabout Transport owner-operator. Desiderato had long been watching her customers’ freight dry up. She had for years run trade-show-related freight, largely, with a couple of steady brokers — a niche that turned out to fit squarely in the pandemic’s crosshairs. She made do on an arrangement with a military-freight-specialized broker, but business was slow, and rates were lackluster.

She sold her Kenworth and dry van trailer and found a well-priced 2017 Ford F350 with only 17,000 miles on it at a North Carolina dealer. A new Load Trail 40-foot flatbed with a gooseneck hitch built for heavy-duty use in Louisiana completed the package, outfitted with a hydraulically controlled dovetail.

After registration delays, by July she was working, intending to specialize in automobiles. Her first series of loads came by way of a friend in New York who “had 500 vehicles to clear from a lot in Staten Island to a Connecticut auction,” she said. Most of it was “bigger stuff — crew-cab pickups and Sprinter vans that a nine-car hauler could only take three, four at a time.” But she could get half that or more on her flatbed, with $1 to $2 per vehicle per mile. “That was a good start to get my feet re-wet,” she adds.

That’s right: Desiderato previously had done similar hauls. She worked for a car-haul company in 1999 that closed shortly thereafter, then drove for high-end car dealerships before upgrading to a Class 8.

Two decades ago she began building her customer base with nothing more than “a fax out to my local high-end dealerships – and it was an unsolicited fax – where I said, ‘There’s a new transporter in town.’” She ended up moving “Jags, Porsches and Mercedes” for dealers. “I’ll probably end up doing that again, but this time with the bigger vehicles.”

The Business Manual for Owner-Operators
Overdrive editors and ATBS present the industry’s best manual for prospective and committed owner-operators. You’ll find exceptional depth on many issues in the Partners in Business book, updated annually.
Download
Partners in Business Issue Cover