Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Closing the Loop on Truck Driver Communication

If your trucking company is relying on an “open-door policy” or even online surveys to get feedback from your truck drivers, you’re probably not doing enough.

Deborah Lockridge
Deborah LockridgeEditor and Associate Publisher
Read Deborah's Posts
May 30, 2025
Closing the Loop on Truck Driver Communication

Are you REALLY communicating with your truck drivers?

Image: HDT Graphic

5 min to read


If you’re relying on an “open-door policy” or even online surveys to get feedback from your drivers, you’re probably not doing enough, according to Mark Murrell, co-creator of the Best Fleets to Drive For program and president of CarriersEdge, which offers online driver training.

Since the Best Fleets to Drive For program was founded in 2008, Murrell has been talking to some of the best trucking fleets in the country when it comes to driver retention, and sharing what he learns from those best practices with other trucking fleets.

Ad Loading...

"One of the things that we have said for years and years and years to fleets is to ask drivers what they want, ask drivers what they think about things."

"One of the things that we have said for years and years and years to fleets is to ask drivers what they want, ask drivers what they think about things," he told HDT in an interview.

"We hear over and over from fleets that they've got an open door policy 'any driver can talk to us.' 

"But that's a very passive approach. Basically, 'I'm going to sit here and wait for you to come and tell me something. But it doesn't really work anymore. It's a starting point, but it works way better to actually be proactive and go out there and ask drivers what they want.

"The fleets that do that have a much better response," Murrell says. "Not only are they making that effort, which is generally well received by drivers, but it also allows them to get to people that aren't necessarily going to come into the office and say something."

How To Find Out What Truck Drivers Want

Murrell explains that before the COVID pandemic, the Best Fleets to Drive For program saw a range of different ways trucking companies were communicating with drivers — online and offline tools, personal communications, driver meetings, and some automated methods.

Ad Loading...

But the pandemic pushed fleets to rely more on virtual methods, and it has largely stayed that way, as fleets rely on automated, online surveys.

"We found this year when we were evaluating the Best Fleets to Drive For that nearly every fleet was doing online surveys as a way of collecting feedback from their driving force — to the point where it’s almost too much," Murrell says.

“Drivers are starting to get survey burnout. They get too many surveys, and the participation rate has started to go down. The quality of the feedback has started to go down.”

Fleets need to use a variety of approaches, he says.

Why The Personal Touch Is Vital For Truck Driver Retention

Yes, some online surveys are useful, both anonymous and ones where the driver is identified. But fleets also should be using other methods of outreach, such as phone calls and town hall meetings.

Ad Loading...

“Pre-COVID, we would regularly see people doing town halls at different terminals or just getting together with their drivers kind of informally and saying, ‘I want to get your feedback on this. I'm really curious what you think about this thing,'" Murrell says, which "can work really well.

“We are starting to see the seeds of this coming back.”

One method is management outreach calls, for instance, where managers will get a list of different drivers every week to call and check in with.

“It's not that difficult to work into the schedule, and it can be a really great way to take the temperature of what's happening in the workforce.”

“All of those things ends up being the most effective way to collect good feedback and make sure that you get it in a timely fashion in a way that you can actually use it.”

Ad Loading...

What Do You Do With Truck Driver Feedback?

Collecting driver feedback, whether it’s online surveys or other methods, is just the first step, Murrell says. You have to do something about what you learn.

You can’t address every complaint. In the beginning, fleets can pick the lowest-hanging fruit and start from there.

“But the third part of it that people often miss is actually sharing that back to the workforce,” he says — telling the drivers what the company is doing about what it’s hearing.

You have to close the loop and let drivers know what you're doing in response to their feedback. Explain to drivers what you're changing as a result of what you heard.

“When people see that there is something happening, that they've made the effort to tell you something, you did something with it, and you can see that that change is happening, that becomes a bit of a flywheel," Murrell says. 

Ad Loading...

"They will then give you more feedback and speak up more often and give you more ideas and it can be something that really builds on itself nicely.”

What To Tell Truck Drivers When You Can't Fix The Problem

What about things you can’t change?

“Even if you can’t do something, you still have to communicate back,” Murrell says. “And sometimes that can be a more valuable discussion.”

“Even if you can’t do something, you still have to communicate back. And sometimes that can be a more valuable discussion.”

Sharing with drivers why you’re unable to make a change can lead to a discussion, he says, coming up with ideas about other things the fleet might be able to do to address the issue.

“One of the things that the Best Fleets have found is that sharing with drivers the things they can’t do, why they can’t do it, or the failures, talking about those things more openly builds a lot more trust," Murrell says.

Ad Loading...

Conversely, he says, if there’s a problem that comes up every time you do a survey, and you never do anything about it, drivers start to get suspicious.

At the end of the day, drivers don’t expect fleets to be perfect — but they do expect them to care, to try, and to explain. 

Whether it’s a town hall at a terminal or a quick phone call from a manager, small gestures can lead to big insights. And those insights, if put to work, can make all the difference between losing a driver and keeping one.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Drivers

Illustration of truck owner operator and magnifying glass with the word "regulations"
Driversby Deborah LockridgeFebruary 26, 2026

Owner-Operator Model Gets Boost as DOL Proposes 2024 Independent Contractor Definition Reversal

For an industry that has watched this issue go back and forth for years, the independent contractor proposal marks the latest swing in the regulatory pendulum.

Read More →
 Truck with door open and enforcement officer talking to driver about ELD
DriversFebruary 26, 2026

FMCSA Reinstates Field Warrior ELD to Registered Device List

One electronic logging device has been reinstated to the FMCSA's list of registered ELDs.

Read More →
Photo of truck driver in yellow safety vest walking alongside tractor-trailer
Driversby Deborah LockridgeFebruary 25, 2026

How One Company is Using Smart Suspension Technology to Reduce Driver Injuries and Improve Retention

America’s Service Line adopted Link’s SmartValve and ROI Cabmate systems to address whole-body vibration, repetitive strain, and driver turnover. The trucking fleet is already seeing measurable results.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Illustration with photos from some of the 2026 Best Fleets to Drive For honorees
Driversby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 24, 2026

CarriersEdge Announces 2026 Best Fleets to Drive For

The 18th annual contest recognizing the best workplaces for truck drivers sees changes to Top 20, Hall of Fame

Read More →
Illustration of driver students around trucks with distressed graphic elements and safety cones
Driversby Deborah LockridgeFebruary 19, 2026

FMCSA Targets 550+ ‘Sham’ CDL Schools in Nationwide Sting Operation

The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration issued more than 550 notices of proposed removal to commercial driver training providers following a five-day nationwide enforcement sweep. Investigators cited unqualified instructors, improper training vehicles, and failure to meet federal and state requirements.

Read More →
 Illustration showing a driver behind the wheel, DOT offices, and examples of problematic non domiciled CDL
Driversby Deborah LockridgeFebruary 18, 2026

DOT Alleges Illinois Issued Illegal Non-Domiciled CDLs

Illinois is the latest state targeted and threatened with the loss of highway funding by the U.S. Department of Transportation in its review of states' non-domiciled CDL issuance procedures. The state is pushing back.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
 Illustration showing a driver behind the wheel, DOT offices, and examples of problematic non domiciled CDL
Driversby Deborah LockridgeFebruary 12, 2026

FMCSA Locks in Non-Domiciled CDL Restrictions

After a legal pause last fall, FMCSA has finalized its rule limiting non-domiciled commercial driver's licenses. The agency says the change closes a safety gap, and its revised economic analysis suggests workforce effects will be more gradual than first thought.

Read More →
Photo of Stone's Truck Stop
Driversby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 5, 2026

Trucker Path Names Top Truck Stops for 2026

Truck driver ratings reveal the best chain and independent truck stops in the country.

Read More →
SponsoredFebruary 1, 2026

Stop Watching Footage, Start Driving Results

6 intelligent dashcam tactics to improve safety and boost ROI

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Podcast thumbnail saying "Are we in for more regulatory turbulence?"
DriversJanuary 23, 2026

What FMCSA’s New Enforcement Push Means for Fleets in 2026 [Podcast]

Listen as transportation attorney and TruckSafe Consulting President Brandon Wiseman joins the HDT Talks Trucking podcast to unpack the “regulatory turbulence” of last year and what it means for trucking fleets in 2026.

Read More →