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How to Use Facebook to Retain Drivers

Driving a truck can be a lonely, stressful job. But no driver has to be completely isolated in the age of social media. Facebook, in particular, can be a powerful tool in making drivers feel like they’re part of a team and connected to family and friends even on the road.

July 12, 2019
How to Use Facebook to Retain Drivers

Driving a truck can be a lonely, stressful job. But no driver has to be completely isolated in the age of social media. Facebook, in particular, can be a powerful tool in making drivers feel like they’re part of a team and connected to family and friends even on the road.

Photo via Volvo Trucks

5 min to read


If used properly, social media is an excellent tool that fleets can use not only to communicate with drivers and potential drivers, but also leverage to boost their overall visibility in a crowded, competitive and dynamic industry.

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A recent webinar hosted by Tom Robb, associate director of education for the Truckload Carriers Association, outlined the various ways social media platforms, particularly Facebook, can be used to attract new driving talent to fleets and retain current ones.

Perhaps the most powerful aspect of Facebook for fleets is its ability to take the edge off the isolation and loneliness many long-haul drivers and their families feel during extended periods away from home. Moreover, Facebook can create a sense of unity among drivers and their families, be a morale booster and offer much-needed advice — or even just a sympathetic ear — during stressful times.

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According to webinar moderator Jane Jazrawy, CEO of CarriersEdge, which helps produce TCA’s Annual Best Fleets to Drive For program, many of the same strategies that help fleets recruit drivers on Facebook can be used to retain them after they’ve been hired.

These tactics can include pages with information on company initiatives, promotions, awards and other milestones that can foster a team philosophy and boost morale. Other posts can offer tips and help for managing money and heath and give relationship advice to help drivers and their families to adjust to and deal with the realities of life for long-haul truckers.

Melissa Nishan, vice president of driver recruiting, Epes Transportation noted that a good, general Facebook strategy for a fleet is to use it as a way to communicate and engage drivers. Don’t focus too much on trucks, business content and other “shop talk.” Bear in mind that drivers are human.

And like any person, being bombarded with a glut of work-related content after a grueling 8 to 10 hour day is unlikely to entice any tired employee. That’s why she stresses using Facebook in other ways, such as sharing news, oddball or humorous posts or interactive posts that encourage “likes,” commentary and online conversations.

But the most powerful ways that Facebook can help retain drivers often spring up organically, said Callie Heathscott, marketing director for Maverick Transportation. These often begin as closed, private groups, she noted.

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“To begin with, don’t limit your company to just one, single, Facebook page or group,” she explained. “Your main Facebook page is a public site that is really like a full-blown online ad for your company. Your primary focus there should be on public relations or driver recruiting. But that may not be the best way to communicate more company and lifestyle specific information and related interactions with your driver force.”

Heathscott said Maverick has had great success with other, more specific Facebook pages that deal exclusively with driver-related topics. “Maverick Aces” is probably the most high-profile example of this approach — a Facebook page that tells stories about, honors and promotes the company’s safest and most fuel efficient drivers.

Other unique Maverick Facebook pages, such as Maverick Wellness, tackle specific issues, such as driver health, with articles, advice and encouraging online conversations on making healthy choices and staying active away from home.

Another popular Maverick Facebook destination is the “Driver Q&A” page where drivers can go to seek help, information and advice about aspects of their job they do not understand or need help dealing with.

Heathscott also mentioned the organic pages that spring up on their own. A prime example of this is the “Maverick Wives” Facebook page, which was started as a kind of online support and advice page for driver spouses who still have to manage a household, finances and raise children while their partner is away.

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“That page was actually started by a driver’s wife who wanted to reach out to other spouses for help, to lend support and advice,” Heathscott said. “And we want to respect the boundaries of that group. It’s not an official Maverick page, per se, and while we support the group and make sure new drivers and their wives are aware of its existence and encourage them to join, we don’t attempt to monitor or direct the content or the conversations on that page.”

Kenneth Moore, a former driver who is now the fleet’s operations analyst, said that currently, Maverick is administering at least 12 different Facebook groups dealing with some aspect of driver safety, wellbeing, home life or just good, fun, stress relief.

“You still get negative posts on these pages,” he said. “Anyone can have a bad day. So we try not to get too involved as the fleet when those posts show up. We see these situations as good opportunities for other drivers to step up and defend us. So they turn into self-regulated groups and we’ve found that’s good for morale, too.”

Social media — Facebook in particular — is intended to encourage the free expression of ideas and conversation, Moore stressed. So Maverick’s policy is — in most cases — to not attempt to guide a conversation in one way or another.

“We see our role in these discussions as presenting fact-based information so we can give drivers direct answers to their questions and let them know what’s going on,” he said. “That has been a particularly useful approach with live Facebook sessions where we can take and answer questions in real time.”

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The key to making Facebook an effective tool for retaining drivers, said Moore, is to always keep the human aspect in mind.

“Drivers don’t get a lot of personal connections outside of a telephone call when they’re away from home,” he said. “But using Facebook to provide a human aspect that helps them feel like they’re on a team, get answers to questions and stay informed, is a powerful way of keeping them connected, engaged and a valuable member of your team.”

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