Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Commentary: Would You Drive for Your Fleet?

Are you treating your drivers like employees?That may sound like an odd question. Unless you use owner-operators, of course your drivers are employees. But … do you really treat them like the rest of your employees?

Deborah Lockridge
Deborah LockridgeEditor and Associate Publisher
Read Deborah's Posts
March 1, 2015
Commentary: Would You Drive for Your Fleet?

Deborah Lockridge, Editor in Chief

3 min to read


Deborah Lockridge, Editor in Chief

Are you treating your drivers like employees?

That may sound like an odd question. Unless you use owner-operators, of course your drivers are employees.

Ad Loading...

But … do you really treat them like the rest of your employees?

That was the question posed by Duff Swain, president of Trincon Group, who I interviewed recently for our Driver Dilemma series.

Swain is adamant that before you even think seriously about the topic of this month’s Driver Dilemma installment, “Expanding the pool,” you need to address your retention issues. Otherwise you’re just trying to bail out a boat without fixing the leaks.

“Everyone talks about the shortage and need for new drivers, but no one is really taking care of the turnover issue,” he told me. Fleets need to come to grips with reality, he said, and recognize that most have not been good at recruiting, orientation, communications or accountability.

“Turnover is a communication issue pure and simple,” he says. “Treat your drivers like employees and bring them into the company and make them feel like they want to be there and want that job.”

Ad Loading...

Ask yourselves these questions and think about whether you truly are treating your drivers as employees:

What do you call your drivers?

“Nine times out of 10, I go into a trucking company and they are talking about drivers, not team members or associates.” Swain says. Maybe it doesn’t seem important, but words are powerful.

How do you pay your drivers?

Much has been made of the need for better pay to draw drivers into the industry, but how drivers are paid can be as important as how much. Are any of your other employees paid piecework? Or are they paid with a yearly salary, or hourly?

“Why not pay [drivers] a salary related to tenure and experience, plus a mileage or hourly incentive based on a certain level of productivity?” Swain asks. “That way you are saying to the driver, ‘You are an employee.’”

It comes down to fairness. When drivers are paid by the mile or by percentage and have little control over either one, such as when weather or excessive detention times drive down their miles, it’s not fair. And drivers know it.

Ad Loading...

How do you evaluate your drivers?

Do you have an annual or semi-annual review, raise, promotion process for your employees so they know what’s expected of them and they get feedback and guidance on how to meet their goals? Do you do the same for your drivers? In most cases, Swain said, small- and medium-size carriers don’t even have job descriptions for drivers, let alone performance expectations.

How do you communicate with your drivers?

Do you have signs in your company that indicate some areas are off-limits to drivers? Are driver managers trained to actually be managers, not just dispatchers, with the associated communication skills? Do you have a separate driver newsletter, or a company-wide newsletter? Do you have driver award ceremonies, or company- or terminal-wide award ceremonies? Your very efforts to make drivers feel special could be keeping them apart from the people they need to interact with to feel like, and work as part of, a team.

And lastly … have you asked your drivers if they feel like valued employees? 

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Drivers

SponsoredFebruary 1, 2026

Stop Watching Footage, Start Driving Results

6 intelligent dashcam tactics to improve safety and boost ROI

Read More →
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 →
DriversJanuary 20, 2026

How Pilot Is Using AI in Truck Maintenance

A practical look at how artificial intelligence is helping Pilot's trucking fleet move from reactive maintenance to a more proactive approach.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
SponsoredJanuary 19, 2026

3 New Ways Fleet Software Pays: ROI opportunities for modern fleet managers

Safety, uptime, and insurance costs directly impact profitability. This eBook looks at how fleet software is evolving to deliver real ROI through proactive maintenance, AI-powered video telematics, and real-time driver coaching. Learn how fleets are reducing crashes, defending claims, and using integrated data to make smarter operational decisions.

Read More →
SponsoredJanuary 19, 2026

Basic Tracking vs Next Generation Fleet Technology

Fleet software is getting more sophisticated and effective than ever, tying big data models together to transform maintenance, safety, and the value of your existing tech stack. Fleet technology upgrades are undoubtedly an investment, but updated technology can offer a much higher return. Read how upgrading your fleet technology can increase the return on your investment.

Read More →
Graphic showing smart truck parking technology with a highway sign reading “Spaces Available” and the Streetline logo.
Driversby News/Media ReleaseJanuary 16, 2026

Streetline Expands Smart Truck Parking System on West Coast

Streetline is expanding smart truck parking tools, including a new I-5 deployment in Washington and a no-upfront-cost pilot model for state DOTs.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Truck parked at night
Driversby Deborah LockridgeJanuary 15, 2026

Third 'Jason's Law' Truck Parking Survey Under Way

The Federal Highway Administration is asking motor carriers and truck drivers to give input on where and when drivers have difficulty finding truck parking, and on how drivers prefer to get information on available parking.

Read More →
Driversby StaffJanuary 8, 2026

FMCSA Continues Focus on State Issuance of Non-Domiciled CDLs

The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration continues a crackdown on an increasing number of states it says have been issuing non-domiciled CDLs improperly.

Read More →
Driversby Deborah LockridgeDecember 30, 2025

Will FMCSA’s Driver-Oriented Enforcement Initiatives Affect Capacity?

The Department of Transportation and the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration took several actions in 2025 to tighten enforcement of regulations for commercial drivers. Will those affect trucking capacity in 2026?

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Driversby Deborah LockridgeDecember 15, 2025

Q&A: Lisa Kelly Explains Ice Road Trucking, Reality TV Editing, and Life as a Female Driver

Lisa Kelly talks to HDT about the return of the show Ice Road Truckers, what really happens on the ice roads, how reality TV shapes drivers’ stories, and the career she’s built beyond the show.

Read More →