Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Disruption? Or Re-invention? [Commentary]

HDT Editor in Chief Deborah Lockridge explores how a little disruption in the trucking industry could create something new, and better.

Deborah Lockridge
Deborah LockridgeEditor and Associate Publisher
Read Deborah's Posts
October 29, 2021
Disruption? Or Re-invention? [Commentary]

HDT Editor in Chief Deborah Lockridge explores how a little disruption in the trucking industry could create something new, and better.

Photo: Canva

3 min to read


"Disruption is the language of the disrupted. Creation is the language of the creators. And as an industry, we have to decide which we are going to be.”

That was a comment from Diane Hames, vice president of marketing for Navistar, during a conversation at the American Trucking Associations’ Management Conference and Exhibition in Nashville last month, and it stuck with me.

As a journalist, I find the evolution of language fascinating. Disrupt comes from the Latin disrumpere, formed by combining dis- (“apart”) and rumpere (“to break”). Disrupt literally means, “to break apart.” Until the late 20th century, it had a negative connotation.

Today, the word has become a business-jargon cliché. You can thank an academic by the name of Clayton Christensen, who in the late 1990s used the word in writing about startups. Newcomers use “disruptive innovation,” he wrote, to successfully challenge established businesses and eventually change the nature of the market. Think about how PCs changed the computer market or how Uber changed the taxi market.

Or, if you want to go back long before Christensen coined his term, think about the introduction of the motor truck and how it caused an entire rethinking of freight movement.

“It was radical,” Hames said. But today we’re seeing disruption on the same level. “We’ll see more changes in next decade than we have in the last 30 to 40 years,” she said. “With order backlogs and supply-chain challenges, the saying that necessity is the mother of invention is very true right now….There will be things that come on line in the next years that we’re not even seeing today, that come of the very specific market conditions we’re in right now.”

Deborah Lockridge

For instance, she said, with the microchip shortage, there are efforts to design systems that don’t use traditional chips. “We took cheap chips for granted, and we can’t do that anymore,” she  added.

Cheap chips are hardly the only example of things we’ve taken for granted that need to be disrupted — taken apart, re-examined, and re-invented, from our reliance on fossil fuels to the job of the truck driver itself.

Right now, the trucking and logistics industry is in the midst of a time that fits both definitions of the word disruption. Even before the pandemic, newcomers were pushing an acceleration of the pace of change in areas such as electrification, autonomous technology, and how shippers and carriers connect. Then COVID-19 came along, accelerating the adoption of paperless technologies and the growth of e-commerce. Now we’re facing a supply-chain crisis so bad it’s threatening economic growth, exacerbated by a severe driver shortage.

“It’s essential that we create adaptation to improve the over-the-road experience,” said Cari Baylor, president of Indiana-based Baylor Trucking, in a panel discussion, such as more dedicated routes, hub-and-spoke operations, weekly pay minimums, and paid time off.

The pandemic caused job-seekers to prioritize quality-of-life concerns. There are so many people switching jobs, industries, or careers that it’s been dubbed “the great resignation.” Against this backdrop, I have to think that a job that doesn’t even offer paid vacation time is going to have a hard time competing.

Perhaps nowhere was the move to re-invent the industry as apparent as in a panel discussion called “Next Gen Perspective: Trucking’s Future is Now.” Lina Dejongh, a branch manager for Trimac Transportation Services, challenged the audience to do more.

“I think we’re talking about things but not fixing it,” she said. As companies and as an industry, we need to figure out “how to truck differently,” she said. “Let’s shake it up. We’ve got to do something different.”

Let’s go back to that original meaning of disruption: breaking apart. It could be a good thing, if our industry can take those pieces, get rid of the ones that aren’t working, add new pieces that do, and rearrange them to create something new and better: the trucking industry of the future.

This editorial commentary first appeared in the November 2021 issue of Heavy Duty Trucking.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Fleet Management

CargoNet 2026 Qi report.
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseApril 24, 2026

Cargo Theft Incidents Fall in Q1, but Organized Crime and Impersonation Drive New Risks

CargoNet reports fewer supply chain crime events to start 2026. But losses hold steady as organized crime shifts tactics toward impersonation schemes and high-value goods.

Read More →
Graphic with light bulbs, HDT Truck Fleet Innovators logo, and the word Nominations
Fleet ManagementApril 24, 2026

Nominations Open for HDT Truck Fleet Innovators 2026

Heavy Duty Trucking is searching for forward-looking leaders at trucking fleets as nominations for HDT’s Truck Fleet Innovators 2026. Deadline is May 15.

Read More →
Illustration with trojan horse and lock with inside of cargo container in background
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseApril 23, 2026

New Trojan Driver Cargo Theft Scam Bypasses Carrier Vetting Systems

Cargo theft rings plant operatives as drivers inside legitimate, fully vetted carriers, then execute coordinated thefts that look like a traditional straight theft from the outside.

Read More →
ATA Truck Tonnage Index March 2026.
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseApril 22, 2026

March Truck Tonnage Posts Strongest Annual Gain Since 2022

A modest sequential increase capped the strongest quarterly performance in years, signaling continued freight momentum in early 2026.

Read More →
Toll road.
Fleet Managementby Jack RobertsApril 22, 2026

Ohio Turnpike Targets $5.2 Million in Unpaid Tolls from Trucking Firms

More than 300 carriers across 26 states have been sent to collections as the Ohio Turnpike cracks down on toll evasion and delinquent payments.

Read More →
Illustration with ATRI logo and square blocks spelling out "research"
Fleet Managementby Deborah LockridgeApril 20, 2026

'Beyond Compliance,' Regulations, Driver Coaching on ATRI’s 2026 Research List

The American Transportation Research Institute will examine driver coaching, regulatory impacts — including the "Beyond Compliance" concept —and weather disruptions that shape trucking operations.

Read More →
Brian Antonellis, senior vice president, fleet operations, Fleet Advantage.
Fleet Managementby Jack RobertsApril 17, 2026

Fleet Advantage's Brian Antonellis on the Growing Need to Replace Old Trucks

Fleet Advantage's Brian Antonellis says it's time for fleets to get back to the fundamentals of good maintenance practices. And that includes replacing older, inefficient equipment.

Read More →
Illustration of computer and mobile screens with load matching software superimposed over photo of an oversize load
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseApril 17, 2026

Truckstop.com Adding to Open Deck, Heavy Haul Offerings

Load matching for flatbed, lowbed, oversize and overweight loads can't be automated like basic van freight, but Truckstop.com is adding more high-tech tools to help.

Read More →
Trucker Path, Truckstop.com partnership expands.
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseApril 14, 2026

Trucker Path, Truckstop.com Expand Load Access Partnership

An expanded Trucker Path and Truckstop.com integration brings more freight opportunities into the TruckLoads app while emphasizing security and network quality.

Read More →
DAT TVI March 2026.
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseApril 14, 2026

Truckload Rates Hit Two-Year Highs as Diesel Costs Surge, DAT Says

Strong March freight demand combined with a spike in fuel costs pushed both spot and contract truckload rates to their highest levels in more than two years.

Read More →