Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Russ Gerdin Won't Give It Away

Heartland Express is operated with an eye toward long-term profits instead of short-term cash flow. Chairman & CEO Russ Gerdin is a 2006 HDT Truck Fleet Innovator.

March 1, 2006
Russ Gerdin Won't Give It Away

Russ Gerdin, chairman and CEO of Heartland Express.

Photo: Heartland Express

5 min to read


Russ Gerdin doesn't consider himself much of an innovator, despite the fact that his company, Heartland Express, continues to enjoy the lowest operating ratio in the truckload industry. But accomplishing that has more to do with attention to details than with innovation, insists the chairman and CEO.

Yet when you talk to Gerdin, it's obvious he looks at things a little differently than the pack. For instance, take his remarks at the Merrill Lynch Global Transportation Conference last summer.

Ad Loading...

"It blows my mind on a daily basis, everyone crying about a shortage of drivers," he said. "It seems to be a sickness within the truckload industry that we truckers have to haul all the freight – it doesn't matter if it pays, we just have to haul it. So in order to do that, we have to hire a whole bunch of bad drivers to haul a whole bunch of bad freight."

When asked about those remarks, Gerdin told us, "It seems like the trucking industry as a whole doesn't do a real good job of containing themselves when they've got all kinds of drivers. They just buy trucks and start hauling freight. They haul a lot of bad freight to be able to say they have X amount of trucks."

The number of trucks a fleet has is immaterial, Gerdin says. It's how you use them that counts.

"There's a lot of ego in trucking," he says, leading in essence to a competition to see who has the most trucks. "If you ask people whether a company is making money or it's broke, everyone knows. But if you ask the same people how many trucks that company has, nobody knows."

In 2005, Heartland's operating revenues rose 14.6 percent to $523.8 million, and its net income increased 15.1 percent to $71.9 million. Its operating ratio – 80.1 percent, with a 13.7 percent net margin.

Ad Loading...

Driver Shortage 'Not Such a Bad Thing'

In fact, a driver shortage is not such a bad thing, Gerdin says. "The driver shortage makes you realize you have to provide a better living for the drivers, and then you have to charge more." Higher rates mean not only better pay for the drivers, but a better bottom line for the trucking company.

"We don't know of anyone that pays [drivers] more than we do in the overall package."

Heartland gets what it pays for, Gerdin says, in the form of lower turnover and more experienced, safer drivers, which also leads to better insurance rates and better customer service. "We don't hire any trainee drivers, so we're paying more to get the experienced driver. We're willing to pay to get that kind of a driver." And they're willing to let drivers go who aren't up to snuff.

"We let a lot of drivers go because they've had two or three late loads. Most people don't do that. We're constantly culling to have the best workforce of all."

Better drivers also allow Heartland to save money on the number of people needed on the administrative side. Most trucking companies average six non-driver employees per truck, Gerdin says. At Heartland, that number is three and a half. "So we have 40 percent fewer people doing the same amount of gross volume. Our philosophy is to have fewer people, which lets you take better care of those people and have better people to make decisions."

Ad Loading...

The Long-Term View

Much of Gerdin's different approach to trucking comes from growing up in the business. "Every time Dad got a dollar, he bought another truck, and all he did was build up a bank," he says. "I worked for him the first year out of college, and at that point we agreed to disagree. I think you should have no debt, have new trucks and not be working on them all the time. Dad believed you should have debt and work on trucks all the time. Maybe that's what shaped me, was watching how hard he worked. I watched him work like I see so many truckers doing today. The lesson I learned from him was doing the opposite of what he did."

Having no debt is a big part of what allows Heartland to operate differently, with an eye toward long-term profits instead of short-term cash flow. "When I started 40 years ago, I bought one truck, and when I got it paid for, I bought another one," Gerdin says. "We can have a new truck sitting out there, and because it's paid for, if we don't have what we want for rates and we don't have what we want in a driver, that truck can sit there."

Heartland also operates only new trucks, which brings maintenance savings. "We don't run our shops in the evening or on the weekends. Everyone says you can't do that, but we do," Gerdin says. "It's awfully expensive to have night shops. It's a known fact they're twice as inefficient as a day shop."

The company also carefully specs its trailers to last longer and need less maintenance, rather than cutting corners to get a cheaper purchase price.

Some Things Don't Change

Gerdin was 25 when he bought his first truck. He has no plans to retire. Though he's seen a lot in the last 40 years, he says, some things don't change.

Ad Loading...

"There is not anything new in the trucking industry," he says. "The driver still drives; he's still the key. The load has to get there on time. And it's been that way as long as I've had trucks. We see too many ideas that are going to revolutionize something that has not been revolutionized at all."

The key to success, he says, is not running after every new innovation, but "just to be better at what you do in many, many small ways."

Editor's note: Russ Gerdin retired due to health issues in 2011, five years after this profile was published, and died later that year.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Fleet Management

2026 ACT Expo Speakers

ACT Expo 2026 Unveils Speaker Lineup Focused on Real-World Fleet Technology Deployment

Nearly 400 executives and fleet leaders will address AI, autonomy, zero-emission vehicles, and connected technologies at ACT Expo 2026 event in Las Vegas in May.

Read More →
thermo king heavy duty trucking
SponsoredMarch 2, 2026

How Thermo King’s AI-Fueled Telematics Drive Fleet Efficiency

Thermo King's AI-powered telematics enhance fleet efficiency with smart monitoring, predictive maintenance, and real-time insights. Improve uptime and help reduce costs with these advanced digital solutions.

Read More →
Illustration with fraud and cybersecurity images and the words "The Cyber Stop"
Fleet Managementby Ben WilkensFebruary 26, 2026

NMFTA Targets Freight Fraud and Telematics Supply Chain Risks

New carrier identity checks, industry resources, and telematics supply chain research aim to make freight fraud and cyber risks harder to exploit.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Bobit Business Media logo displayed next to The Fleet Source logo on a white background, separated by a vertical line.
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 25, 2026

Bobit Business Media Expands Fleet Technology Platform with Acquisition of Roadz Partner Portfolio

Bobit Business Media has acquired key partner agreement assets from Roadz, expanding its role as a go-to-market partner for fleet technology providers and strengthening its digital sourcing capabilities.

Read More →
American Class 8 tractor-trailers.
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 24, 2026

ATRI Seeks Carrier Data for 2026 Operational Costs Report

The annual benchmarking study from ATRI adds year-over-year comparisons for repeat participants as fleets navigate shifting market conditions.

Read More →
Fleetworthy fleet management.
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 23, 2026

Fleetworthy Unifies Brands Under Single Banner to Streamline Fleet Readiness

Company consolidates Bestpass, Drivewyze and CPSuite into one platform aimed at reducing vendor complexity and controlling fleet costs

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Podcast thumbnail saying "Cargo Theft: Is Your Load Next?"
Fleet ManagementFebruary 23, 2026

Double Brokering, Phishing, and the Rise of Strategic Cargo Theft

Cargo theft has evolved from parking-lot break-ins to cyber-enabled strategic fraud. Here’s what fleets need to know.

Read More →
YouTube thumbnail with Scott Cornell, HDT Talks Trucking Logo, and the words, "Is Your Load Next?"
Safety & Complianceby Deborah LockridgeFebruary 20, 2026

The New Cargo Theft Playbook — And How Fleets Can Fight Back

Cargo theft has shifted from parking-lot break-ins to organized international schemes using double brokering, phishing, and even spoofing tracking signals. In this HDT Talks Trucking video podcast episode, cargo-theft investigator Scott Cornell explains what’s changed and what fleets need to do now.

Read More →
Daimler Truck North America Vice President David Carson
Fleet Managementby Jack RobertsFebruary 19, 2026

Capacity Overhang Begins to Clear, But Fleets Aren’t Ready to Spend 

Daimler Truck’s David Carson sees early signs of tightening capacity — yet buyers remain wary, extending trade cycles and resisting a pre-2027 emissions surge. 

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Map showing which states have bad freight bottlenecks
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 17, 2026

Chicago Interchange Overtakes Longstanding New Jersey Intersection as Worst Freight Bottleneck

The American Transportation Research Institute's annual analysis of truck speeds through congested interchanges yielded a new worst bottleneck this year.

Read More →