You get more loads as an owner-operator by working load boards and broker relationships hard, building direct shipper accounts that pay better than spot freight, getting your own authority so you keep the broker margin, and freeing up your driving time so you can actually book and negotiate. The truck only earns when the wheels turn, so every hour on the phone is a trade-off.
The math of an owner-operator is unforgiving: empty miles and empty days don't pay the note. Getting more loads isn't one trick — it's stacking a few reliable sources of freight and protecting the driving hours that actually generate revenue. Here is what works.
Work the load boards, but don't live there
DAT and Truckstop are where most owner-operators start, and they're fine for filling gaps. But spot rates are a race to the bottom, and the time you spend refreshing a board at a truck stop is time you're not driving. Use boards to stay loaded, not as your whole strategy.
Build broker relationships that call you first
A handful of brokers who trust you to cover a load on time is worth more than a thousand cold board postings. Run on time, communicate, keep your paperwork clean, and the good brokers start calling you before they post. That is how you get first crack at the better-paying freight.
- Always answer and update — brokers reward reliability with repeat freight
- Submit clean, complete paperwork fast so you get paid and re-booked
- Specialize in lanes you run well and own them
Go direct with shippers
Direct shipper accounts cut out the broker margin and pay meaningfully more per mile, but they take real selling — cold calls, relationships, and consistency. One or two steady direct accounts can anchor your week and let you cherry-pick spot freight around them.
Real-time driver coordination and routing around the clock — overnight, weekends, holidays, and peak surges covered.
Get your own authority
Running under your own MC authority means you keep the margin a carrier would otherwise take. It comes with insurance, compliance, and back-office weight — but for an owner-operator serious about growth, it is usually the single biggest lever on take-home pay.
Protect the hours that earn
Here is the catch nobody tells you: booking loads, chasing paperwork, checking calls, and updating brokers is a full job by itself — and every hour you spend on it is an hour the truck sits. Handing the phone, the after-hours calls, and the paperwork tail to a back-office desk means you keep driving and selling while someone else keeps the freight and admin moving. The truck earns; the desk handles the rest.