One of the many reasons America is awesome is because it gives you the opportunity to pursue excellence and chase greatness. America isn't perfect because nothing is. But it remains a place where hard work, determination, and personal responsibility can open doors that once seemed impossible. Don't waste that opportunity. Make the most of it. You got this. #undefeated
Some people might say that the customer is the most important part of a business’s success. After all, without customers, there is no business.
However, I would argue that customers are not the most important aspect of a successful business. The employee is. It always has been, and it always will be.
Without employees buying into the vision of an organization, that organization isn’t going anywhere. When you take care of your employees, they’ll take care of your customers—and the business will take care of itself.
Today when I went to Calgary to drop my trailer off I passed a broken down semi.
2 hours later it was still on the side of the highway so I zipped to the drive thru and grabbed lunch for the driver.
Hopefully your day gets better 🙏
My wife wrecked the truck again today. She told the police the man she collided with was texting on his phone and drinking a can of beer.
The police told my wife, "The man can do whatever he wants in his own living room."
@realcarrier411 If it’s an appointment, 1 hr tops. Loading or unloading.
Shipper controls the appointment, they need to own it.
I have been a driver, carrier, broker and now a shipper.
Shippers need to step up!
If you were ok with picture on the left happening at the White House but now you’re bitching about the picture on the right happening there, then you can go fuck all the way off.
My goodness, check out this photo of Admiral Chester Nimitz of Fredericksburg, Texas, playing horseshoes in Hawaii, 1943. I love the details. I'm pretty sure that several of the men are drinking beer and I THINK it's Budweiser. Adm. Nimitz and his partner, Gunnery Sargent Elmer Helfmann of Minnesota, won the match.
Courtesy the fantastic National Museum of the Pacific War in Fredericksburg.