Freight Broker Training-Your Money, Your Time
Freight broker training seems to be popping up everywhere now. It looks like more and more people are catching on to and cashing in on this home based business idea. Not too long ago freight broker training was published in the Entrepreneur Magazine to be one of the fastest rising home based businesses around. Today it is ringing true. There are freight broker seminars, schools, internet classes and just yesterday, a freight broker academy opened! All this may be well and good, but if they don’t have the freight broker experience, what kind of fine-detail can they explain? What kind of personal experiences, scenarios or stories can they tell you or relate to? What advice would they be able to give you in case of theft, a hi-jacking, missing /damaged goods, or an accident? Will your freight broker trainer be there for you after the training? Would you be able to call him/her at 11:30 on Wednesday night or 9 am on Sunday morning if you came across something you weren’t taught, forgot about or just plain didn’t understand? Ask these questions when considering a freight broker training course. If you are not satisfied with the answers you get, keep searching. It is your money you will be spending. But if you are just bored and have money to throw away, go ahead and jump on the expensive gold and glitter train, if nothing else, just for the ride. If not, do some investigating before you make up your mind. Call the prospective freight broker trainers and talk to them. Make sure you are spending your money and your time with someone who knows the freight broker industry inside and out. See if they will tell you in all honesty that it can take from six months to two years to build a solid freight broker business. Ask them about their years of experience. What they did and how they did it. Where and how they got their start, who they worked for, why they quit. Satisfy your own curiosity. I’d bet you could satisfy my curiosity with details/experiences about your current or former job/business couldn’t you? I know I could. Don’t be shy. Ask them point blank if they have ever been a freight broker or a freight broker agent and ask if they’ve ever owned a freight brokerage. Have they ever been a truck driver or a dispatcher? It goes with the territory. Ask questions to get a feel of their understanding of the freight broker industry, then go with you gut instinct. After all you do want to get the best possible training you can get for your money right? I thought so. Freight broker training should come from the experienced and the experienced make the best instructors.
Copyright2008 Jack C. Martin
Owner of a1freight training
http://www.a1freightbrokertraining.com



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