Turning point coming

HedleyLamarr

Well-Known Member
It’s not a one year snapshot. It’s an event that lasted a year plus and has changed history going forward. Huge difference. Post pandemic reality is the new “overall context”. And maybe you don’t overhaul it but you certainly don’t look at a year of suckage where your biggest competitor absolutely killed it and act like very significant changes need to happen.

For reference, a contractor on Facebook broke down fuel prices and Ground’s fuel supplement between the start of the contract and about a month ago. Fuel expense went up by 65%. FedEx fuel supplement went up by 53%.

One way or another, before this year ends, people will be parking trucks. It will be either under protest or simply unable to financially continue. And it’s not just one or two contractors throughout the country and it’s not just small “mom and pop”shops. It’s the larger investors who decide that continuing down the FedEx owning business isn’t profitable and doesn’t look to be anytime in the near future.

Investors are figuring this out at every level and Pittsburgh/Memphis is completely out of touch with it.
Couldn't help but notice that Dano didn't reply to this. No answer perhaps?
 

bacha29

Well-Known Member
Has grounds profit margin shrunk?
In the short term ? Yes. It spent barge loads of money on the Ground network which now has to be expensed against earnings But, when the reconciliation is finished and if all goes according to plan ground will likely be back in that mid to high teen percentage margins. Again, if it all goes according to the plan.
 

instiches

Well-Known Member
One way or another, before this year ends, people will be parking trucks. It will be either under protest or simply unable to financially continue. And it’s not just one or two contractors throughout the country and it’s not just small “mom and pop”shops. It’s the larger investors who decide that continuing down the FedEx owning business isn’t profitable and doesn’t look to be anytime in the near future.

Investors are figuring this out at every level and Pittsburgh/Memphis is completely out of touch with it.
And contractors are frequently seeing 5-15% cut in per stop revenue on their renegotiations. It's ugly.
 

bacha29

Well-Known Member
And contractors are frequently seeing 5-15% cut in per stop revenue on their renegotiations. It's ugly.
It's the way the system works. The box generates x amount of revenue. Corporate takes it's cut out of it. Executives take their cut out of it in the form of bonuses. By the time it gets down to the contractor there's nothing left. And to top it all off he's expected to find somebody to take responsibility and governance over that route for nothing. A nearly impossible situation has become a completely impossible situation. It's a rigged system whereby a contractor is designed to fail. The only question is how long will it take him to do so? Some last a bit longer than others but in the end it becomes impossible to go on.
 

Fred's Myth

Nonhyphenated American
It's the way the system works. The box generates x amount of revenue. Corporate takes it's cut out of it. Executives take their cut out of it in the form of bonuses. By the time it gets down to the contractor there's nothing left. And to top it all off he's expected to find somebody to take responsibility and governance over that route for nothing. A nearly impossible situation has become a completely impossible situation. It's a rigged system whereby a contractor is designed to fail. The only question is how long will it take him to do so? Some last a bit longer than others but in the end it becomes impossible to go on.
Awesome! I for one would LOVE to see the Ground Model crash and burn.

Go back to hiring, managing, and most of all PAYING employees!
 

59 Dano

I just want to make friends!
Awesome! I for one would LOVE to see the Ground Model crash and burn.

Go back to hiring, managing, and most of all PAYING employees!
You clowns who support this don't get it. An integration of Ground and Express would be the subbing out of Express employees to contractors, not the turning of Ground drivers into actual FedEx employees.
 

MAKAVELI

Well-Known Member
You clowns who support this don't get it. An integration of Ground and Express would be the subbing out of Express employees to contractors, not the turning of Ground drivers into actual FedEx employees.
Subbing out employees to contractors. Lol
Where do you come up with this Bull :censored2:?
 

59 Dano

I just want to make friends!
Subbing out employees to contractors. Lol
Where do you come up with this Bull :censored2:?
I mean, yeah, in theory they might combine operations to save money and then turn around and choose the most expensive way to staff that combined operation - but it would be stupid.
 

MAKAVELI

Well-Known Member
I mean, yeah, in theory they might combine operations to save money and then turn around and choose the most expensive way to staff that combined operation - but it would be stupid.
Works for UPS and other parts of FedEx Corp. Upper management and Fred are just stuck with the mentality and philosophy that it can't be done with the delivery side. The company needs to adapt or be left behind by UPS and Amazon.
 

bbsam

Moderator
Staff member
The real kicker is that this mess is all Ground’s own making. They have been obsessed with becoming larger and more efficient. And the plans had a degree of merit but didn’t account for crappy logistics programs, driver turnover, a global pandemic and weather impacts.

And yes, most of that is impossible to predict. The problem is that they refused to adapt to any of those situations. Costs were simply passed along. Honestly, I’d say that had they dealt with those as they came up, we wouldn’t see near the focus on how high gas prices are affecting contractors. Fuel prices are just that proverbial last straw.

So far their only response has been to say that they will get better at doing what hasn’t been working. Contractors have been raising these concerns internally for nearly two years now. They’re in a tight corner and I’m curious to see if they somehow navigate the mess they’ve created.
 

bbsam

Moderator
Staff member
Works for UPS and other parts of FedEx Corp. Upper management and Fred are just stuck with the mentality and philosophy that it can't be done with the delivery side. The company needs to adapt or be left behind by UPS and Amazon.
And that’s the conundrum. They’re already in a down position against very tough competition. Attempting a monumental restructuring like this could be catastrophic.
 

MAKAVELI

Well-Known Member
And that’s the conundrum. They’re already in a down position against very tough competition. Attempting a monumental restructuring like this could be catastrophic.
I don't think they would try all at once. They've been making small changes over the years to make the appearance of one company to the public. I think if they thought they could turn Express into a contractor model they would have done it already. But combining some Express and Ground into the same buildings is definitely the biggest move they've made yet in either direction.
 

McFeely

Huge Member
I mean, yeah, in theory they might combine operations to save money and then turn around and choose the most expensive way to staff that combined operation - but it would be stupid.

I know this thread is mostly about Ground, but one could argue that the company (at least Express) has had a history of doing something "to save money" then completely screw the pooch on execution.

Response comes to mind with extra sorts at ramps and stations, extra RTDs, wave 2 drivers, huge amounts of rental vans, and not enough staffing to support any of that (read: expensive overtime for existing employees). DRA was supposed to save money too to keep every route to an 8-hour day, lulz. One can only imagine what the financial repercussions will be with E-Star's route planning.
 

Cactus

Just telling it like it is
I mean, yeah, in theory they might combine operations to save money and then turn around and choose the most expensive way to staff that combined operation - but it would be stupid.
Everything FedEx tries these days IS stupid.
 
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