People stay where they’re comfortable, and they leave where they’re not. In most industries, that statement has limits. Switching employers isn’t always easy, and options can be constrained by geography, skill set, or pay.
Trucking is different.
In today’s market, a competent driver with a clean record can generate multiple job offers within hours. That reality hasn’t fully sunk in for many truckload carriers, and it shows in their turnover numbers. Too many companies are still asking the wrong question. Instead of “Why are drivers leaving?” they should be asking:
“Why would a driver choose to work here in the first place?”
Know Where You Stand in the Market
Start with an honest look in the mirror. Where does your company rank on driver pay compared to competitors in the same lanes and sectors—flatbed, tanker, refrigerated, dry van, and so on? If you don’t know the answer, find out. At a minimum, you should reassess this quarterly.
Not knowing your market position may be the single biggest contributor to high turnover. Drivers know exactly where you stand—even if you don’t.
Safety Is Culture, Not a Slogan
Next, examine how safety actually operates in your organization. Is it embedded in day-to-day decisions, or is it treated as a department that exists after something goes wrong?
Where are your CSA scores? Are standards enforced consistently? Do you tolerate unprofessional behavior?
Here’s the reality: professional drivers want to work around other professionals. If you allow unsafe or sloppy behavior to go unchecked, your best drivers will leave. Every time.
Do you have a clear discipline policy? Is it applied fairly? Does your safety team have the knowledge, authority, and support to run a real safety strategy—not just manage paperwork? If not, turnover will continue, or your insurance costs will eventually push you out of the market.
Communication: Who Controls the Narrative?
Now ask yourself where drivers get their information about your company and the industry. If you don’t have a formal communication strategy, then the message is coming from the driver room, social media, and the CB radio.
People are social by nature. They need information, context, and connection. If leadership doesn’t provide it, someone else will.
And communication isn’t just recruiting. Your company is constantly communicating—with drivers, office staff, customers, vendors, regulators, law enforcement, charities, and the communities where you operate. Most importantly, you are communicating with the drivers you want to hire next.
The question is simple: Are you controlling that message, or reacting to it?
Controlling the narrative isn’t marketing. It’s leadership.
Rate Yourself—Honestly
Try this exercise. On a scale of 1 to 10, rate your company in each area:
- Driver pay package versus competitors
- Safety culture and professionalism
- Overall communication to all audiences
Be honest. When in doubt, score lower.
If your scores are weak, that’s actually good news—it tells you exactly where to focus. Improving these areas directly improves culture, and culture is the real retention tool.
If you rate yourself high across the board and still struggle with turnover, go back and do it again. You missed something. Perception is reality. If your company is perceived poorly, it doesn’t matter what you believe internally.
Culture Is What Keeps Drivers
Every company I work with hires far more drivers than they should. The fix isn’t more recruiting—it’s building a place where drivers want to stay.
That means a positive, professional environment where people feel respected, informed, and supported. Where safety is real, communication is intentional, and leadership knows its position in the market.
That’s what reduces turnover. Everything else is noise.
If you want to discuss any of this further, feel free to reach out. Retention is a strategy problem, and strategy can be fixed.
Take good care,
RJH