Last week's Business Update established a foundational truth about Network 2.0: paying your drivers by the hour is the margin-protective move. Paying by the day — the model most Ground-only contractors grew up with — guarantees your driver a fixed income regardless of how long the route actually takes or how efficiently the work gets done. In a world where you are now running both Express time-definite stops and Ground volume on the same routes, that guaranteed-pay structure bleeds money every time a driver takes longer than planned.
But knowing that hourly pay is the right structure is only half the problem solved. The harder half is this: actually running an hourly operation is fundamentally different from running a daily one. The habits, the oversight cadence, the role of your Business Contact, the way you think about equipment, the way you handle afternoons — nearly all of it changes. Contractors who switch to hourly pay without changing how they manage will not capture the margin benefit. They will simply have a new pay structure layered on top of an old operational approach, and the numbers will not improve the way they should.
This post walks through what managing by the hour actually requires — the shifts in thinking, the systems you need, and the specific areas where most contractors leave money on the table during the transition. If you made the move to hourly or are about to, this is the operational framework you need to back it up.
