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The First 90 Days Under Your Own Authority: A Survival Plan

RateAnchor · July 2026 · 8 min read

The MC number arrives and it feels like a diploma. It's actually a stopwatch. Startup guides estimate a safe launch needs $50,000–$100,000 — and the part that kills new carriers isn't the permits or the insurance binder; it's a slow cash leak in the first quarter that started with mispriced loads in week one. Here is the 90-day plan for the part the startup checklists skip.

Days 1–30Build the floorbefore the phone ringsDays 31–60Build the ledger:invoice date → paid dateDays 61–90Review like a survivor:real CPM vs the estimate
The quarter that decides year two. Permits start the business; this keeps it.

Composite, but common: a new authority's first month is usually its busiest and its worst-priced — the phone rings, hunger answers, and the floor was never written down. The plan below exists so week one doesn't quietly price year one.

Days 1–30: establish the floor before the phone rings

Before the first load: know your all-in cost per mile, cold. Set a driver minimum for your own time. Decide your deadhead tolerance. Vet every broker against federal records before signing — new authorities are the favorite target of fraud precisely because they're hungry and unverified relationships feel like progress.

Days 31–60: build the payment ledger

Log when every invoice goes out and when every dollar lands. Two loads in, you already know more about a broker than their sales rep will ever tell you. Slow payers aren't necessarily bad partners — but they're partners who need a higher rate or a shorter leash.

Days 61–90: review like a survivor

Pull the quarter's real numbers: actual cost per mile versus your day-one estimate, average days-to-pay per broker, the loads you regret. Adjust the floor. The carriers who make year two do this ruthlessly; the ones who don't, don't.

Every step of this plan is a screen in RateAnchor: the cost floor, the broker check, the payment ledger, the review. Ninety days of discipline for the price of one coffee a month.
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Take it with you: The 90-day checklist (free PDF) — print it, keep it in the truck, hand it to a driver who needs it.

Built inside working truck fleets in the USA — by people who quote loads for a living. RateAnchor is decision support for professional carriers; nothing here is legal, tax, or financial advice.

Know your number — RateAnchor, $5.99/mo