Take control of your perfect recruiting process to consistently grow your fleet without relying on crowded job boards or expensive recruitment agencies.
Take control of your perfect recruiting process to consistently grow your fleet without relying on crowded job boards or expensive recruitment agencies.

Easy 4 Step Roadmap To Double Your Fleet in 2026

Easy 4 Step Roadmap To
Double Your Fleet in 2024

No more relying only on the job boards. Easily access all the drivers in your market by launching ads in minutes that have been proven to work and generate over 80,000 leads.
"It's been just 1 week and we already have 4 interviewed drivers with confirmed interest including a lead driver with 7 others pending in the Savannah area."
Logan P.

Reduce wasted time on unqualified candidates by filtering them out and instantly engage with your qualified candidates. The largest processor of driver applications did a study to find that you are 30% more likely to hire a driver if you respond within 5 minutes. Qualified applicants will show up on your calendar asking you to call them and give them an interview.
“With your system, it does it for us, making our job a little easier. We couldn’t keep up with all the candidates we have without your follow up system. Most of our tenured drivers are because of your follow up system."
Jasmynn F.

As the saying goes, fortune is in the followup.
By building your own company database of drivers and storing it in your system, you have permission to message them at will free of charge because you own this database. Next time you need to fill a position, use your own database rather than relying on someone else’s advertising platform or a crowded job board.
“Robert had a list of 300 drivers built up in his waiting list. Using ALIS, he sent out a message to them and had 25 interviews scheduled almost instantly for free and filled his position in 2 days. "
No more relying only on the job boards. Easily access all the drivers in your market by launching ads in minutes that have been proven to work and generate over 80,000 leads.
"It's been just 1 week and we already have 4 interviewed drivers with confirmed interest including a lead driver with 7 others pending in the Savannah area."
Logan P.


Reduce wasted time on unqualified candidates by filtering them out and instantly engage with your qualified candidates. The largest processor of driver applications did a study to find that you are 30% more likely to hire a driver if you respond within 5 minutes. Qualified applicants will show up on your calendar asking you to call them and give them an interview.
“With your system, it does it for us, making our job a little easier. We couldn’t keep up with all the candidates we have without your follow up system. Most of our tenured drivers are because of your follow up system."
Jasmynn F.
As the saying goes, fortune is in the followup.
By building your own company database of drivers and storing it in your system, you have permission to message them at will free of charge because you own this database. Next time you need to fill a position, use your own database rather than relying on someone else’s advertising platform or a crowded job board.
“Robert had a list of 300 drivers built up in his waiting list. Using ALIS, he sent out a message to them and had 25 interviews scheduled almost instantly for free and filled his position in 2 days. "

Ready to hire your next great driver? Take the challenge for only $99 – Pay once, and get lifetime access to the proven system that will help you recruit drivers quickly and efficiently. No more guesswork, no more wasted time.
No, the budget that you’d like to allocate to any advertising platform will be separate. The budget you will spend to hire a driver will vary widely depending on a number of factors. For you to estimate, we usually see lead costs ranging from $3 - $20 per lead using adlaunch pro.
Yes, we do have an option to manage the advertising budget for you and maximize the number of leads you get. This is an option if you have an ad budget exceeding $3,000 per month. Schedule a demo and we can discuss exactly how that works and see if you are a good candidate for that.
Congratulations on having a system that you use. We have various options of integrating with driver reach and tenstreet or other platforms depending on your need. Schedule a demo and we can walk through the best option for that.
No long term contracts. We operate on a basis where we make sure that you are happy. If it’s not working for you, you are able to cancel with a written 30 day notice.

What $5 Diesel Is Doing to Driver Sentiment -
And What It Means for Your Recruiting
The average trucker is paying $5.38 a gallon for diesel right now. A month ago, it was $3.88. That's a 41% spike in roughly thirty days - driven by the Iran conflict and the resulting disruption to the Strait of Hormuz, which carries about 20% of the world's oil supply.
For owner-operators, the math is brutal. They're paid by the mile. Costs have shot up roughly twenty cents per mile almost overnight, wiping out the five cents most of them were making. That's not a rough quarter. That's actively losing money on every load they haul.
For company drivers, the direct hit is softer. Their fuel comes out of the carrier's budget, not their own pocket. But they're watching. They're watching owner-operator colleagues struggle to cover costs. They're watching small carriers fold. And they're asking, quietly, whether their own situation is as solid as they thought.
That's the sentiment picture right now. Financially stressed, uncertain, and - for a growing portion of the driver pool - actively reconsidering their options.
What 'Reconsidering' Actually Looks Like
Not every driver responds to financial pressure the same way. Some hunker down with what's familiar. Some walk away from trucking entirely - and the data shows a meaningful percentage are doing exactly that. A recent survey found 40% of truckers actively looking for jobs outside the industry. Driver job satisfaction has ranked in the bottom 10% of all careers for years, and economic stress accelerates what was already a slow bleed out of the profession.
But there's a third group that matters most if you're a carrier with open seats right now: drivers who were previously content staying put, now crossing into 'open to a conversation' territory.
A driver who hasn't submitted an application anywhere in two or three years is starting to think, for the first time in a while, whether a different carrier might put him in a more stable position. Not desperation. Not panic. Just a genuine reassessment. That's a real window - if you know how to reach those drivers and what to say when you do.
Here's the Catch
More drivers being open to a move doesn't automatically make recruiting easier. It depends entirely on what you're offering and whether that offer speaks to what drivers are actually worried about right now.
A driver who's financially stressed isn't looking for a vague promise of 'competitive pay.' He wants specifics. He wants to know what the weekly check actually looks like when diesel is expensive. Whether your carrier is financially solid enough to weather this stretch. Whether the compensation structure makes sense in a world where costs spike without warning.
Carriers whose recruiting messages still lead with generic benefit language and broad claims about home time are getting tuned out. The driver you actually want - stable tenure, clean record, not in 'apply everywhere' mode - has a high bar for what it would take to move. Vague doesn't clear that bar.
This is where offer competitiveness matters more than most carriers realize. Not just whether your pay rate is above the regional average, but whether the full package - pay structure, home time, benefits, equipment, carrier stability - tells a story a financially uncertain driver finds convincing. Getting that story right before you run a single ad is the difference between generating applicants and generating the right applicants.
The Vacancy Math Hasn't Paused
Here's the thing that doesn't stop while the driver market is complicated: the cost of an empty seat. Industry estimates put it at $5,000 to $20,000 per month, per open position, depending on the carrier's size and routes. A five-seat vacancy at a 50-truck carrier isn't a recruiting headache - it's a $25,000 to $100,000 monthly cash bleed.
The driver shortage isn't going away either. The American Trucking Associations estimates a current deficit of 60,000 to 82,000 CDL drivers nationally, with projections to reach 160,000 short by 2030. High fuel prices create turbulence on top of an already tight market - and drivers leaving the industry entirely make the supply problem worse, not better.
Carriers who wait to recruit until the situation is urgent face those vacancy costs longer. The carriers getting their offer positioned correctly and in front of the right drivers right now - even while the market feels unstable - come out of this stretch ahead.
This is exactly the problem M3Traffic was built to help solve. We can tell you precisely how your offer stacks up against what other carriers in your market are advertising, before a single ad runs. And we can reach the drivers worth hiring - including the ones who haven't been on Indeed in years.
If your trucks are sitting empty while you figure this out, we should talk.

What $5 Diesel Is Doing to Driver Sentiment -
And What It Means for Your Recruiting
The average trucker is paying $5.38 a gallon for diesel right now. A month ago, it was $3.88. That's a 41% spike in roughly thirty days - driven by the Iran conflict and the resulting disruption to the Strait of Hormuz, which carries about 20% of the world's oil supply.
For owner-operators, the math is brutal. They're paid by the mile. Costs have shot up roughly twenty cents per mile almost overnight, wiping out the five cents most of them were making. That's not a rough quarter. That's actively losing money on every load they haul.
For company drivers, the direct hit is softer. Their fuel comes out of the carrier's budget, not their own pocket. But they're watching. They're watching owner-operator colleagues struggle to cover costs. They're watching small carriers fold. And they're asking, quietly, whether their own situation is as solid as they thought.
That's the sentiment picture right now. Financially stressed, uncertain, and - for a growing portion of the driver pool - actively reconsidering their options.
What 'Reconsidering' Actually Looks Like
Not every driver responds to financial pressure the same way. Some hunker down with what's familiar. Some walk away from trucking entirely - and the data shows a meaningful percentage are doing exactly that. A recent survey found 40% of truckers actively looking for jobs outside the industry. Driver job satisfaction has ranked in the bottom 10% of all careers for years, and economic stress accelerates what was already a slow bleed out of the profession.
But there's a third group that matters most if you're a carrier with open seats right now: drivers who were previously content staying put, now crossing into 'open to a conversation' territory.
A driver who hasn't submitted an application anywhere in two or three years is starting to think, for the first time in a while, whether a different carrier might put him in a more stable position. Not desperation. Not panic. Just a genuine reassessment. That's a real window - if you know how to reach those drivers and what to say when you do.
Here's the Catch
More drivers being open to a move doesn't automatically make recruiting easier. It depends entirely on what you're offering and whether that offer speaks to what drivers are actually worried about right now.
A driver who's financially stressed isn't looking for a vague promise of 'competitive pay.' He wants specifics. He wants to know what the weekly check actually looks like when diesel is expensive. Whether your carrier is financially solid enough to weather this stretch. Whether the compensation structure makes sense in a world where costs spike without warning.
Carriers whose recruiting messages still lead with generic benefit language and broad claims about home time are getting tuned out. The driver you actually want - stable tenure, clean record, not in 'apply everywhere' mode - has a high bar for what it would take to move. Vague doesn't clear that bar.
This is where offer competitiveness matters more than most carriers realize. Not just whether your pay rate is above the regional average, but whether the full package - pay structure, home time, benefits, equipment, carrier stability - tells a story a financially uncertain driver finds convincing. Getting that story right before you run a single ad is the difference between generating applicants and generating the right applicants.
The Vacancy Math Hasn't Paused
Here's the thing that doesn't stop while the driver market is complicated: the cost of an empty seat. Industry estimates put it at $5,000 to $20,000 per month, per open position, depending on the carrier's size and routes. A five-seat vacancy at a 50-truck carrier isn't a recruiting headache - it's a $25,000 to $100,000 monthly cash bleed.
The driver shortage isn't going away either. The American Trucking Associations estimates a current deficit of 60,000 to 82,000 CDL drivers nationally, with projections to reach 160,000 short by 2030. High fuel prices create turbulence on top of an already tight market - and drivers leaving the industry entirely make the supply problem worse, not better.
Carriers who wait to recruit until the situation is urgent face those vacancy costs longer. The carriers getting their offer positioned correctly and in front of the right drivers right now - even while the market feels unstable - come out of this stretch ahead.
This is exactly the problem M3Traffic was built to help solve. We can tell you precisely how your offer stacks up against what other carriers in your market are advertising, before a single ad runs. And we can reach the drivers worth hiring - including the ones who haven't been on Indeed in years.
If your trucks are sitting empty while you figure this out, we should talk.

Easy 4 Step Roadmap To
Double Your Fleet in 2024