The Freight Show
For decades, brokerage has run on two assumptions: pay your reps on commission, and stay asset-light. Shannon Breen built FreightVana by breaking both. What happens when you strip commissions out of a brokerage entirely and own the trailers instead of the trucks? Shannon spent his corporate career inside a large public truckload carrier, where he helped stand up the power-only business after the Knight-Swift merger in 2017. He saw the structural problem up close: inside an asset-based carrier, the company trucks always win, so the partner-carrier network gets suboptimized every time the market turns. He left to build FreightVana on the inverse bet, own the trailers, partner for the power, and pay no commission so the whole team is aligned with the shipper and the carrier instead of the margin on any one load. Today FreightVana runs committed trailer networks for 150 of the largest shippers in the country. He also gives a sharp read on the current market: why the historic four-week spot run is squeezing committed freight networks, why this is not a repeat of COVID, and how rising standards and liability after Montgomery could split brokerage into two tiers. What you'll learn: * Why FreightVana runs with no commission structure: how removing per-load incentives keeps the team aligned with shippers and carriers instead of extracting margin on every move * "There are no solutions, only trade-offs": the cost Shannon accepted to build a non-commissioned model and why he'd make the same call again * Why he owns the trailers but not the trucks: the "totem pole" problem inside asset-based carriers that makes a true partner network impossible * How a trailer-led model actually wins shippers: drop-trailer flexibility, interchangeability, and security standards a traditional broker struggles to match * Why length of haul matters more than raw utilization: how a sub-200-mile drop pool becomes quasi-dedicated, and why FreightVana targets 500-plus-mile lanes to build a real network * What the model unlocks for small and mid-size carriers: drop-and-hook efficiency, less dwell time, and access to Fortune 500 networks they can't reach alone * Why this market is not a repeat of COVID: the difference between a supply-driven run-up and a demand-driven one, and how Shannon navigates the contract squeeze with authenticity and data * How rising standards could split brokerage into two tiers: why the top 200 brokers separate from the field, and why the broker's role gets more important, not less Time-stamped highlights: * (00:00) Intro and the state of the market: a historic four-week spot run and the pressure it puts on committed freight networks * (01:29) What committed (contract) freight actually means and why a rising spot market squeezes it * (01:50) Why this disruption is not a repeat of COVID: supply-driven versus demand-driven * (02:50) Servicing 150-plus of the largest shippers in the country and the purview that gives him * (04:06) Navigating the contract conversation with authenticity and data instead of emotion * (06:09) FreightVana's disciplined pricing model and why you price for network connectivity * (07:18) The split: roughly 45% on owned equipment, 55% traditional brokerage, and three pricing models * (07:50) Why FreightVana has no commission structure and what drove that decision * (09:00) Aligning with the customer instead of making margin on every single load * (09:52) "There are no solutions, only trade-offs" and flipping the triangle * (11:22) Why lofty commission structures are nearly impossible to undo once they're built * (12:11) The Knight-Swift merger in 2017 and building power-only inside a large carrier * (12:14) The "totem pole" theory: why company trucks always win and the partner network suffers * (14:00) Building FreightVana from the ground up: trailers, technology, pricing, and no commission * (14:43) Why FreightVana was not built for a freight recession * (15:46) Security and insurance standards, and why he won't scrape the bottom of the barrel for capacity * (17:36) The shipper value prop: drop-trailer flexibility and the long-tail carrier's truck-to-trailer ratio * (18:36) The 15-trailer interchangeability example and why a fungible pool beats single-lane drops * (21:45) Why the largest carriers' stock is up 40% in three months, and what pricing power leaves shippers * (22:57) The pain points that signal a fit: freeing operations from live-load appointments * (25:13) The carrier side of the value stream: access to Fortune 500 networks a small carrier can't reach alone * (26:13) Dwell time, ATRI data, and the drop-and-hook efficiency the model gives smaller carriers * (27:46) The typical FreightVana carrier: under 50 trucks, roughly 75% of the trucks on the road * (30:00) Pricing discipline and why a commission floor undermines network density * (31:21) Trucking's driver-first totem pole versus FreightVana's focus on the trailer network * (33:21) Why sub-200-mile drop pools run quasi-dedicated, and why FreightVana targets 500-plus-mile lanes * (35:10) The proprietary pricing algorithm reading freight flows behind every RFP * (36:51) The Supreme Court / Montgomery decision and what it does to insurance and standards * (38:58) The two-tier split: approved high-standard carriers versus a persistent lower-standard market * (40:51) Shipper liability, the Texas case, and indemnity clauses in Fortune 500 contracts * (42:57) Why the top 200 brokers hold roughly 90% of brokered volume * (45:12) Does brokerage's structural role change? Why Shannon thinks it gets more important * (52:08) What Shannon is watching next year: market stabilization, AI's ROI, and the broader economy Guest: Shannon Breen — Founder & CEO, FreightVana Shannon spent his corporate career in asset-based trucking, helping stand up the power-only business at a large public truckload carrier following the Knight-Swift merger in 2017. He left to found FreightVana, a brokerage built on an inverted model: it owns the trailers rather than the trucks and runs with no commission structure, betting that alignment with shippers and carriers beats per-load margin. Today FreightVana operates committed trailer networks for more than 150 of the largest shippers in the country.
25 episodes
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