If you've spent the majority of your career focused on driver recruitment, this year might feel disorienting. Budgets are tighter. Roles are blurring. AI is everywhere. And suddenly, you're being asked to support business development or sales marketing, possibly with little preparation and even less time to get up to speed.
You're not alone. Across the transportation and logistics industry, marketers are being asked to do more with less, often in areas outside their expertise. The good news? If you've historically focused on recruitment marketing and employer branding, you already have most of the skills you need. This shift requires a change in mindset more than a complete overhaul of your skillset.
Why This Change Is Happening Now
A slower freight market and increased carrier availability have changed priorities. Drivers aren’t the bottleneck anymore; winning business is. Factors influencing this shift include:
Sound familiar? If you're being asked to focus on filling freight lanes instead of driver seats, you'll want to keep scrolling.
You're in luck! The skills that made you effective in recruitment marketing are directly transferable to B2B marketing:
In driver recruitment, you sold a job. In business development marketing, you're selling a partnership. The shippers you want probably aren't looking for the cheapest carrier; they're looking for someone who won't let them down.
Reframe your thinking:
Your new goal is to position your company as the logistics partner shippers can't afford to lose!
To be successful, you'll need to collaborate closely with people across your company, many of whom you may not have worked with before.
Start with sales. This relationship is critical. Schedule regular check-ins and ask if you can share access to a CRM. Understanding which marketing activities generate qualified leads makes both your jobs easier. If shared CRM access isn't possible (common in our industry), ask sales to pull a list of existing customer contacts. This helps you develop a clearer ideal customer profile.
Your sales team holds real-world intelligence about your target audience. In your first meeting, ask questions like:
Additionally, make time to meet with other departments including operations and safety to uncover the stories that make your company unique. Want to talk about cargo theft in a compelling way? You need to understand the real process behind how your company prevents it. Want to highlight on-time performance? Talk to operations about what makes it possible.
This is where your storytelling skills shine. But first, you need the raw material. Be curious!
When you're learning on the fly, early wins can be motivating. Here's where you can start:
Here's the reality: you're being asked to do a job you may not have trained for, with fewer resources than ideal, in a market that's currently struggling. That's not a reflection of your abilities, it's the state of the industry right now.
Be patient with yourself. Ask questions. Lean on your sales team. Find a mentor who's made this transition before. Join industry groups like TMSA and get active on LinkedIn, where other logistics marketers are navigating the same shift.
Need more help? Connect with our team here!