01 · Coordination
Driver Coordination and Check-Ins
Shift start and end check-ins, pre-trip verification, mid-route wellness calls, and post-delivery confirmations. For truck driver dispatch, consistent check-in cadence is the foundation of everything else. When a driver goes quiet, your dispatcher is the first to know and the first to act.
This includes maintaining your driver roster, tracking available hours under FMCSA Hours of Service rules, and flagging drivers approaching HOS limits before it becomes a compliance event.
02 · Exceptions
Exception Handling: Breakdowns, Delays, and Refused Deliveries
Exceptions are where most internal dispatch operations break down overnight. When a driver hits a closed dock at 11 PM, your dispatcher reaches the backup receiving contact, reschedules the appointment, and sends the merchant an updated delivery window before the morning shift starts.
Exception handling covers breakdowns and roadside coordination, weather-related lane closures, receiver refusals, missed appointment windows, and driver emergencies. The dispatcher coordinates the response, notifies the relevant parties, logs the event in your TMS with timestamps, and escalates to your operations manager through your chosen channel.
03 · Routing
Route Monitoring and Adjustments
Your dispatchers monitor active loads throughout the shift. When a highway closure or severe weather event affects a lane, the dispatcher identifies affected trucks, pulls up the routing options in your TMS, and notifies drivers before they hit the problem.
This is not reactive. It’s the kind of forward-looking watch that prevents a 30-minute delay from becoming a missed delivery.
04 · Communication
ETA Updates to Merchants and Customers
Shippers and receivers want accurate delivery windows. Your dispatchers send ETA updates at agreed intervals, or triggered by exceptions, directly to your customers, merchants, or receiving teams using your existing communication channels.
If a reefer load running into a grocery DC is running 40 minutes late due to traffic, the receiver hears about it from your dispatcher before they start calling your operations manager.
05 · Documentation
BOL and POD Processing
Document handling is high-volume, detail-sensitive work that ties up experienced staff. Your dedicated dispatchers handle BOL verification, POD collection from drivers, and document submission to the relevant systems or portals.
A driver delivers, photographs the signed POD, and sends it to the dispatcher through your chosen channel. The dispatcher logs it, submits it where it needs to go, and flags any discrepancies. Your billing team gets clean documentation, not a pile of unprocessed delivery records.
06 · Coverage
24/7 Truck Dispatch Coverage
The core operational benefit for most carriers considering outsourced trucking dispatch services. A 24/7 truck dispatch model with three eight-hour shifts needs staffing reliability across all three. DMI’s office-based dispatchers in Naga City, Philippines provide time-zone coverage that aligns with US and Canadian operating hours, including the overnight windows that are hardest to staff domestically.
No call-ins. No staffing gaps. Your shift coverage is there.
07 · Back office
Billing and Invoicing Support
Detention time, lumper charges, fuel surcharges, and accessorial fees all need to be captured and invoiced accurately. Your dispatchers support your billing cycle by logging charges as they occur, flagging disputes, and ensuring that revenue you earned is revenue you collect.
/ · Next step
Ready to map this against your fleet?
A 30-minute discovery call covers shift structure, TMS platform, and exception playbook so both parties know whether the engagement makes sense.