I represent a transport company with a fleet of 12 trucks, we are actively developing the intercity transportation direction and want to consistently receive requests from certain states - New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey. Is it possible to set up geotargeting of leads for these regions in Compare the Carrier? Our main market is the East Coast of the USA, and we have built logistics in these states. It is important that incoming requests for transportation are relevant to our coverage. We have already encountered a problem when leads came from California or Texas - and we simply could not process them. Therefore, we are looking for a service where we can precisely specify from which regions requests should come, and limit the acceptance of non-targeted leads. I am also interested in how flexible the settings are by cargo type, delivery date and route, and whether it is possible to change filters during the cooperation process.
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If this is an example of forum marketing, then it's unlikely the client will get any profit. Without unique content, without structure, and without proper link integration—it all gets removed quickly, and the platform's trust level suffers. We take a different approach: each post is part of a well-thought-out campaign. What we do isn’t just “placement,” it’s a full-fledged crowd-marketing strategy with focus on SEO, engagement, and indexing.
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I totally get where you're coming from. Managing a fleet of a dozen trucks is no small task — from keeping up with maintenance and fuel costs to making sure every truck has consistent work. I ran into a similar situation last year when we had 8 trucks on the road and needed more reliable leads to keep things moving. One thing that really helped us was using https://leads.comparethecarrier.com/. It's a simple tool to compare different carrier lead sources, and it saved us a ton of time and effort. Instead of chasing cold calls or sketchy listings, we were able to focus on actual profitable routes. Might be worth checking out, especially if you're trying to scale or just want to keep the trucks busy without burning out your team. Just my two cents based on what worked for us.