
Website American Logistics Authority
Job Overview: Transportation Support Coordinator (Remote)
American Logistics Authority is seeking a Transportation Support Coordinator for a 100% remote position based in the Indianapolis, IN area. This role functions as the “Air Traffic Control” for ground freight, sitting at the intersection of drivers, brokers, and shippers to ensure cargo moves across the country without friction.
This is a strategic entry-point into the logistics industry. The role is explicitly designed as a training ground for those who wish to eventually transition into high-earning roles like Independent Freight Dispatcher, Load Planner, or Broker Agent.
Key Responsibilities & Logistics Operations
Driver & Dispatch Synchronization
Real-Time Guidance: Provide drivers with precise pickup/delivery addresses, updated appointment times, and specific loading instructions.
Troubleshooting: Act as the first point of contact for road issues, including mechanical breakdowns, weather delays, and Hours of Service (HOS) compliance challenges.
ETA Tracking: Monitor driver progress to ensure delivery windows are met and proactively manage delays before they become “service failures.”
Load Coordination & Documentation
Verification: Audit Bills of Lading (BOL) and Proofs of Delivery (POD) to ensure the physical freight matches the digital paperwork, preventing costly “wrong-load” claims.
TMS Management: Upload all critical documents into the Transportation Management System (TMS) and maintain meticulous load notes.
Accessorial Tracking: Identify and track opportunities for additional revenue, such as Detention (waiting time), Layovers, and TONU (Truck Order Not Used).
The Organization & Culture The culture is characterized by “Entrepreneurial Autonomy” and a fast-paced “work-from-home” model. In 2026, the company leans heavily into a decentralized structure where success is tied directly to negotiation skills and volume. While the remote nature offers a “Supportive Virtual Team Environment,” the atmosphere is high-pressure and sales-oriented. Internal feedback reflects a performance-driven divide: high-achieving “Independent Dispatchers” praise the uncapped earning potential and flexible scheduling, while entry-level staff note that the “performance-based” nature of the roles requires extreme self-discipline and a “thick skin” for managing broker-carrier negotiations.
The Indianapolis Presence: A Remote Powerhouse
Indianapolis serves as a primary strategic anchor for the company’s “Statewide Remote” initiative, leveraging Indiana’s position as the “Crossroads of America”:
The “Virtual Office” Hub: Despite being listed locally, the company has largely moved away from a traditional downtown campus in favor of a 100% remote operational model, allowing them to tap into a wider talent pool across the Indy metro area.
Carrier Sourcing: The Indy-based teams are heavily involved in Owner-Operator Recruitment, specifically targeting Indiana’s massive independent trucking community to build out a robust network for their brokerage wing.
Entry-Level Gateway: In 2026, the firm has become a major “first-stop” for Indianapolis residents transitioning into logistics, providing specialized remote training in load boards, rate negotiations, and FMCSA compliance.
Workplace & Strategic Highlights (2026)
Strategic 2026 Focus: “Hyperscale Dispatching”
The “Authority” Advantage: Strategically, the firm focuses on helping new owner-operators manage their own “Operating Authority,” providing the back-office support and consistent load sourcing that small trucking businesses often lack.
Tech-Enabled Negotiation: The 2026 strategy utilizes proprietary workflow templates and real-time load-tracking technology (integrating tools like DAT and Truckstop) to give their dispatchers a speed-to-market edge in booking high-paying freight.
2026 Compensation & Roles (Indianapolis Market Estimates):
Independent Freight Dispatchers: Roles are performance-based, with high earners in the Indy market grossing between $1,800 and $3,500 weekly ($93k–$182k annually), based on their ability to manage 7–10 trucks simultaneously.
Remote Logistics Coordinators: Entry-level coordinators typically see a target pay range of $865 to $1,195 weekly, focusing on the administrative and tracking side of the shipment lifecycle.
Truck Driver Recruiters: These roles focus on connecting carriers with opportunities, often earning $800 to $2,000+ per week through a combination of leads and successful onboarding bonuses.
Comprehensive 2026 “Independent” Benefits:
Total Location Flexibility: The primary benefit is total control over one’s schedule and location, a major draw for the modern Indiana workforce.
Structured Onboarding: Unlike many 1099 roles, the company provides “self-paced” training resources to ensure new hires understand DOT regulations and TMS (Transportation Management System) operations.
Weekly Settlements: The company prioritizes “fast-cash” cycles, with weekly pay settlements that provide immediate financial feedback for the work performed.
Strategic Values: “Ambition, Transparency, and Growth”
Meritocratic Ladder: The culture is explicitly “merit-based.” Success in recruiting or dispatching often leads to opportunities to manage larger carrier groups or move into specialized lanes like “Reefer” or “Flatbed” logistics.
Integrity in Brokerage: As a federally regulated entity, the company emphasizes transparency in its broker-carrier agreements, ensuring all rate confirmations are legally sound and protected under federal bonding.
Relationship Driven: Despite high-tech tools, the core strategy remains “People First.” Dispatchers are encouraged to build long-term personal relationships with their drivers, moving from “transactional” booking to “strategic” route planning.
To apply for this job please visit americanlogisticsauthority.com.