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-   -   Bike Messengers Pay???$$$ (https://www.bikeforums.net/singlespeed-fixed-gear/104349-bike-messengers-pay.html)

elliottw 05-04-05 04:21 PM

ground express eh? that sounds pretty sweet. i took that city express job because i didnt know what the deal was. damn, i quit in like a week cuz the dispatcher kept sending me across the mass ave bridge holding one or none, i knew i was going to make any money there.

jacobs 05-04-05 04:29 PM

city doesn't care about their riders at all...but they don't have to. they'll hire anyone, and that makes it that way. if you show dedication, are easy to work with and work hard, you can do well there...it's just much easier somewhere else.

however,i have heard city is REALLY strapped for riders at the moment, so if you want to make some $$, hit em now.

Lividkoi 05-04-05 08:15 PM

What is a good company to work for in nyc. A company that would hire a rookie?

jim-bob 05-04-05 09:18 PM

Start the countdown to 'best messenger bag' thread.... NOW

jacobs 05-04-05 09:22 PM


Originally Posted by Lividkoi
What is a good company to work for in nyc. A company that would hire a rookie?


good luck. as a rookie, take what you can get and bust your ass. if you have what it takes you'll move on naturally to a better company, and better pay over time.

bejay 05-04-05 09:26 PM

does anyone know if its possible to find part time work as a messenger in nyc....and if so the companies that are cool w/part time messengers

48x16 05-05-05 07:49 AM


Originally Posted by jacobs
good luck. as a rookie, take what you can get and bust your ass. if you have what it takes you'll move on naturally to a better company, and better pay over time.

Try Urban Express. They employ around 1/4th of the messengers in NYC and I was hired right away. They even wanted me to start working that day and it was already 4:30pm. They don't care about their workers and they pay ****, but it's a start.

RedMenace 05-05-05 08:30 AM


Originally Posted by 48x16
Try Urban Express. They employ around 1/4th of the messengers in NYC and I was hired right away. They even wanted me to start working that day and it was already 4:30pm. They don't care about their workers and they pay ****, but it's a start.

too right, Urban will hire ANYONE (but they'll make it sound like they're selective when you talk to them). when i first moved to NYC from Phila, i worked there for about 6 weeks, but it killed me inside... probably a personality flaw on my part, but i couldn't take the combination of making zero money and being treated like **** by everyone involved... clients, dispatchers, managers, etc... if you're a rookie it won't matter because, like other people have said, if you're good you'll naturally either find a good fit at Urban or move on to a better company. as a rookie, you have the advantage of not knowing better. my problem was that i came from working at TimeCycle in Phila; a company with good clients, good management, and a good crew where it was fun to work and i was able to make a living. Urban Express was, to me, messengering stripped of everything that ever made it fun, which leaves a pretty terrible experience. i never knew messengering to be so desolate and lonely as the short time i worked there. when i first started in Phila, i worked at Heaven Sent, but at that point i didn't mind the terrible pay and overall crappiness of the company because i didn't know any better. and it wasn't long before i moved on. i guess when i moved to NYC, i just didn't have it in me to go through that process again, especially with no savings and not being able to make a living while doing it.

Lividkoi 05-05-05 09:07 AM

Forget a job as a messenger then. Crappy pay and being treated like ****... I dont understand why anyone would want to work that way. I can understand making good money and ahving to put up with the usual ass hole. But having to deal with a bunch of ass holes and a check that cant hardly pay for rent. I would rather stand outside on the streets handing out flyers for 10-15 dollars an hour. much luck to those of you who think its cool to just walk the walk. puhhh

RedMenace 05-05-05 09:17 AM

well, i didn't mean to make it sound like messengering is like that as a rule. it's not. the years i worked in philly were awesome, and if i hadn't moved away from there i would definitely still be working at TimeCycle. that said, it is tough, especially as a starter. you have to be very committed to it to deal with the ****ty aspects of being a rookie (working for crappy companies, not knowing the ins and outs, etc...) but once you learn that stuff, messengering is the most rewarding and awesome job i've ever had, even when it's 2°C and raining.

if you are into it, at least try it. if it doesn't work out you aren't under contract or anything. don't let my crappy experience color your view of messengering though... it can be awesome and i'd hate if someone missed out on that opportunity just because i whined on this forum.

alcahueteria 05-05-05 09:36 AM

I was thinking of doing it here in atlanta. Any of you guys tried it down here? Just wondering if you had any experiences or recommendations for this particular location. Of course I was also thinking of moving to nyc to do it, but I figured I live here now so why not just try it here first and then maybe get a little knowledge before I just go a move there.

SamHouston 05-05-05 11:09 AM


Originally Posted by 12XU
****** bag of the year?

"I don't think there was any doubt about who the fastest rider out there was," says Ford, 33. "That would be me."

Man, this guy sounds like a complete tool; I don't want to wish death upon him or anything, but him messing up a few tags would be funny.

He's ok, it's good to be cocky sometimes, helps your game.

He was very fast in Seattle, but while there may not have been any doubt in his own mind I don't think the crowd could say that. I made it to the finals with ease, and was in the same semi-final as Adam. I -smoked- him off the line, he certainly caught me quick enough and got half a wheel up on me, but when I saw that we'd left the rest of the field many many bike lengths behind I knew finishing next to him was A-ok as both of us would up move to the Final. I figure he knew the same because neither of us struggled at that point.

As for the final...broke my chain on the start, maybe it was my chain, maybe my "holder" held a half sec too long (felt like it) but all well that ends well, I didnt get mad or anything. I ran up the hill for 6th place.

I was actually quite lucky to make even the semi-final. On the qualifier I did an un-intentional wheelie when they said go, I'm not used to trackstanding up hill, and that the sprint was up a hill meant I was starting in my small ring in front, normally I'd start on the 53. Anyway I did a wheelie, stopped cold. put both feet down unclipped to avoid falling and laughed and cursed and then started the race. I guess the guys I was with just didn' want it because the leader had 25-30 yards on me and I slalommed all 5 of them to win since only 1st place would go forward in that heat.

I think the fastest person there was Brooks Rapley. He was on a sweet track bike and due to some oversight had no idea til the day that the race was up a hill. Had he the gearing, or if the race had been on a flat he may have beaten those of us on road bikes. Brooks has won before and is super fast on the drome, rode for the canadian national team and may still do so, haven't seen him much lately. He got second in the final and it was close. That's the kind of trackbike rider it takes to beat a good sprinter on a road bike, someone on the national/international level, but it can be done if the track sprinter outclasses the road sprinter to that degree.

Seattle rocked, so much fun, best Worlds I've been to.

SamHouston 05-05-05 11:32 AM

Oh, and On Topic,

You have to pay your dues, if you do it right it won't take long at all, anywhere from 6 weeks to a year, sometimes more if you tend to screw up.
The job has to have rookie status because there is a lot to learn, and one thing you'll (hopefully) do at a crappy company is learn to contend with your road rage. you will experience road rage like never before, so powerful it takes you over inside and out and only a supreme effort will prevent you acting out on it. It comes of fear, anger and vulnerability combined with a daily dose of unjustified belittlement and disregard from drivers, clients and at a crappy starter company, your dispatcher. I call it 1st year rookie angst and I've never seen anyone immune to it in my 12 years on the road. You get crazy mad, so a crappy company is best at that time, til you learn to manage yourself. A good company expects quite rightly that you will be a pro, and too many or too frequent incidents will have you in turnover city, one company after another.

I started at a company that had the gall to pay me (my best check from them, once I was top of their crappy heap), get this, $675 for nine working days, pretty good for a rookie right? Sure. But for that I did 479 runs not including returns which numbered at around 200. I probably spent a third that much on food those 2 weeks because I didnt have time to sto so ate purchased food on the go and I was too tired to cook so I at purchased prepared food every night, a lot of it. It's not uncommon to see rookies riding along, mumbling or talking to themselves angrily with a crazed look in their eye. They either get over it or move on. Or not..there is always another company in turnover city until there isn't.

Basically, if you are starting out it's going to be hard, real hard. So have a support structure in place if you can.

no tengo coche 05-05-05 01:16 PM

those of you that have messenged at some point, what kind of work are you normally doing? Is it mainly delivering packages/documents across town? the company in san diego that will hire anyone and pays **** (as it seems every city has one of these) is Cal Xpress (I work for them part time). They are actually a legal service, and so we do lots of stuff with the courts, and serving people (I know very little about the legal aspects, which makes it all the easier to screw up and get yelled at). Just wondering if the legal stuff is normal of most shops, or if thats part of quirky local courier market.

RedMenace 05-05-05 01:54 PM

i did practically all my messenger work in philadelphia... in that city there are a couple of companies who only do legal stuff. all the other companies will take legal work, of course... with varying service charges (for instance at TimeCycle, "legal wait time" is worth 150% of normal wait time, and if a subpoena is to be served, there's a monster surcharge due to the risk of having your messenger shot or thrown down the stairs).

Shiznaz 05-05-05 02:13 PM

I wonder how often that happens!

I guess theres that, and if you're really unlucky the Gypsy might come after you!

jacobs 05-05-05 03:52 PM


Originally Posted by Lividkoi
Forget a job as a messenger then. Crappy pay and being treated like ****... I dont understand why anyone would want to work that way. I can understand making good money and ahving to put up with the usual ass hole. But having to deal with a bunch of ass holes and a check that cant hardly pay for rent. I would rather stand outside on the streets handing out flyers for 10-15 dollars an hour. much luck to those of you who think its cool to just walk the walk. puhhh


think of it like all the people who pay $30,000 a year for 4 years to get a degree so they can get a job.

companies like city express in boston, urban express in ny, and heaven sent in philly are like school, except you get paid. it's a learning experience at those places. you learn the ropes, and if you can cut it, you will move on to bigger and better things pretty quickly.

jacobs 05-05-05 04:06 PM


Originally Posted by no tengo coche
those of you that have messenged at some point, what kind of work are you normally doing? Is it mainly delivering packages/documents across town? the company in san diego that will hire anyone and pays **** (as it seems every city has one of these) is Cal Xpress (I work for them part time). They are actually a legal service, and so we do lots of stuff with the courts, and serving people (I know very little about the legal aspects, which makes it all the easier to screw up and get yelled at). Just wondering if the legal stuff is normal of most shops, or if thats part of quirky local courier market.

i've never served anyone anything...

i do some legal filing, maybe 15-20% of my daily work, but for the most part it's business to business stuff.

luckycat 05-05-05 04:58 PM

companies like city express in boston, urban express in ny, and heaven sent in philly are like school, except you get paid. it's a learning experience at those places. you learn the ropes, and if you can cut it, you will move on to bigger and better things pretty quickly.[/QUOTE]


Sometimes it's not such a bad thing to stay with a big company. Nice thing about big companies is that there's always work, and if you've been there for a while you'll probably get a lot of it.

Lividkoi 05-05-05 07:17 PM

What about these company in NYC. Champion and Breakway? They have open positions and say they pay 300-800 A week....

RIdingblind 05-06-05 06:38 PM

800 a week is pretty damn generous for a rookie, although you'll make that sometimes. i work for breakaway. they hire part-timers. very flexible, and i think the pay's pretty good.

operator 05-06-05 07:17 PM

Treated crappy and ****ty pay? That's like every unskilled manual labor job there is out there. GG.

operator 05-06-05 07:18 PM


think of it like all the people who pay $30,000 a year for 4 years to get a degree so they can get a job.

companies like city express in boston, urban express in ny, and heaven sent in philly are like school, except you get paid. it's a learning experience at those places. you learn the ropes, and if you can cut it, you will move on to bigger and better things pretty quickly.
Except that they have the potential to make x293842 what you make as a messenger.

SamHouston 05-06-05 08:01 PM

Depends on what degree they get, and what they got getting it. I've topped out at $33-35G as a messenger. I worked some crazy shifts to do it. I met a lot of people and learned quite a bit about people that way. I seriously doubt that my earning potential is limited in any way by my lack of a degree. It's all the individual these days. I may not be able to make more than I did when I messed for that much but I could do it consistently if wanted too and that's a good honest living wage that could afford a family or a nice bachelor life if properly managed. Instead I'm taking some of what I've learned on the street and putting it to use in a related industry. Many industries can be approached this way, many people will respect ability and experience over a degree.

jacobs 05-07-05 05:18 AM


Originally Posted by operator
Except that they have the potential to make x293842 what you make as a messenger.

Yeah, but I didn't spend 30g's a year, I got paid. There is a difference there. I was just using college as an example of how at first, in a lot of trades, you go through some sort of "training" period where the money isn't as good.


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