Dock Watch exists because too much important information gets found out the hard way. Wrong gate. No parking. Two-hour wait nobody warned you about.
The trucking industry moves millions of loads every day — and drivers are expected to figure out each stop as they go. Wrong gate, no signage, a dock that's been moved, a contact number that hasn't worked in two years. Critical details that should be easy to find instead get passed around informally, if at all.
Dock Watch gives drivers access to real dock information from other drivers — and gives facilities a way to keep their own details current. Notes are verified before they go live. Ratings are honest. The whole system is built around the one thing that matters: what you actually need to know before you pull in.
The information that makes a stop smooth — the entrance that actually works, the contact who picks up the phone, whether there's anywhere to park — rarely makes it onto any official document. It lives in the heads of drivers who've been there.
Dock Watch is designed to capture that knowledge and make it available to every driver on their next run. Not just a map. Not just an address. The actual detail that changes whether the stop goes smoothly or costs you two hours.
For facilities, it's the same idea from the other side — a way to make sure drivers arriving at your dock have what they need to get in and out without unnecessary delays.
Dock notes require confirmation from 4 drivers before they go live. Not just crowd-sourced — crowd-verified.
Ratings come from drivers who actually visited, not from accounts with no track record. The feedback is real.
The network improves with every driver who uses it. Each note, each rating, each check-in makes the next driver's stop a little smoother.
Download the app if you're a driver. Or visit the Business portal if you run a facility. Either way, the goal is the same — better information before the gate.