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All taxi drivers, in any part of the UK, will know how difficult it can be to keep track of their daily workload. In the busiest part of the shift, there are passengers coming and going with increasing regularity, and by the end of the day the driver often can’t remember how many fares he or she had and where each of them wanted to go.
There is a desperate need to be more organised, because the driver will need to keep a record of the journeys that have been made, as well as the money that has been taken. The answer is a pad of taxi driver daily log sheets, which is ideal for making sure accurate records are kept with ease and convenience.
Remain in control of the job at all times
It’s so simple to stay in control with a cab driver daily log sheet. All the driver needs to do is fill in the details of each journey as the day progresses. It only takes a few seconds each time, and will not interfere with the service to the passenger. And when the shift comes to an end, the details of the day’s journeys are clearly displayed.
At the start of the shift, the driver simply fills in the date and, if he or she wishes, the vehicle’s mileage. At the end of the day’s work, the closing mileage is entered, too, enabling the taxi driver to easily work out the total distance travelled during the whole shift. At the end of each individual journey, other information can be recorded, too.
Easy to use columns make it a piece of cake
The driver can use the individual columns to record information, such as the time at the beginning of each individual trip. The ‘from’ and ‘to’ destinations can be entered in the next two columns, followed by the price of the fare that was taken. In the final column, the taxi driver can keep a running total of the income for the day.
Taxi driver daily log sheets are available in books of 100 sheets, so the driver can keep the pad in the vehicle, using a new sheet every day. For extra value, the taxi owner can buy ten books at a time. It works out cheaper in the long run, and every cabbie knows that locating bargains is vital in the current economic climate.
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Source by David Hurd