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Fleet Operations Are Changing – The Industry Needs to Evolve With Them

Fleet Operations Are Changing - The Industry Needs to Evolve With Them

By Drake Bauer, CEO & Co-Founder, Proaction

June 10, 2026

How AI, modular technology, and a new generation of fleet operators are reshaping what it means to manage a fleet


The Problem: Technology Has Raised the Bar
Fleet operations are entering a new operating reality. Vehicles generate more data than ever, business leaders expect faster answers, and the daily work of managing maintenance, compliance, fuel, inspections, safety, EV readiness, and driver communication increasingly happens across a patchwork of systems.

That is the problem: the technology shift has raised expectations faster than many operating models can adapt. A fleet team may have telematics data in one place, service records in another, invoices in a third, and approvals moving through email. The information exists, but the work still depends on people manually connecting the dots. The consequences are slower decisions, preventable downtime, unclear accountability, and missed opportunities to control cost.

A 2024 fleet survey shows the pressure clearly: more than 88% of stakeholders surveyed agreed reducing overall costs was a priority, and more than 81% said finding new solutions to make their fleet more efficient was a priority.


The Solution: Pair Service Experience With Better Technology
The solution is not to dismiss the industry knowledge that has helped fleets manage complexity for decades. Leasing partners, maintenance networks, dealer groups, outsourced fleet support teams, and specialized service providers all play important roles in keeping vehicles on the road and businesses moving.

But the way that expertise is delivered is changing.


From Fixed Programs to Modular Capability
Traditional fleet programs were created for an era when reducing complexity often meant centralizing as much work as possible with a small number of trusted partners. Many fleet teams want fewer handoffs, clearer accountability, and access to people who understand the details of fleet operations.

What has changed is that operators now have more specific technology needs. They want real-time visibility. They want systems that talk to each other. They want to automate repetitive work without replacing every partner or platform they already trust. They want tools that fit their operation instead of reshaping their operation around a fixed package.

The broader technology market is expanding with it. Allied Market Research projects the global fleet management market to reach $52.5 billion by 2030, as demand grows for safety, maintenance, and tracking tools.

This is where the market is moving from fixed programs to modular capability. The future is about giving operators the flexibility to combine trusted service relationships with technology that can be deployed quickly, integrated cleanly, and adapted as the business changes.


What AI Actually Changes
AI matters in fleet management because it can reduce the manual burden between data and action.

Most fleet teams are not short on information. They are short on time, clean workflows, and operational follow-through. A maintenance alert has to become a decision. A failed inspection has to become a task. A cost exception has to reach the right manager. A compliance risk has to be caught before it becomes a problem.

Modern fleet operations platforms can sit across existing systems and help turn those signals into work. They can surface exceptions, draft reports, route approvals, remind drivers, coordinate vendors, and give leaders a clearer picture of what is happening without waiting for a monthly review. That does not replace human judgment. It gives fleet professionals more room to use it.


What This Means for Service Providers
The technology shift creates opportunity across the fleet service ecosystem, including national providers, regional service companies, leasing organizations, dealership groups, maintenance networks, and specialized partners.

Providers that evolve fastest will be the ones that make it easier for clients to connect systems, see what is happening, and act quickly. That does not make their operational experience less important. It makes that experience more valuable, because clients need it delivered through workflows that match the speed of the business.

Larger organizations can use modular technology to move faster, open more integrations, and focus their teams on advisory work that software cannot replicate: strategy, lifecycle planning, regulatory guidance, supplier relationships, and total cost decisions.

Smaller and regional providers can use the same technology to compete in ways that were difficult a decade ago. They may already have strong customer relationships and deep local knowledge. What they have often lacked is the software infrastructure to deliver enterprise-grade visibility, automation, and reporting. That gap is closing.

For fleet operators, this is good news. More capable providers mean more choice, better transparency, and technology that fits the way each fleet actually works.


The Next Chapter
The next chapter of fleet management will not be defined by replacing the old model with a new one overnight. It will be defined by connecting what already works with tools that make it faster, clearer, and more adaptable.

That is Proaction’s biggest value proposition: an operating layer for fleet work that consolidates data, automates routine processes, and helps teams act before small issues become expensive ones.

The service-provider ecosystem does not need to be diminished for this shift to matter. In fact, the industry’s experience is one of its greatest assets. The question now is how to pair that experience with technology built for the speed and complexity of modern fleet operations.

The companies that do that well will give clients something every fleet leader wants: more control, more visibility, and more confidence in the decisions they make every day.


About the Author

Drake Bauer is the CEO and Co-Founder of Proaction, a fleet operations automation platform that helps fleets and asset-heavy organizations consolidate, automate, and operationalize day-to-day workflows. He can be reached at [email protected].

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