FLD makes remarketing vehicles easier and quicker, and that includes paying you within a week - not 6 or 7 weeks down the road, like some of the competition does.
To reduce driver risk, lower associated costs, and sustain risk reduction, driver safety must become “a way of life” – part of an organization’s conversations, activities, meetings, performance reviews, annual conferences, and other events.
In this webinar, eDriving’s Jim Noble, Senior Vice President, Risk Engineering, and Denise Murroni, Customer Success Manager, will explain the difference between a “good” safety program and a culture of safety.
Thursday, July 30, 2020
11:00 AM PT / 2:00 PM ET
Register for free!
In this webinar, you will learn how to establish a crash-free culture® by:
The official word, according to the Centers for Disease Control, is that travel of any kind can be risky business these days - make sure you’re not headed for a hot spot where COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations are on a rapid upswing.
If you do travel, plan to bring an ample supply of hand sanitizer and disinfectant wipes along with you. If you take medications, remember to bring along enough to last for the entire trip, and perhaps more to cover an unforeseen delay.
Highway rest areas are an obvious hazard, so take extra precautions should you need to stop while en route. Pack your own food so you can minimize exposure from restaurants and grocery stores, or use a drive-through window. Pay for all transactions with a debit or credit card instead of making face-to-face cash purchases. Whenever and wherever you stop, sanitize everyone’s hands before reentering your car.
Read the article at Forbes.
By Mark Boada, Executive Editor
Alongside COVID-19, distracted driving is an on-going plague that fleets around the world are struggling to fight.
Among the approaches are changes in fleet policy that prohibit various forms of behind-the-wheel distractions, on-line lessons and videos that educate drivers about the dangers, and even systems that use dashboard cameras to detect and warn a driver when he or she isn’t watching the road.
While these all have demonstrated value and effectiveness, the one thing none of them do is to actually prevent distraction. That’s where cell phone blocking technology steps in. And while it deals with only one form of distraction – the use of mobile devices – the technology has been found in the field to have dramatic results. At least, that’s what a study conducted by Forrester Consulting and commissioned by one cell-blocking system provider, TRUCE Software, last year has documented.
Since the global COVID-19 pandemic emerged, fleet-based businesses have faced a number of logistical, operational and monetary challenges.
Focusing on preventing the spread of the virus and keeping employees safe while at the same time trying to stay profitable, or even just afloat, is a real challenge for fleets.
How do you manage a fleet business during pressure situations? How do you keep a fleet business afloat during an emergency? Are your workers, equipment and vehicles truly safe?
CLICK to REGISTER for this insightful webinar to learn how technology can help build a resilient fleet that can steer you through any emergency situation now or in the future.