Automotive Fleet
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Measuring Corporate Attitudes Toward Distracted Driving

Mobile phones are a part of every employee’s daily life. Corporate attitudes toward cell-phone use and policies are changing with the times.

by Staff
September 4, 2012
Measuring Corporate Attitudes Toward Distracted Driving

 

3 min to read


Cell-phone use continues to proliferate, and is fast becoming a necessary tool of any trade. Fleet managers are making a marked effort to enforce cell phone policies and become more proactive in dealing with potential liability issues.

With responses from more than 900 professionals, ZoomSafer’s second annual distracted driving survey was designed to gauge corporate fleet operators’ perspectives and attitudes toward employee use of mobile devices while driving, and how these attitudes have changed in the 12 months since its inaugural survey in May 2011.

Ad Loading...

According to the survey results:

Cell phone use policies continue to proliferate. The survey showed a trending increase in the deployment of corporate policies to manage employee mobile-phone use. Of the survey participants, 80 percent reported that their employers have a cell-phone use policy in place, up 29 percent from the 62 percent of respondents in 2011. The survey also showed the percentage of companies without policies that have plans to put one in place has not changed since a February 2012 survey, holding steady at 52 percent.

Efforts to enforce cell phone use policies have markedly increased over the past year. The majority of companies with cell-phone use policies in place now take steps to enforce them, with 86 percent of total respondents reporting that their companies enforce their written policies — a 62-percent increase from the 53 percent of companies in 2011.

Confidence in “reactive” enforcement methods are plummeting. While more companies are taking steps to enforce written cell-phone use policies, confidence in the most common “reactive” enforcement methods is dropping. Only a little more than a quarter (26 percent) of total respondents report they are “very confident” that their companies’ current policy enforcement methods are sufficient to modify driver behavior.

Interest in cell-phone policy technology continues to grow. More than 80 percent of all respondents consider cell-phone policy technology to be more or just as important as more traditional driver management solutions, including hard braking/accelerating reports, speeding reports, and real-time driver performance feedback.

Ad Loading...

Further, more than a quarter (26 percent) of all respondents report their companies plan to evaluate phone-based software, cell-phone use analytics, or in-vehicle cameras within the next 12 months.

Android and iPhone smartphones are the fastest-growing company-provided mobile phones. Twenty-three percent of companies that equip employees with mobile phones issue Android smartphones, up from 13 percent in February 2012, while 26 percent issue company-provided iPhones, up from 12 percent. BlackBerry smartphones and feature phones (mobile phones, which, at the time of manufacture are not considered a smartphone, but have additional features and functions of a smartphone) are still the most prevalent company-provided mobile phones; 33 percent of companies equip employees with BlackBerry smartphones, while 32 percent issue feature phones.

The survey results are shown in comparison with results from a May 2011 employee distracted driving survey and from a February 2012 Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) cell-phone rule survey. For most results, this analysis provides a comparison between all respondents, respondents from fleets, which are subject to regulation by the FMCSA, and respondents from fleets that are not subject to FMCSA regulation.

Click the photo below to see a slide-show of all the charts included in the story.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Safety

A blue and red Automotive Fleet graphic calling for nominations for the fleet safety award.
Safetyby Faith HowellJune 4, 2026

Nominations Open for 2026 Fleet Safety Award

Nominations have officially opened for the 2026 Fleet Safety Award Winner.

Read More →
wheel geotab image
SponsoredJune 1, 2026

Turning Connected Vehicle Data Into Decisions That Matter

Fleet leaders have more data than ever, but turning that data into clear, actionable decisions remains a challenge. This white paper shows how leading organizations are using connected vehicle data to improve safety, reduce costs, and optimize fleet performance. Learn how to turn insight into action across your fleet.

Read More →
A person holding a clipboard and writing on an inspection checklist beside the wheel of a large white vehicle, likely conducting a fleet or safety inspection.
SponsoredJune 1, 2026

Cameras, Safety and Insurance: From Reactive Claims to Real-time Prevention

Commercial auto remains one of the most challenging and costly lines of coverage for fleet operators and insurers alike. Learn more about how to effectively address these issues from Onur Aksan, Enterprise Business Development Executive, Geotab.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
A Fleet Forward Conference graphic representing the safety symposium.
Safetyby Chris BrownMay 29, 2026

NAFA Fleet Safety Symposium to Collocate With 2026 Fleet Forward Conference

The daylong certificate program will precede the Fleet Forward Conference at the Gaylord National Harbor in Maryland.

Read More →
A person with hands on the steering wheel driving
Safetyby Judie NuskeyMay 15, 2026

The Distractions You Can’t Turn Off: What Drivers Face Outside the Vehicle

Fleet drivers face constant visual, cognitive, and environmental interruptions the moment they hit the road. From roadside chaos to mental fatigue and digital overload, today’s biggest driving risks often come from outside the vehicle itself.

Read More →
Hail covers the windshield and hood of a black vehicle with text overlay about FLASH Weather AI’s new hail prediction model.
Safetyby News/Media ReleaseMay 13, 2026

FLASH Weather AI Launches First Deep-Learning Hail Prediction Model With High-Resolution Forecasting

FLASH Weather AI has launched a first-of-its-kind hail prediction model capable of forecasting hail size and arrival time at 1-kilometer resolution up to 55 minutes ahead, giving fleets and insurers critical time to prepare for severe storms.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Coca-Cola fleet executive smiling beside graphic text reading “Rolling Dollar Signs” about the company’s trucking and fleet strategy.
Safetyby Chris BrownMay 12, 2026

How Coca-Cola United Protects Its Fleet from Growing Legal Risk

As litigation risk rises, vehicles are increasingly targeted. This Coca-Cola bottler shares how it’s reducing exposure through driver training, technology, and a proactive risk management approach.

Read More →
Two trucking industry workers talk in front of semi-trucks beside text reading, “The issue isn’t lack of safety technology — it’s lack of alignment.”
SafetyMay 12, 2026

How to Speak the Same Language on Fleet Safety

Drivers, supervisors, and data often speak different safety “languages.” Getting on the same page will drive better results.

Read More →
pictures of a lock with the words Cybersecurity 101
Safetyby Jeanny RoaMay 11, 2026

Fleet Cybersecurity 101: What You Need from Your Technology Vendors

From identity management to third-party certifications, the right technology partner should make security easier to manage. Here are the three building blocks that fleet managers need to stay in control as connected systems scale.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Chris Brown sits across from safety experft at Lifesaver mobile in an interview about distracted driving and phone use tech.
Safetyby Chris BrownMay 1, 2026

Reducing Risk by Eliminating Phone Use Behind the Wheel

Distracted driving remains one of the most persistent risks in fleet operations. New approaches focus on removing mobile device use entirely while adding real-time safety support.

Read More →