Closer Look:What Can Fleets do with ChatGPT?
How AI Can Enhance Electric Vehicle Fleets
Artificial intelligence relates to various aspects of running electric vehicles, such as duty cycles, routing, deployments, maintenance and charging schedules.

One expert, Jim Fish, vice president of Opus Intelligent Vehicle Support (IVS), recently shared a general overview and direction on applying AI to both electric- and ICE- vehicle fleets.
Photo: Bobit
For all the potential and precautions surrounding Artificial Intelligence (AI), the tool has been around in fleet operations, underscoring how managers can adopt recent advances one step at a time.
AI brings the added appeal of being a natural fit for electric vehicle fleets since EVs are more data-driven and digital-centric than ICE vehicles.
One expert, Jim Fish, vice president of Opus Intelligent Vehicle Support (IVS), recently shared a general overview and direction on applying AI to both electric- and ICE- vehicle fleets.
AI and Electric Vehicle Maintenance
Amid much of the hype, we must realize that AI has been deployed for many years, Fish said.
“I know that the craze in the press is all about AI of about the last six months, but it's been deployed in aggregating maintenance repair orders and understanding what might be going on in order to shortcut the diagnostic time,” he said.
When Opus IVS looks at millions of experiences, it can boil them down to identifying flaws and errors and enable a fleet to save time dealing with the problems in the future, he said.
“There have been several approaches to fleet, irrespective of electrified fleets, that are predictive and prognostic in nature. So, by predicting when a failure may occur and being proactive about it, or sensing that there is an impending failure, are two ways that machine learning works in the fleet space.”
Integrating AI with Electric Vehicles
Because EVs are mostly newer, they haven’t reached the five-year plus usage range where maintenance becomes more frequent and can provide the cumulative data on insights, Fish said. For now, comparisons are micro compared to the vast number of ICE vehicles on the road.
An electric vehicle is considerably more complex electronically than an ICE vehicle, while retaining the typical maintenance of tires, suspension systems, and brakes, he said.
“You have all of these or other issues that could still happen, but our belief is you’ll see less maintenance,” Fish said. “But you’ll need more expertise to service these vehicles because of the increasing complexity. AI can help bring that complexity down.”
Smartening up EV Charging Schedules
A hypothesis behind running an electric vehicle is that if a human performs tasks without emotional content, then a machine can be trained to also do it, Fish said. When you consider the millions of EV charging cycle experiences, and the fact that no human can look at those millions of experiences and be able to formulate the ideal charging plan, it points to the advantages of machine learning.
“When we talk about charging schedules, it's all of that accrued experience that can then be trained into a model that can help understand the ideal charging circumstance for a particular vehicle itself,” he said.
How AI Can Save Costs and Time
When looking at fleet routing and scheduling maintenance, AI once deployed can slash costs and time spent by more than 50%, up to 70%, Fish said. A business case for it becomes clear at the 50% level.
“Not only do we expect time/cost savings, but we expect improved executional content,” he said. For example, delivery and other performance errors can decline, leading to more competence as the AI models scale up.
“When you're using a machine learning model, it upskills everyone who uses it, but it doesn't make poor executables,” he said. The research shows that the improvement is about 0.4 standard deviations in executional capability. So great executables get even better, and poor executables do get (somewhat) better.
More AI Advances Coming Soon
One constant with AI is it accelerates change and data connections, increasing its ability to “think” through problem solving. That means AI will continuously adapt to its direction and scope, resulting in more support for fleet operations.
“One thing that we're seeing is machine learning is quite prescriptive output,” Fish said. “We think the mad rush since the introduction of language models is for a human cognitive assist that not only makes the decision but assists and facilitates a better decision by a human.”
This “gold rush” in AI comes in automating and helping humans make better decisions in what they’re doing, such as with determining the most logical and efficient fleet vehicle routes.
Google Maps, for example, is just one prescriptive example of AI at a basic level.
Fish outlined three factors to consider where adopting AI can help:
Providing more data and conclusions in a shorter timeframe, thereby enabling humans to focus more on the context of a decision or procedure. Humans are irreplaceable for some decisions.
Getting equipment and machines to diagnose problems and anomalies, especially in the operation of fleet vehicles. AI can read electric vehicle data in ways that resemble debugging code.
Enhancing productivity by freeing up humans to focus on the critical decisions and tasks without the distraction of the repetitive minutiae and detail better handled by AI.
Will AI Evolve into Coaching?
Another dimension to AI is that it must be prompted and asked the right questions, for which humans are better suited, Fish said.
“You still must formulate an ask. People think we won’t need HR workers anymore because AI can write amazing job descriptions. But you still must know what to ask for in the job description, and you still have to edit this job description so it can help you and make suggestions to you like including social media posts.”
AI users over time can get the technology to align better with their goals and purposes as they interact more with it. It’s all a matter of improving the quality of your input, or “asks,” that will yield more relevant prompts and suggestions from the AI. An AI model, such as ChatGPT, must know the context of the person who needs help, and the more it learns and knows, the more it can customize its outputs to increase the knowledge value and solutions it provides to the user.
Using AI to Find and Train EV Technicians
One of the big challenges electric vehicle fleets confront is finding enough EV technicians, or at least retraining the ICE technician.
“This is where language models begin to come into play in increasing the skill level,” Fish said. “If you have an A-level technician, which is an elite technician or a diagnostician, on ICE vehicles, and here comes an EV, he intuitively knows how vehicles are working and he is going to know that now there's different things to learn on an EV.”
Using AI as a tool, fleet managers can present information that steepens the learning curve for the technician, enabling them to learn faster and improve their skills. It resembles an online session, or like a more informed and powerful how-to YouTube video.
“The upskilling is a form of training, but unlike any training that's ever been delivered,” Fish said. “You don't have to go to a class with a hands-on practicum. Instead, it becomes like influencers on YouTube.
The future state of the art of influence is, ‘Oh, you have this problem. Here are six things that you should do to solve this.’ That's where language models can come in and rapidly upskill people.”
Originally posted on Charged Fleet
More Green Fleet

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 →Are You Tracking Your Fleet's True Total Cost of Ownership?
Bobit Business Media surveyed 190 fleet professionals and found that while most fleets are tracking costs, fragmented systems and data gaps are keeping true TCO visibility out of reach. With rising pressure to control spend in an increasingly volatile environment, the gap between what fleets think they know and what the data actually shows is wider than you might expect. See how your peers are managing costs today and where the industry still has room to improve.
Read More →
Hybrids: Electrification Without the Challenges
For fleet managers, fuel is one of the biggest line items in the budget — and it's one hybrids can shrink without changing how your people work. Download the eBook to see the numbers, understand the technology, and get a step-by-step guide to making the switch.
Read More →
Startup ZMD Motors Developing Electric Conversion for Ram 5500 Work Trucks
Detroit-based company says it has begun early development of a system to convert internal combustion Ram 5500 chassis-cab trucks to electric power.
Read More →
U.S. EV Adoption Is Climbing, but Commercial and Passenger Markets Diverge
New industry group data revealed that light-duty electric vehicle sales are hitting record market share and volumes, while commercial EV volume dipped. What’s driving the fluctuations?
Read More →
How To Upfit Electric Work Trucks and Vans
The biggest challenge lies in balancing additional equipment and accessories with EV battery capacity and range.
Read More →
How Fleets Can Adjust Approaches To EV Adoption
With the expiration of federal incentives, EV success now hinges less on government policy and more on discounts, battery tech progress, increased range, and broader infrastructure.
Read More →
Despite World Troubles, Forward Thinking Guides Fleets
Fleet operators shared their challenges during an annual conference that embraced the latest advances across all aspects of running private- and public-sector vehicles.
Read More →
GM Energy Details Partnerships and Targets for Public Charging Build-Out
EVgo, Pilot, ChargePoint and IONNA named; goal is 35k GM-invested DC stalls by 2030, with customer-experience upgrades at sites.
Read More →
Q3 Electric Vehicles Sales Hit Record High
EV buyers took advantage of the final federal tax credit days, while average prices edged up for new EVs and continued to decline for used models.
Read More →