Q. How do you see the market for fuel card services evolving over the coming years in terms of partner programs?
A. I think you see most oil companies focus on what they’re good at...
A. No, not necessarily. It may be more of a partnership opportunity as they start to get more involved in other aspects of the business. For example, we’ve been able to use a device like the one designed by Square to help out some emergency fueling partners. You can imagine the scene: There is a hurricane coming in and you’ve got a number of mobile fueling trucks set up on the side of a parking lot and they want to make sure they know who’s getting fuel at that location. They’re going to need a way to capture that information. So now, with an iPad and a Square device, we’ve programmed it so that they can accept a WEX card. They’re going to swipe that WEX card in the vehicle and capture all that data. So it’s not necessarily a threat as much as an opportunity for us to integrate with them and potentially share customers. I think they’ve got the awareness of the market. A lot of what happens in the commercial space is being driven by consumer experience. So, people want to have that same customer experience. In some ways, it pushes us to develop different applications that are more consumer-like: mobile apps and ways to pay with a mobile device, etc.
Senior Vice President and General Manager
A. I think you see most oil companies focus on what they’re good at...
A. I think you will get both. It’s going to take a lot of time to change to just one solution...
A. I think down the road everybody probably assumes that we end up in a cardless society...
A. Vehicles will always need to be fueled...
A. In these regions, a lot of what we do is following our customers. We are fortunate enough to have a database of more than 300,000 customers...
A. We’re getting it more from the customers. If I manage a fleet and I have a presence in 15 different countries, I have a global fleet manager that oversees it all...
A. Obviously, a partner will have more presence than an individual customer. A fleet is just one entity, whereas a fleet management partner might have 20 or 30 accounts in a given region...
A. We’re starting to see a lot of points of integration, whether that be with data or systems. Telematics devices provide a rich data set that can be utilized in a number of ways...
A. Fleet management was historically built on the foundation of data. The more data you had, and the more you could combine various data sources, the easier it was to gain insight into how your fleet is operating, allowing you to make better decisions...
A. The pace of change today is faster than it’s ever been, and yet slower than it ever will be from this point forward...
A. The single biggest mistake we see is to view parts of your fleet operation independent of each other...
A. There are many things, beyond the obvious, such as developing a written preparedness plan and training your employees to implement it so you protect your vehicles and equipment and identify which employees play essential roles during a disaster...
A. Arriving at work, Fran Fleetkeeper scans a large board with dots on a map. Some of the dots are green. Some are red...
A. Imagine waking up one day to no fuel, damaged roads, and unknown damage to your fleet of 500 vehicles. It’s the ultimate nightmare for a business with any exposure at all to mobility...
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