Automotive Fleet
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

How Do You Maximize Retained Value on Truck Replacement?

When is the right time to replace your light trucks and vans? That's a question we posed recently during a roundtable discussion with four of the most knowledgeable fleet managers in the business.

by Staff
December 1, 1985
3 min to read


When is the right time to replace your light trucks and vans? That's a question we posed recently during a roundtable discussion with four of the most knowledgeable fleet managers in the business.

They are: George Weimer, director of transportation services for Continental Telecom in Atlanta (his 8,000-vehicle fleet includes 5,100 light trucks); Robert Whitfield, corporate fleet administrator for Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp of Louisville, KY (1,750 vehicles including 900 vans); George Denick, automotive fleet manger in the corporate services department of Texaco, Inc. in New York (8,400 vehicles including 3,200 light trucks); and E. Pierce Walsh, director of fleet management for IC Industries, Inc. of Chicago (4,500 vehicles including 1,500 light trucks and vans).

Ad Loading...

Weimer: My replacement policy for light trucks and vans is four years or 70,000 miles. I'm trying to get that used trucks out on the market with something left on it to sell. And in my experience the truck will take more miles than a car will take when you go to sell it.

Walsh: For our vans, the replacement policy is 60,000 miles or three years. For the light trucks, it's four to five years and 70,000 to 100,000 miles.

Denick: Our trade-cycle policy for light trucks is currently three years and 65,000 miles. Or, if you run 100,000 miles before three years, we'll replace it. We've had some of those.

Whitfield: For our plant vehicles, for the trucks that haul the forklifts and so forth, the replacement policy is unlimited, really. Some of them are as much as 10 years old. But the majority of my vans are with the sales force, and those are on a three year/600,000-mile cycle. That's because I have a demand for my used vehicles.

The purchased can cut a window in, put a seat in, and they have created a recreational vehicles. Therefore, I am maximizing my retained value. Going out there with 60,000-70,000 miles on them is not a problem, because with some modification these vans become an inexpensive R.V. But for the plant vehicles, again, it's whenever I remind the braches to review their vehicles and to figure replacement expenses in their yearly budget.

Ad Loading...

Weimer: Do you tell them which vehicles they ought to be considering? Do you say, 'Here is the fleet; based on the mileage and the age, you should consider replacing this vehicle this year?

Whitfield: Yes, our computer puts that together on the basis of age and mileage. Then we tell them which vehicles are going to be replaced.

Denick: I'm within six months of implementing a system like that; that's the direction I want to go.

Whitfield: It's a work tool. And it helps us to maximize that retained value.

Denick: The biggest part of our job when you get right down to it is the used market. We're just starting to recognize that! I tell my management: 'I'm acquiring $20 million worth of vehicles, but I'm going to sell $7 million worth of used equipment for you.'

Ad Loading...

This is an area of opportunity that we have just begun to explore. This exploration goes beyond the traditional disposal methods of employee-sale, wholesalers, and auctions. We have had great success with employee-auctions held at lunchtime in one of our office buildings.




Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Remarketing

collage of conference speakers
Remarketingby Chris BrownApril 30, 2026

CAR 2026 Recap Part 2: Closing the Gap Between Data & Remarketing Value

The second half of CAR 2026 examined how fleets can translate lifecycle strategy, vehicle data, and market shifts into higher real-world results.

Read More →
Collage of CAR speakers
Remarketingby Chris BrownApril 27, 2026

CAR2026 in Two Words: Velocity, Value (Part 1)

The 2026 Conference of Automotive Remarketing convened with a mandate to involve a new constituency — fleet managers — and an updated mission to demonstrate unrealized value in de-fleeted vehicles.

Read More →
Johan Verbois, executive director of CARA, stands outdoors in a blue blazer with arms crossed, with blurred vehicles and greenery in the background.
Remarketingby News/Media ReleaseApril 27, 2026

CARA Appoints Johan Verbois as Executive Director

CARA recently opened up a part-time executive director position and appointed Johan Verbois for the role.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Fleet Remarketing Association temp logo
Remarketingby Chris BrownApril 20, 2026

Launch of Fleet Remarketing Association Signals New Era for Vehicle Lifecycle Value and Data Stewardship

The Association, dedicated to advancing the remarketing phase of the vehicle lifecycle, held its kick-off meeting on April 16 at the 2026 Conference of Automotive Remarketing (CAR) in Cleveland.

Read More →
Line comparisons of used vehicle inventory set in different colors.
Remarketingby News/Media ReleaseApril 20, 2026

March Used Vehicle Inventory Falls To Lowest Since 2019

Franchised and independent dealers had a total of 1.95 million used vehicles in stock in March, the lowest on record in the current data set.

Read More →
 A white Polestar 3 with all doors and trunk lid open while on display at an EV sales event.
Remarketingby News/Media ReleaseApril 7, 2026

Spring Bounce Pushes Q1 Used Vehicle Values Higher

Demand signals remain strong at auctions, with sales conversions, a clear sign of demand, reaching 68.2% in the most recent measure.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Graphic promoting CAR 2026 roundtables featuring headshots of five speakers and topics including Wall Street trends, fleet data, upfits, fair market value, and AI in remarketing.
Remarketingby Chris BrownMarch 31, 2026

CAR 2026: Get the Wall Street Update on the Key Players in Remarketing

From a Wall Street analyst's take on remarketing's key players to whether fleets need their own version of Carfax, CAR 2026's afternoon roundtables will answer key operational and industry questions.

Read More →
Promotional graphic for CAR 2026 panel on data-driven value in commercial vehicles, featuring five industry experts and session details for April 16 in Cleveland.
Remarketingby Chris BrownMarch 31, 2026

CAR 2026 Session to Uncover the Missing Data That's Costing Fleets at Disposal

Work trucks lose value at remarketing, not because they aren't worth more, but because the data to prove it rarely makes it to the auction.

Read More →
Graphic promoting a CAR 2026 conference session showing four speaker headshots above the title “What Really Moves Vehicle Value Now — And What Doesn’t” with automotive conference branding
Remarketingby Chris BrownMarch 11, 2026

CAR 2026: What Really Moves Vehicle Value Now — And What Doesn’t

A panel at the 2026 Conference of Automotive Remarketing will examine how resale value is created across the vehicle lifecycle and which traditional remarketing practices still deliver ROI.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Blue bar graphs showing a rise in used vehicle categories across the board.
Remarketingby News/Media ReleaseMarch 6, 2026

Wholesale Used Vehicle Prices Up In February

Solid demand at Manheim auctions with higher sales conversion rates indicate an appetite from dealers to buy.

Read More →