Remember the energy crises of 1970s? You know, the ones that had everyone chilling in their cars in long lines at the gas pumps? Those involved some hardcore restrictions on consumer behavior, many of them with the goal of conserving fuel - like those gasoline shortages, as well as a national speed limit.

To get consumers on board, organizations jumped on the fuel conservation awareness train - here's a little trip down memory lane for you:

  • The Advertising Council's campaign featuring the tagline 'Don't Be Fuelish,' including TV commercials starring actor George C. Scott and Miami Dolphins football coach Don Shula, encouraging viewers to lower thermostats, turn off unused lights and appliances, and drive slower to save energy
  • Cartoonist Jack Davis sketching illustrations for billboards, magazines and newspapers that showed people practicing various ways to not be 'fuelish'
  • Our personal fave: The famous PSA from the '70s featuring Earth with a gas gauge on it, with the needle moving ever closer to 'E,' while a Doomsday voice intones, 'If we can put a man on the moon, we can do anything-but can we solve our energy problem in time?'
Fuel conservation was pretty trendy in the '70s (along with other, more questionable fads like disco, bell-bottom pants and Pet Rocks). But conserving fuel has never gone out of style for businesses that rely on fleets to run the company.

When your entire business plan relies on your vehicles, it's critical to keep them running - but that can get really expensive. Gas prices have always fluctuated wildly, but even when the price for a gallon is 'low,' every quart adds up - and if fuel costs aren't being managed, that can have a big impact on the bottom line.

There are unfortunately a lot of ways drivers can waste gas (sometimes without even realizing the consequence of their actions). Speeding and excessive idling are major culprits. Speeding on the highway can reduce fuel economy by as much as 33 percent, according the Department of Energy, and just one hour of cumulative idle time is the equivalent of driving 25 miles, according to Ford Motor Company. So a driver who is trying to get to a job a little faster by putting the pedal to the metal - assuming that a quicker arrival time will please the customer and the boss - is actually costing the business more.

Driving more than necessary wastes fuel, too. If a driver is dispatched to a jobsite and isn't totally sure how to get there, then he or she may end up taking a more circuitous route. Or a driver may know exactly how to get there - but not know that a major accident just shut down that road and it would have been faster to go 'the long way.'

Fortunately, there's a solution for all these woes: GPS vehicle tracking software.

By sending managers alerts whenever drivers are speeding or idling too long, the software lets them take fast action and stop these fuel-guzzling (and in the case of speeding, unsafe) behaviors in their tracks.

GPS vehicle tracking software also lets drivers pull up the fastest directions to a job - and the directions are always in near real time, so even if there is an accident or road construction, the app can route drivers around the obstruction and get them to the job fast.

© 2017 Fleetmatics. All Rights Reserved. The Verizon name and logo and all other names, logos, and slogans identifying Verizon's products and services are trademarks and service marks or registered trademarks and service marks of Verizon Trademark Services LLC or its affiliates in the United States and/or other countries. All other trademarks and service marks are the property of their respective owners. Fleetmatics has used third party sources in the creation of this blog. Fleetmatics does not make any representations whatsoever, or give any warranties of any kind, expressed, implied or otherwise about the information contained in this blog. See https://www.fleetmatics.com/privacy-policy/126 for more details.


To learn about other ways GPS vehicle tracking can help your business save money, check out our eBook!

Fleetmatics Group plc published this content on 07 February 2017 and is solely responsible for the information contained herein.
Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 08 February 2017 09:36:10 UTC.

Original documenthttps://www.fleetmatics.com/blog/how-gps-vehicle-tracking-saves-fuel

Public permalinkhttp://www.publicnow.com/view/C45DEE563EE7C7F7966D90A89D8E3868A3DA9075