In Europe, they are asking the question: What is the next evolution of fleet management? A growing number of European fleet professionals believe the concept of “mobility management” will radically transform traditional fleet management. The expectation is that the fleet managers of today will evolve into “mobility managers” in the future. These proponents predict mobility management will produce major structural changes in the European fleet industry over the next 15 years. They foresee an industry-wide move away from traditional fleet management to mobility management. But, what exactly does this mean?

The explanation is that instead of companies managing a fleet of vehicles to meet their employees’ mobility needs, the new mobility managers will move beyond asset management to manage a broader array of mobility and travel options. This emerging view is so widespread in Europe that Nexus Communication, the publisher of Fleet Europe magazine, produces an international magazine called Smart Mobility Management that addresses the concept of multi-modal mobility.

The Vanguard of Mobility Management
The concept of mobility management will represent a paradigm shift in fleet management, allowing employees to recieve a mobility allowance instead of a car allowance.

The Netherlands has been at the forefront of the trend to mobility management, as several Dutch-based companies have adopted mobility budgets. The trend is spreading as other companies in France, Belgium, and Sweden are similarly starting to experiment with corporate mobility budgets. A mobility budget is a financial incentive that stimulates employees to travel in a more sustainable way. It is a fixed monthly budget that an employee can use to pay for all travel costs, regardless of the travel mode used. In this new mobility environment, car allowances will be replaced by mobility allowances, and assessments will be made of the most cost-efficient, time-efficient, environmentally-efficient, and labor-efficient ways of making essential business journeys. Employees will have to make sound business cases to their managers for not choosing the most efficient means of corporate travel available for that particular journey.

If, by the end of the month, the mobility budget is not completely spent, the employee is allowed to either keep the money or use the remaining amount for other employee benefits. Employees are able to decide how to spend their mobility budget. The more environmentally sustainable way an employee travels, such as using public transport, or even by attending a phone conference rather than traveling to a meeting, the more monies will be left over for the employee’s use. The proponents of mobility management say this financial incentive motivates employees to use sustainable transportation.

Ultimately, the belief is that as the concept of mobility management spreads, companies will transition to operating on the basis of a total cost of mobility (TCM), rather than the traditional total cost of ownership (TCO).

However, the mobility managers of the future will face a greater level of job complexity than today’s fleet managers by having to manage a number of different mobility suppliers, covering the different categories of travel, versus the traditional focus on managing the vehicle asset and driver.

Expansion of the Market
European fleet management companies (FMCs) anticipate growing acceptance of mobility management and are positioning themselves to serve this emerging market. For instance, Athlon Car Lease, a major European fleet leasing company, launched a new company on March 15, 2012, called Athlon Mobility Consultancy to provide advisory services to support corporate mobility initiatives. ALD Automotive, another major European fleet management company, is now serving the mobility market. It has joined forces with Mobispot, a specialist in remote working solutions. Mobispot is an online platform in which users can find workspaces within Belgium with the objective of reducing the amount of time employees have to spend in their cars for the traditional home-to-work journey. A network of available workspaces in the country is made available, enabling users to find one anywhere in the country less than 15 minutes from where he or she is at any particular time. Companies pre-pay for a specific amount of credit, and employees reserve a space, turn up, and start working.

One attraction of mobility management to FMCs is that it expands the market beyond the finite number of employees who qualify for a company-provided vehicle, which represents only 10-20 percent of the employee population. Mobility management allows lessors to serve the other 80-90 percent of the workforce who do not qualify for company vehicles, but have their own mobility needs. However, in order for mobility management to succeed, there must be viable alternatives to company-provided vehicles, such as a well-connected public transportation network seamlessly interconnected with corollary mobility solutions.

 

Questions & More Questions

Is this the future direction of fleet management? Is Europe in the vanguard of a trend that will eventually migrate to the North American fleet market? Is the industry moving beyond asset management to mobility management, which will allow employees to use all forms of transportation and not automatically assign a company vehicle? Let me know what you think.

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About the author
Mike Antich

Mike Antich

Former Editor and Associate Publisher

Mike Antich covered fleet management and remarketing for more than 20 years and was inducted into the Fleet Hall of Fame in 2010 and the Global Fleet of Hal in 2022. He also won the Industry Icon Award, presented jointly by the IARA and NAAA industry associations.

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