Most public fleet teams work hard. The problem is that operational friction is slowing everything down around them.
Technicians wait on parts, supervisors chase updates across disconnected systems, and work orders arrive incomplete. PM schedules slip, vehicles sit longer than necessary, and small delays stack on top of each other until reactive operations become the norm.
And in most public fleets, adding more staff isn’t a realistic solution. Hiring remains difficult, experienced technicians are harder to retain, budgets are constrained, assets are aging, and service expectations continue rising.
The fleets improving productivity today have found a better path forward: systematically reducing operational friction.
Operational friction is the collection of small inefficiencies that quietly slow maintenance operations every day. Individually, these problems seem manageable:
● missing parts information
● delayed approvals
● incomplete inspections
● disconnected systems
● unclear repair priorities
● inconsistent PM scheduling
● manual paperwork
● poor communication workflows
But together, they create organizational drag across the entire fleet operation. Consider what this looks like in practice:
● A technician spends 20 minutes locating repair history because asset records are fragmented.
● A sanitation truck sits idle waiting for approval on a routine repair.
● A school bus arrives for service without complete DVIR notes, forcing technicians to re-diagnose the issue.
● A supervisor manually updates spreadsheets instead of managing shop workflow.
● A PM is delayed because scheduling visibility is inconsistent across departments.
None of these delays feel catastrophic on their own. But across dozens of technicians, hundreds of assets, and thousands of work orders, operational friction becomes one of the biggest hidden productivity drains in public fleet management.
Many productivity conversations focus entirely on technician wrench time. But some of the biggest efficiency losses happen before a technician even touches the vehicle.
Reactive operations create constant workflow disruption:
● emergency repairs interrupt planned work
● parts shortages delay jobs
● incomplete work orders slow diagnostics
● poor communication creates duplicate effort
● inconsistent scheduling reshuffles priorities daily
This forces technicians into stop-and-start workflows that reduce efficiency across the entire operation. Over time, reactive culture becomes normalized. Technicians expect interruptions, supervisors expect delays, and leadership expects backlog.
The real issue isn’t staffing. It’s operational clarity.
Strong PM discipline is actually one of the most important productivity strategies a public fleet can implement, even though most fleets treat it purely as a reliability initiative.
Reactive maintenance creates operational instability:
● overtime spikes
● emergency repairs increase
● scheduling becomes unpredictable
● technician focus gets disrupted
● parts planning weakens
● downtime expands
A missed PM on a refuse truck doesn’t just impact one vehicle. It can disrupt route schedules, increase overtime costs, pressure technicians with emergency repairs, and affect service delivery across the community.
By contrast, disciplined PM workflows create:
● more predictable scheduling
● smoother labor allocation
● better parts preparation
● fewer emergency interruptions
● more efficient shop throughput
The result goes beyond better asset reliability. You end up with a calmer, more productive operation overall.
One of the biggest mistakes fleet organizations make is trying to improve productivity through pressure instead of visibility. Technicians rarely become more efficient simply because leadership demands it. They become more efficient when operational obstacles are cleared out of their way.
That requires visibility into:
● technician workflow bottlenecks
● overdue PMs
● repair delays
● parts shortages
● backlog trends
● asset downtime patterns
● scheduling conflicts
Without visibility, supervisors spend their days reacting instead of managing proactively. And when supervisors operate reactively, the rest of the shop follows.
High-performing public fleets create operational clarity that allows teams to:
● prioritize work consistently
● reduce wasted motion
● improve scheduling discipline
● streamline communication
● reduce downtime earlier
● improve accountability fairly
Importantly, this also improves retention. Technicians become frustrated when disorganization repeatedly slows their work. Clear workflows and consistent processes create a more stable and professional environment that people want to stay part of.
Public fleet operations carry unique operational constraints. Fleet leaders are expected to:
● support essential public services
● operate aging assets longer
● navigate procurement complexity
● justify spending publicly
● maintain audit-ready documentation
● manage technician shortages
● improve reliability with limited resources
That means productivity can’t depend entirely on adding labor hours. Public fleets need systems, workflows, and operational discipline that help existing teams operate more effectively.
Because when operational friction grows unchecked:
● downtime increases
● backlog expands
● technician burnout worsens
● replacement decisions become reactive
● leadership confidence declines
● public trust weakens
And eventually, service reliability suffers.
The strongest fleet operations aren’t built around constant firefighting. They’re built around operational clarity:
● clear workflows
● clear priorities
● clear maintenance planning
● clear communication
● clear accountability
● clear operational visibility
Getting more out of a fleet comes down to removing the friction that keeps good teams from operating efficiently in the first place.
The public fleets that improve productivity long term will be the ones that reduce operational friction, strengthen workflow discipline, and create maintenance operations that are proactive instead of reactive.
RTA Fleet360 is purpose-built for public fleets that need to do more with what they’ve got. It centralizes maintenance operations, strengthens PM compliance, and gives supervisors the real-time visibility they need to manage proactively instead of reactively. If your team is ready to stop fighting fires and start running a more efficient shop, book a demo of RTA Fleet360 and see what’s possible.
This article was inspired by a recent episode of our podcast. Check out the full episode for even more tips and tricks: