This article is based on a recent episode of The Fleet Success Show podcast. Watch the full episode here:
There’s nothing wrong with outsourcing your fleet’s maintenance and repair (M&R). In fact, with technician shortages and shrinking bandwidth, it’s often a necessity. But treating your third-party vendor like an all-inclusive vacation package is how costs balloon and service quality nosedives.
In this episode of The Fleet Success Show, Marc Canton, Steve Saltzgiver, and Scott Rood sound the alarm: FMCs are not your fleet manager. Stop acting like they are.
Spoiler: they would. And they do. Fleet Management Companies (FMCs) and vendors operate on profit margins. When they recommend new tires, brakes, or batteries prematurely, it’s not necessarily fraud—it’s incentive alignment. Their job is to optimize their bottom line, not yours.
The guys tell stories of audits that revealed:
It’s death by 1,000 cuts. But only if no one’s watching.
Steve, Marc, and Scott make it clear: if you don’t have dedicated personnel (or consultants) overseeing this stuff, you’re hemorrhaging money. That means:
This isn’t micromanagement. It’s management, period.
Sure. Until you replace it 1,000 times. Every part, no matter how small, can snowball into six figures if you’re not vigilant. That’s why fleet leadership requires a hybrid skillset: data literacy, mechanical intuition, and contractual awareness.
As Scott put it: “You gotta know what you're looking at. And you gotta be willing to look.”
Most fleets either don’t have service level agreements (SLAs), or they have flimsy ones. A good SLA should:
If your vendor isn’t signing off on those? They’re just freelancing with your fleet.
This episode is your wake-up call. Put eyes back on your operation, and your invoices.