Why is there a shortage of fleet technicians?
The fleet industry is in a full-blown talent crisis. Dealerships, independent shops, and government fleets alike are struggling to fill bays. The cause? A perfect storm:
- Lack of interest from younger generations
- Outdated compensation strategies
- Poor visibility and weak recruiting
- A rising preference for other trades like HVAC, plumbing, and electrical
Why isn’t Gen Z becoming fleet technicians?
Gen Z is entering the trades—but they’re choosing careers that feel more rewarding, mobile, and financially viable. Plumbing, HVAC, and electrical work offer simpler entry paths, higher wages, and easier self-employment.
Meanwhile, techs in the fleet world often:
- Work behind the scenes with little recognition
- Have limited career paths
- Earn less for more complex, multi-disciplinary work
What are other trades doing right?
Plumbing and electrical industries:
- Recruit early and often at trade schools
- Offer clear apprenticeships and growth paths
- Make entrepreneurship easy (low barrier to entry)
Fleets need to:
- Tell a better story about the value of fleet technician work
- Create visible recruiting pipelines
- Sell their culture, facilities, and career progression
What role does compensation play?
A huge one. Most HR departments benchmark wages against nearby cities—but ignore the private sector competition down the street. Meanwhile, techs can earn more working fewer hours in HVAC or electrical.
To compete, fleets must:
- Evaluate total comp against real threats (dealers, trade shops)
- Fight for technician wage increases based on skill breadth
- Show young techs there’s room to grow
How can fleets improve recruiting?
- Partner with local high schools and trade programs
- Invite students to tour clean, high-tech shops
- Offer internships and part-time roles
- Create clear career ladders from entry-level to supervisor
- Use language that reflects the role: technician, not mechanic
What’s the bottom line?
You’re not just competing with white-collar jobs anymore. You’re competing against plumbers, electricians, and HVAC techs—and right now, they’re winning.
To fix your technician pipeline, you need more than job postings. You need:
- Culture that attracts top talent
- Compensation that reflects job complexity
- Recruiting efforts that start early and sell hard
Fleet managers must start thinking like marketers. Because in today’s job market, the best story wins.
This article is inspired by a recent episode of The Fleet Success Show podcast. Check out the full episode here: