The past few years in the fleet profession have given many, if not all of us, opportunities to challenge ourselves to be positive or negative about changes in our industry. Sadly, some have taken a "duck and cover" mentality, hoping the changes would pass them by. In the end, many of these individuals have become casualties of change. Others have grabbed the proverbial bull by the horns and made the best of the many challenges we’ve faced. The next several years will bring more of the same, I am certain. 
P.S. I recently jotted down a short list of what I consider to be some significant game-changers for the fleet industry. You can look at this list with an eye toward gloom-and-doom, or you can choose to look at them as opportunities for innovation. It will be up to us – NAFA, our partners, the fleet managers of today and tomorrow, and our valued business associates -- to create and execute strategies that can take advantage of these opportunities.
1. Mobility Management. At its inception, fleet management was asset management and was primarily about managing the vehicles drivers used. Today, with new generational wants and needs, autonomous vehicles, new vehicle technologies, and rideshare services – to name just a few disrupters – this is changing. Today, and even more so in the future, fleet management is not as much about asset management as it is about mobility management.
2. Safety. Coupled with the new vehicle technology mentioned above, driver safety has – rightly so – become a dominant issue. Strict distracted driving policies, compliance with federal regulations, and a push to get to zero traffic deaths will all impact how you manage your fleet and the related liability that goes with crashes.
3. Big data and the connection with TCO. Every aspect of your vehicle operations can be monitored every second of every day, but what do you do with all of that data? Innovators will use the information for predictive analytics, finding ways to reduce their total cost of operations/ownership. The result? Tomorrow’s fleet managers will be more data analysts than asset managers.
4. Redefined role of fleet managers. In addition to being more data analyst than asset manager, tomorrow’s fleet manager – and already many of today’s fleet managers – won’t only being wearing a fleet manager’s hat. They’ll be doing travel, relocation, human resources, or a number of other tasks in addition to fleet. And, at least in the corporate world, they’ll be reporting up to someone in procurement or sourcing.
NAFA Fleet Management Association
http://www.nafa.org/