You might have used a satnav to find a pub once and thought that was telematics. It is not. Telematics is the steady stream of signals from vehicles – location, engine data, driver inputs and more – turned into something a fleet manager can read and act on. Recent independent research has looked at how those signals reduce risk, cut fuel use and change work for drivers. One big review by TRL outlines both the clear benefits and the common limits people run into when they try to roll this tech out.
In the messy world between hardware and dashboards, telematics companies sit quietly connecting sims, boxes and back-office tools.
What telematics actually gives you (and what it does not)
Telematics gives data, not magic. It records trips, engine fault codes, harsh braking and idle time. When used right, it helps spot an oil leak before it becomes a roadside breakdown. When used badly it becomes a blizzard of alerts that nobody trusts. The evidence from government-commissioned work shows the effects depend more on implementation than on the device itself.
Safety: real potential, cautious reality
Many studies find telematics can lower risky driving. That said, the impact on crash rates and long term behaviour is mixed unless the programme includes clear feedback for drivers and fair policies for managers. The Department for Transport reviewed telematics for young drivers and warned that devices help when paired with coaching and sensible use of the data. In short, tech alone is not a behaviour-change silver bullet.
Fuel, emissions and the urban freight puzzle
Telematics data has become crucial for anyone trying to shrink fuel bills or manage emissions. Detailed vehicle traces reveal idling, inefficient routes and the exact moments when a heavy foot drives up consumption. Research using telematics for city freight in London found some policies can unintentionally increase vehicle-kilometres and fuel use if not modelled with real data. So the tech helps, but planners must know what the data is telling them.
Who should run telematics, and how to avoid backfire
You should run a pilot before a full rollout. Start with metrics that matter to the business: unscheduled downtime, fuel per 100km, or on-time deliveries. Share the baseline numbers with drivers so improvements are visible. The TRL work stresses the need for clear governance: data privacy, retention rules and how data will be acted upon. If you skip that, you will face resistance and mistrust.
Which behaviours actually change
Telematics nudges things like harsh braking, speeding and idling, but it does not magically create safer drivers overnight. Employers that pair telematics with coaching, not punishment, get better results. Recent TRL guidance and newer industry reviews make the same point: devices spot events, humans convert that into learning.
Legal, health and workplace considerations
You will want to check health and safety guidance when rolling out in-vehicle tech. The UK Health and Safety Executive highlights telematics among vehicle safety technologies employers can use to support learning and reduce risk. The key word there is support. Use the data to teach, not to spy.
Practical, old-school tips that still matter
Run a two-month baseline before fitting anything. Involve drivers early, and show them the dashboards. Pick a limited set of KPIs and avoid one-size-fits-all scorecards. Buy devices that are compatible with your longer term goals, especially if you plan to add electric vans or plug-in hybrids. Keep SIM contracts simple so cross-border trips do not become a connectivity headache.
Final thought
Telematics works when the data leads to a small, crisp change in operations. That could be a maintenance alert that avoids a breakdown, a routing tweak that saves fuel on a specific route, or targeted coaching for a repeat offender. The tech will not fix bad processes or poor leadership. Treat telematics as a practical tool: measure one thing, fix it, then measure the next. If you do that, the numbers will show it was worth the effort.
David Prior
David Prior is the editor of Today News, responsible for the overall editorial strategy. He is an NCTJ-qualified journalist with over 20 years’ experience, and is also editor of the award-winning hyperlocal news title Altrincham Today. His LinkedIn profile is here.












































































