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Construction Tech Review | Thursday, September 22, 2022
Fleet managers in the construction sector now have more options to find a solution that meets their demands because of the growing quantity and capabilities of OEM and third-party telematics services.
Fremont, CA: The number and capabilities of OEM and third-party telematics offerings in the construction industry are growing, giving fleet managers more options. Additionally, construction tool tracking systems are crucial due to the amount of small equipment and power tools on a site. You can track small construction tools, such as drills and jackhammers, as well as heavy construction equipment through fleet management software (FMS). Additionally, you can integrate other fleet solutions into FMS to consolidate all fleet-related data onto one platform with single sign-on (SSO) functionality for increased security and reduced login complexity.
Real-time insight into the location, stock, and assignments of cars and other assets may get maintained using fleet management software. Fleet managers in the construction sector now have more options to find a solution that meets their demands because of the growing quantity and capabilities of OEM and third-party telematics services. Construction tool monitoring systems are equally crucial due to the abundance of tiny tools and power tools on a project. Companies can track large construction machines like cranes and diggers and smaller items like drills and jackhammers using fleet management software (FMS). Additionally, users may include different fleet management systems (FMS) to combine all fleet-related data into a solitary platform with single sign-on (SSO) features for better security and streamlined login processes.
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Maintaining accountability among team members and automating inventory counts and service procedures when necessary is made possible by tracking and monitoring assets using a cloud-based FMS. This view of company tools and equipment in real-time includes assignments and locations.
Smaller equipment and tools should have a specific location from which they are checked out and returned at the end of the day or work.
How and where users keep these items significantly impacts the capacity to efficiently track fleet assets, particularly for smaller tools, equipment, and PPE. Do employees sign out assets as required, or do some goods remain tethered to particular vehicles? Smaller equipment and tools should have a specific location from which they are checked out and returned at the end of the day or work. People can still check out items straight from a car, even if that vehicle is the item's assigned home.
No matter how many tools and tiny pieces of equipment they manage, manually tracking inventory frequently leads to errors. By automating inventory counts and preserving tool information, FMS removes the element of guessing from the process. Even if users aren't physically at the jobsite, users can keep aware of any changes in tool status and quickly access all asset information by tracking value, location, status, and other information in FMS. To maintain asset data up to date, users may simply modify values and tool information. One may merely add or remove tools from the system when they acquire new ones or replace outdated ones.
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