If You Wouldn’t Send It Out of the Shop, Why Send It Out of the Yard?

I’ve spent my career in connected commercial vehicle technology. Long enough to see what “almost there” looks like: providers who could demo a compelling vision but struggled to deliver at scale, with real fleets, in real operating conditions.

That experience made me selective, and it’s also what brought me to Phillips Connect.

From day one, the focus here has been a fully integrated smart trailer platform. Not a partial solution, not a pilot with a handful of customers, but a proven platform built on durable sensors and, more importantly, the software intelligence to turn what those sensors capture into insights fleets can act on. That combination forces you to solve the hard problems: sensor reliability, yes, but also what you do with the insight once you have it. Most fleets are surprised by what they didn’t know they didn’t know about their trailers.

The shift that’s coming is operational, not just technological.

When I talk to enterprise fleet managers, the vision lands immediately. Almost every conversation starts the same way: “If I could see the health of every trailer from my desk, I’d run my operation differently.”

And they mean it. The idea of a desktop yard check, assessing the lights, brakes, and tire health of every trailer before dispatch without sending someone into the yard with a clipboard, isn’t science fiction anymore. It’s quickly becoming the standard.

But getting there requires more than technology. It requires a change in how fleets think about maintenance itself.

Most enterprise fleets still operate on time-based PMs and a “fix it when it breaks” model. That’s not a criticism. It’s how the industry was built, and it worked well enough when visibility was limited. But the model is changing. Fleets are moving from reactive to proactive, and eventually to prescriptive: not just knowing there’s a problem, but knowing which problems to address first, in what order, and why. And those insights don’t live in a vacuum. When smart trailer software connects with a fleet’s existing maintenance systems, safety platforms, and dispatch tools, the whole operation starts speaking the same language.

What I hear from fleets, and where the real friction is.

The barriers aren’t usually about the technology. They’re cultural and operational.

There are decades of inertia around time-based maintenance schedules. There’s skepticism about introducing new systems into an already complex operation. And there’s a real, important conversation happening among safety-conscious fleets about what visibility and accountability actually mean in practice.

Here’s what the best operators have figured out: if you’re running an operation built around safety, proactive maintenance, and genuine regard for your drivers, the insights you’re generating support you. Fleets that are actively identifying and addressing issues before they become problems on the road are building a record of operational integrity. That’s a fundamentally different position than one that was watching the warning signs and choosing to look the other way.

The fleets making real progress aren’t trying to boil the ocean. They start with controlled environments, dedicated fleets, specific lanes, often specing smart trailers at the OEM level, during natural equipment turnover. They build processes around desktop fleet health checks and pre-load validation. They use early deployments to prove the operational and financial case.

And then something clicks.

The aha moment is when a fleet realizes this isn’t about tracking. It’s about changing how the entire operation runs: maintenance, dispatch, planning, safety, compliance. Insights surface that nobody was looking for: load patterns that accelerate tire wear, brake performance trends that show up weeks before a failure, lighting issues concentrated in specific trailer age ranges. Combine that with integrations pulling in context from in-cab systems, maintenance, and TMS platforms already in use, and you’re not just monitoring trailers anymore. You’re seeing your fleet in a way you never have before.

That translates into real operational change:

  • Preventing compromised trailers from ever reaching a dock door
  • Reducing CSA exposure before a truck hits the road
  • Eliminating wasted yard moves and augmenting manual checks
  • Creating a feedback loop between operations, maintenance, and safety
  • Sending automated, priority-ranked work orders directly to the maintenance system

Once that happens, the conversation shifts from “Do we need this?” to “How fast can we scale it?”

Why now is the inflection point.

Here’s what I think gets underappreciated in conversations about smart trailers: this isn’t just about efficiency. It’s about where the entire industry is going.

For some fleets, this is already about preparing for autonomous operations. If a truck is driving itself, the trailer behind it can’t be a question mark. Lights, brakes, tire health become continuously monitored, non-negotiable systems. Smart trailer technology won’t be optional in that world. It will be required infrastructure.

But even before autonomy fully arrives, expectations are shifting. More visibility. More accountability. Less tolerance for reactive operations. No fleet wants to be in a position where a preventable issue becomes a safety event, or a headline.

The inflection point is here. Fleets that start building these capabilities now, the processes, the insights, the integrations, are going to be the ones that separate themselves over the next three to five years.

Healthy trailers don’t happen by schedule. They happen by visibility, by proactive action, and by a commitment to knowing the answer before the trailer ever leaves the yard.


Michael Hoffman is a strategic sales leader at Phillips Connect, a connected trailer technology company focused on delivering the industry’s most comprehensive smart trailer platform.

What is a smart trailer?

A smart trailer is a commercial trailer equipped with sensors and software that continuously monitor its health and operational status, including lights, brakes, tires, and other critical systems. Unlike traditional trailers that rely on manual inspections and time-based maintenance schedules, smart trailers generate real-time insights that allow fleet operators to identify and address issues before they affect safety or operations. The value of a smart trailer platform isn’t just in the sensors themselves, but in the software that transforms what those sensors capture into actionable intelligence fleet teams can use every day.

How do smart trailers improve fleet maintenance operations?

Smart trailers shift fleet maintenance from a reactive model to a proactive and eventually prescriptive one. Instead of servicing trailers on a fixed schedule or waiting for something to fail, maintenance teams receive continuous insights about the actual condition of every trailer in the fleet. This allows them to prioritize work orders based on real need, address issues before they become failures, and reduce the time and cost associated with unnecessary or missed maintenance. When integrated with existing maintenance management systems, smart trailer platforms can automatically generate and stack-rank work orders, helping teams focus on what matters most.

What is a desktop fleet health yard check?

A desktop yard check is the ability for fleet managers and operations teams to assess the health status of every trailer in a yard, including lights, brakes, and tire condition, directly from a software interface without requiring a manual physical inspection. Rather than sending someone into the yard with a clipboard before each dispatch, a desktop yard check surfaces the same information digitally, flagging any trailers with outstanding issues before they’re assigned to a load. This capability is becoming a standard expectation for enterprise fleets that prioritize safety and operational efficiency.

How do smart trailers reduce CSA violations?

CSA (Compliance, Safety, Accountability) violations are often the result of trailers leaving the yard with undetected issues, lighting failures, brake deficiencies, or tire problems that a roadside inspection will catch. Smart trailer technology addresses this by surfacing those issues before dispatch, giving maintenance teams the opportunity to resolve them before a truck ever hits the road. Fleets using smart trailer platforms consistently report a reduction in out-of-service events and roadside violations because problems are identified and corrected at the yard level rather than discovered during a DOT inspection.

What kinds of insights can smart trailer sensors reveal that fleets weren’t previously aware of?

Beyond the expected brake, tire, and lighting alerts, smart trailer platforms surface patterns that manual inspection simply cannot. Load distribution trends that accelerate wear on specific trailer components. Brake performance degradation that shows up weeks before a failure event. Lighting issues concentrated in particular trailer age ranges or models. Tire pressure patterns tied to specific routes or seasons. These are the kinds of insights that change how a fleet thinks about procurement, routing, and preventive maintenance, not just how they manage the repair queue today.

How do smart trailer platforms integrate with other fleet systems?

A well-built smart trailer platform doesn’t operate in isolation. It connects with the tools fleet operations already rely on, including telematics providers, maintenance management systems, safety platforms, and dispatch software. These integrations allow trailer health insights to flow into the broader operational picture, so a maintenance director, safety manager, and dispatcher are all working from the same understanding of fleet readiness. The result is a connected operation where trailer health informs decisions across departments rather than sitting in a separate system no one checks consistently.

What are the biggest barriers to smart trailer adoption in enterprise fleets?

The most common barriers are cultural and operational rather than technological. Many enterprise fleets have decades of established processes built around time-based preventive maintenance and manual inspection routines. Introducing a new model requires buy-in across maintenance, safety, and operations teams. There’s also skepticism about the complexity of managing new systems at scale. The fleets that overcome these barriers typically start with a controlled deployment in a dedicated fleet or specific region, build internal processes around the new insights, and use early results to make the case for broader rollout.

What is the business case for smart trailer technology in enterprise fleets?

The business case operates on several levels. Operationally, smart trailers reduce unplanned downtime, eliminate wasted yard moves, and allow maintenance teams to focus their time on the work that actually needs doing. From a safety and compliance standpoint, they reduce CSA exposure and the risk of a preventable issue becoming a roadside event or worse. At the strategic level, fleets that build smart trailer capabilities now are positioning themselves ahead of an industry shift toward greater visibility and accountability, one that will only accelerate as autonomous operations become more prevalent. The question for most enterprise fleets isn’t whether this investment pays off. It’s how quickly.

Are smart trailers required for autonomous trucking?

Yes, effectively. In an autonomous operation, the trailer behind a self-driving truck cannot be an unknown. Lights, brakes, and tire health must be continuously monitored systems, not periodic checkboxes. Smart trailer sensors and the software platforms that support them are the foundation of that capability. Fleets that begin building smart trailer infrastructure now are also building the operational and technical readiness they will need as autonomous and semi-autonomous operations expand. The investment is not purely about today’s efficiency. It’s about being ready for the way freight will move in the next decade.

How should an enterprise fleet get started with smart trailer technology?

The most successful implementations start small and deliberate. Fleets typically begin with a controlled deployment in a dedicated fleet or a specific operational region, rather than attempting to equip every trailer at once. Many choose to spec smart trailers at the OEM level when turning over equipment in a dedicated operation, which simplifies the rollout. Early focus usually goes to building processes around desktop fleet health checks and pre-load validation, areas where the operational impact is immediate and measurable. Once those processes are in place and the value is visible, scaling the program across the broader fleet becomes a much easier conversation internally.

Phillips Connect Expands Trailer Intelligence Across Roadside, Brake and Liftgate Systems 

Enhanced solutions deliver deeper operational insight through collaborations with Emergency Safety Solutions (ESS), Bendix and Maxon 

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – March 15, 2026 – Phillips Connect today announced new enhancements across three key trailer system categories that expand how fleets manage roadside safety, brake performance and liftgate operations. Introduced at the Technology & Maintenance Council (TMC) Annual Meeting & Transportation Technology Exhibition, the updates strengthen how fleets capture operational intelligence from critical trailer systems and distribute those insights across maintenance, operations and safety teams. 

“Every system on the trailer generates insights that can help fleets operate more safely and efficiently,” said Mark Wallin, general manager and senior vice president of product at Phillips Connect. “Our platform is designed to capture those signals and turn them into actionable insights. By working closely with leading equipment providers, we can also deliver deeper intelligence from systems fleets already rely on across their trailers.” 

Phillips Connect Roadside Safety Intelligence 

Phillips Connect introduced new Roadside safety solutions designed to improve visibility and awareness during roadside events. 

Through a partnership with Emergency Safety Solutions (ESS), the Phillips Connect platform can trigger ESS’s H.E.L.P. DeliverSAFE intelligent roadside hazard technology when a trailer is stopped on the shoulder. When a driver activates the trailer’s hazard lights, the system automatically initiates H.E.L.P. Lighting Alerts, flashing the trailer’s lights in a distinctive high-visibility pattern designed to attract more attention than standard hazard lights. The system also sends real-time shouldered vehicle alerts to approaching motorists through navigation apps and in-dash systems, helping drivers identify roadside hazards earlier and move over more safely. 

Roadside safety intelligence builds on Phillips Connect’s existing light circuit monitoring technology, extending its functionality to improve roadside awareness and help protect drivers, equipment and freight during roadside events. 

Phillips Connect Brake System Intelligence 

Phillips Connect also added system enhancements to its existing brake solutions that provide greater visibility into trailer brake performance and status. 

When fleets operate trailers equipped with Bendix TABS Advanced brake system electronic control units (ECUs), Phillips Connect can access diagnostic trouble code (DTC) fault reporting and standard formatted data messages. This information includes brake wear, trouble codes and other system data that may help maintenance teams detect developing issues and prioritize service before they escalate. 

Phillips Connect can provide fleets access to insights from this data that strengthen cultures of safety by enabling fleets to respond more quickly to events such as roll stability activation or braking faults that may require attention. 

Phillips Connect Liftgate Intelligence 

Phillips Connect also enhanced its liftgate solutions to provide fleets with improved liftgate performance and usage data. 

Liftgates are essential to many delivery operations, particularly on routes with frequent stops or locations without loading docks. When fleets operate Maxon liftgates equipped with MAX LINK technology, Phillips Connect can provide fleets with deeper insight into liftgate activity, system health and performance through its partnership with Maxon. 

This information helps fleets identify potential liftgate issues earlier and avoid delivery disruptions that can occur when liftgate batteries or hydraulic systems stop functioning properly. 

Expanding the Connected Trailer Ecosystem 

These enhancements reflect Phillips Connect’s broader strategy to capture operational intelligence from the systems already installed across the trailer. 

By supporting deeper data visibility from leading equipment and solutions providers, Phillips Connect enables fleets to monitor critical trailer systems while continuing to operate the equipment and technologies they already rely on. 

Phillips Connect will showcase these technologies at TMC in Nashville, March 16–18. Show attendees can learn more about the company’s smart trailer platform and see the latest innovations in connected trailer intelligence at the Phillips Connect booth 2029. 

About Phillips Connect 

Phillips Connect develops smart trailer technology that helps fleets capture and apply intelligence from across the trailer. Its platform brings together sensors, cameras and integrated systems to provide visibility into trailer operations, equipment health and cargo activity. By turning trailer intelligence into operational insight, Phillips Connect helps fleets improve safety, increase uptime and operate more efficiently. 

Founded in 2017 and headquartered in Irvine, California, Phillips Connect develops technology that helps fleets monitor trailer systems, identify issues earlier and make better decisions by making trailer intelligence accessible across the fleet. Learn more at www.phillips-connect.com

Phillips Connect Introduces Platform Enhancements for Connected Trailers 

New JumpStart offering, CargoVision People Detection and Driver Behavior Insights expand trailer intelligence for fleets.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – March 15, 2026 – Phillips Connect today announced new platform enhancements designed to expand how fleets capture and use trailer intelligence across their operations. Introduced at the Technology & Maintenance Council (TMC) Annual Meeting & Transportation Technology Exhibition, the updates improve visibility into trailer activity, cargo operations and trailer performance while making it easy for fleets to benefit from smart trailer intelligence even if they rely on another provider for GPS location tracking. 

“Track-and-trace GPS units have long been the baseline for trailer visibility, but fleets need more than location to make informed decisions that affect operations, safety, dispatch, compliance and maintenance,” said Mark Wallin, general manager and senior vice president of product at Phillips Connect. “The next generation of connected trailer technology is already here, enabling fleets to capture intelligence from across the trailer and supply those insights to every role in the fleet.” 

JumpStart Expands Trailer Intelligence Beyond Location 

Phillips Connect announced JumpStart, a new offering designed to help fleets quickly begin capturing smart trailer insights beyond basic location tracking.  

Track-and-trace telematics providers deliver simple trailer GPS location but typically cannot capture operational intelligence from critical trailer systems. Without insight into how equipment is being used and performing, fleets have limited information to support operational, maintenance and safety decisions.  

Even if fleets are capturing location data from another provider, JumpStart provides easy access to smart trailer insights through six entry points: automated TrailerID, cargo intelligence, brake systems, tire health, liftgate performance and temperature monitoring. Fleets can start with any of these systems and expand over time as they add more smart trailer insights.  

Phillips Connect CargoVision Adds People Detection Inside the Trailer 

Phillips Connect introduced People Detection, a new enhancement to its CargoVision platform that identifies when individuals enter or exit the trailer cargo area. The enhancement gives fleets greater awareness of activity inside the trailer during loading, unloading and other operations. CargoVision with People Detection also helps fleets detect unauthorized access, identify potential cargo theft and safety risks, and better understand how trailers are being used throughout the day. 

Driver Behavior Insights Provide Visibility into How Trailers Are Operated 

Phillips Connect also added Driver Behavior Insights to its platform, helping fleets understand how their trailers are being operated on the road. Using smart sensor data from the trailer, the Phillips Connect platform detects events such as harsh braking, aggressive acceleration and sharp cornering. These insights provide visibility into driver behavior even when trailers are being pulled by third-party tractors.  

This visibility is particularly valuable for fleets that rely on leased equipment, independent carriers or drop-and-hook operations, where trailer owners may not have direct access to tractor telematics. By identifying unsafe operating patterns earlier, fleets can better protect cargo, equipment and their brand on the road. 

Building the Next Generation of Trailer Intelligence 

These innovations reflect Phillips Connect’s broader strategy to capture operational insights from across the trailer and make them easier for fleets to use in their daily operations. 

By combining sensor data, visual intelligence and behavioral insights within a single platform, fleets can move beyond simple location tracking to gain a deeper understanding of how trailers are being used, maintained and operated across their networks. 

Phillips Connect will showcase these technologies at TMC in Nashville, March 16–18. Show attendees can learn more about the company’s smart trailer platform and see the latest innovations in connected trailer intelligence at the Phillips Connect booth 2029. 

About Phillips Connect 

Phillips Connect develops smart trailer technology that helps fleets capture and apply intelligence from across the trailer. Its platform brings together sensors, cameras and integrated systems to provide visibility into trailer operations, equipment health and cargo activity. By turning trailer intelligence into operational insight, Phillips Connect helps fleets improve safety, increase uptime and operate more efficiently. 

Founded in 2017 and headquartered in Irvine, California, Phillips Connect develops technology that helps fleets monitor trailer systems, identify issues earlier and make better decisions by making trailer intelligence accessible across the fleet. Learn more at www.phillips-connect.com

The End of the Breakdown: How a Predictive Trailer Maintenance Platform Is Changing Fleet Operations

For fleet managers, the roadside breakdown is more than a disruption. It is a direct and expensive hit to performance. Emergency repairs, missed deliveries, frustrated drivers, and service failures all spill out from that one moment. For years, trailer maintenance relied on clipboards, spreadsheets, and reactive fixes.

That era is ending.

Predictive trailer maintenance is redefining how fleets protect their assets. A centralized platform turns raw data into meaningful foresight and helps teams shift from reacting to problems to preventing them. This is not simply about collecting fault codes. It is about building an operation that plans ahead and stays ahead.

From Reactive Alerts to Proactive Intelligence

Every trailer is giving off signals about its health. Traditional maintenance only hears those signals when the problem is already critical. A predictive trailer maintenance platform listens constantly and identifies early patterns that would be easy to miss.

It continuously monitors the condition of key systems including:

ABS and brake performance Tire pressure and tire health Lighting and electrical Suspension and other critical components

The value lies in analysis. The platform evaluates each alert, recognizes urgency, and surfaces prioritized notifications before minor issues escalate. Instead of waiting for a brake failure on the highway, teams can address it while it is still contained and manageable.

Giving Maintenance Teams the Ability To Act Confidently

A list of codes is only useful if teams know what to do with it. A Predictive Trailer Maintenance Platform translates data into action.

Prioritized Workflows: The dashboard clearly identifies the issues that pose the highest safety or uptime risk. Maintenance teams can move directly to what matters most.

Planned Scheduling: With clear insight into what needs attention, fleets can schedule repairs during yard time instead of paying for emergency service. The result is fewer surprises and more consistent uptime.

Less Administrative Load: When the platform handles data collection and organization, technicians spend less time documenting and more time repairing.

The Impact You Can Measure

Predictability is not an IT upgrade. It is a strategy that improves the economics of fleet operations.

Higher Uptime: Fewer roadside failures keep trailers earning. Longer Asset Life: Preventative care reduces wear and helps equipment last longer. Controlled Costs: Fleets spend less on emergency repairs, towing, and unplanned labor. Improved Safety: Mechanical issues can be resolved before they create hazards for drivers and others on the road.

A Connected Platform That Strengthens the Entire Operation

A Predictive Trailer Maintenance Platform needs a strong foundation to create real impact. A single system that unifies data from every sensor gives fleets the full picture of trailer health.

A platform like Connect1 brings maintenance intelligence together with insights about location, utilization, and security. This creates a connected view of the entire fleet and supports better decisions across every team. Predictive maintenance is no longer isolated. It becomes part of a larger ecosystem that strengthens performance.

The Bottom Line: Predictability Is a Competitive Advantage

Fleet management is moving toward a more connected and intelligent future. Predictive maintenance is becoming a core part of that shift. With a platform built for visibility and action, fleets gain control over their assets instead of reacting to the unexpected.

This is how fleets reduce stress on drivers, improve reliability for customers, and build a more stable and resilient operation. The question is no longer about whether predictive maintenance is worth it. It is about how long a fleet can wait to adopt it.

How are you using data to improve the health and reliability of your fleet?

Phillips Connect Introduces TechAssist to Transform Smart Trailer Technology Installations and Trailer Maintenance

IRVINE, Calif. – Sept. 4, 2025 – When smart trailer sensors, communication hubs and intelligent monitoring systems are installed and communicating from day one, they become active, data-driven partners in transportation and freight logistics. Phillips Connect announces general availability of TechAssist the Apple iOS and Android app designed to streamline installations for trailer manufacturers (OEMs) and fleet installers, and improve trailer maintenance.

TechAssist plays a critical role in OEM-level quality control and ensures installations keep pace with the speed of builds. By confirming that every sensor, gateway and system is online and reporting correctly before a trailer leaves the plant, OEMs can ensure they are delivering a fully functional, ready-to-integrate asset to their fleet customers. For OEMs and fleet installers, TechAssist delivers lightning-fast installations with a single click, and the ability to run every job through a guided workflow, ensuring that every smart trailer is set up, tested and ready to hit the road.

In a fleet-based business where operational damage is common and the environment is unforgiving, TechAssist also gives maintenance technicians an instant, clear picture of a trailer’s health before it leaves the yard. Fleet mechanics use TechAssist to instantly spot issues related to a trailer’s tires, brakes, lights and more, saving time and money and maximizing efficiency and uptime. By pairing directly with the trailer’s Phillips Connect smart sensors, the app highlights any issues and guides the technician through quick repairs.

“Commercial Class 8 trailers operate in one of the harshest environments you can imagine,” said Todd Thibault, Senior Director of Field Services at Phillips Connect. “Road debris, corrosion and collisions happen frequently, making trailer tech health and diagnostics an essential part of any fleet maintenance program. TechAssist lets even a brand-new technician get a trailer back to 100% quickly without having to call tech support. That’s protecting and getting a return on investment in one simple-to-use app.”

For fleet maintenance technicians, TechAssist delivers instant scalability. Historically only highly trained field engineers could troubleshoot and maintain connected smart trailer systems. TechAssist provides step-by-step workflows that empower any technician, whether in-house or third-party, to install, verify and service smart trailer technology with the same quality results as a seasoned expert. This shortens the training curve from months to minutes, allowing fleets to scale smart trailer deployments without bottlenecks.

“Decades of partnerships with the world’s largest fleets and trailer OEMs have given us a deep understanding of how our customers work, what they expect, and where their pain points are,” said Todd Hodges, Director of Product Management at Phillips Connect. “TechAssist is a direct result of that knowledge. It’s not just a tool – it’s part of how we help customers get the most from their trailer investments from day one.”

TechAssist works seamlessly with the Phillips Connect Connect1 platform, offering secure, offline-capable smart trailer diagnostics, sensor pairing, and installation confirmation for the back office and in the palm of a technician’s hand.

Key features of TechAssist include:

  • Bluetooth-enabled discovery of nearby assets to eliminate manual searching
  • Real-time diagnostics for gateway health and sensor status
  • Camera-based sensor pairing (barcode scanning), replacing manual data entry
  • Offline access to sensor data and history in no-connectivity environments
  • Single Sign-On (SSO) security for enterprise-wide access
  • Guided troubleshooting workflows, with step-by-step support and warnings
  • Support for new sensor types, including automatic tire inflation system (ATIS) regulator and air tank sensors
  • Enhanced visibility into ABS system status, including both ABS and programmable logic controller (PLC) reader connections

The app is available now for iOS and Android devices and can be downloaded via the App Store or Google Play. For more information or to request a demo, visit phillips-connect.com.

About Phillips Connect

Phillips Connect smart trailer technologies help the world’s largest fleets improve operations, safety and efficiency. The Phillips Connect platform of software, sensors, cameras and telematics gateway innovations provide fleet managers and operational leads with real-time visibility into their trailers’ location, tire, brakes, cargo and door statuses, and more, saving customers time and money. Phillips Connect maintains top industry certifications including ISO/IATF 16949 and ISO 14001 and more. Headquartered in Irvine, California, Phillips Connect is part of the Phillips family of companies, celebrating nearly a century of delivering innovative, reliable solutions that keep the transportation industry moving.

 

TechAssist: Raising the Bar for Smart Trailer Installations and Maintenance 

For years, trailers have been the overlooked part of the trucking equation. Power units often get the spotlight, but in reality, the trailer is just as critical to freight, safety, and uptime. With smart trailer technology reshaping how fleets operate, trailers are becoming active, data-driven participants in logistics. Ensuring those systems work from day one and continue working in the harshest environments is essential. 

That is why Phillips Connect developed TechAssist, a mobile app built specifically for trailer OEMs and fleet maintenance operations. TechAssist is now available for iOS and Android, giving technicians a powerful tool to verify smart trailer installations and keep assets ready to hit the road. 

Installing smart trailer systems at OEMs and in fleet yards has historically been a pain point. TechAssist guides installers and technicians through every step of the process. Each sensor, gateway, and communication hub is confirmed as online and reporting before a trailer hits the road. 

For OEMs and for fleets this means faster installs and stronger quality control at scale, and that every trailer leaving the lot is fully functional and ready to integrate into operations and to be put to work. 

Smart trailer uptime in the real world 

The reality of trailer operations is unforgiving. Todd Thibault, our Senior Director of Field Services told me, “Commercial Class 8 trailers operate in one of the harshest environments you can imagine. Road debris, corrosion, impacts. Damage can happen minutes after installation. TechAssist lets even a brand-new technician bring that system back to 100 percent quickly without having to call tech support. That is protecting and getting a return on investment in one simple-to-use app.” 

By pairing directly with Phillips Connect sensors, TechAssist gives maintenance techs an instant and clear picture of trailer health. Tires, brakes, lights, ABS, ATIS, air tanks, and more can be quickly diagnosed and repaired, saving time, labor, and downtime. 

Empowering fleets to scale 

Historically, troubleshooting and maintaining connected trailer systems required highly trained field engineers. TechAssist changes that by making advanced diagnostics accessible to every technician, whether in-house or third-party. Guided workflows shorten the training curve from months to minutes, empowering fleets to scale their smart trailer programs without creating bottlenecks. 

Decades of partnerships with the world’s largest fleets and trailer OEMs have given us a deep understanding of how our customers work, what they expect, and where their pain points are. TechAssist is a direct result of that knowledge. It is not just a tool, it is part of how we help customers get the most from their trailer investments. 

Why it matters now 

The freight industry is moving quickly toward greater connectivity, automation, and efficiency. Fleets that treat trailers as active participants in the logistics ecosystem, rather than passive equipment, stand to gain the most. With TechAssist, Phillips Connect is ensuring that transition is seamless, reliable, and scalable. 

TechAssist is available now for iOS and Android. Learn more or request a demo at  phillips-connect.com/solutions/technology-products/techassist

 

Phillips Connect Partners with Velociti for Installation and Post Sales Support

Newport Beach, CA (July 27, 2021) – Phillips Connect is partnering with Velociti for installation and post deployment proactive technology monitoring and repair service support for their trailer telematics solutions.

Once a Phillips Connect customer has chosen the smart trailer solutions right for their operation, a designated Velociti Project Manager will arrange for the installation of the equipment when and where convenient for the customer.  All required components will be staged appropriately ensuring an efficient installation process by Velociti certified technicians.

The Phillips Connect equipment will begin continuously reporting data from all the systems being monitored, instantly identifying and sending alerts via the Phillips Connect dashboard of any problem that requires attention to keep the asset in a safe operating condition and reduce the chances of costly unscheduled downtime.  The new partnership will seamlessly integrate Phillips Connect asset health monitoring with Velociti’s VeloCare.

“Velociti has a long-standing history in supporting transportation technology and we are proud to partner with Phillips Connect who share a commitment to the industry and value forward thinking ideas,” remarked Ryan Powell, Senior Vice President of Velociti. “Our goal is to build mutually beneficial partnerships and deliver the best-in-class customer experience, both of which are achieved with this alliance.”

VeloCare proactively monitors a customized 24/7 system health portal for the Phillips Connect customer and if a problem is detected, immediately notifies a Velociti representative to arrange the required repair either remotely or to dispatch a technician to complete the service at the customers preferred location.

As a Phillips Connect partner, Velociti will manage parts inventory, process RMA’s and provide real-time visibility, and provide trailer maintenance based on real time visibility from Phillips Connect smart sensors.  This arrangement maximizes the ROI a fleet can expect from Phillips Connect health monitoring and frees the customer from having to react to technology failures.

“Phillips Connect has developed the best scalable smart trailer technology available but we realize that just knowing about a problem is only a first step,” commented Jim Epler, executive vice president of Phillips Connect.  “There needs to be a way to resolve the problem quickly and efficiently to maximize the benefits of the technology. Velociti has the experience, the systems and the skills to work that out and get the trailer back on the road in the most cost-effective way. I have been working with Velociti for almost 10 years and they have the best project managers and installation expertise I have ever worked with.   This is a great partnership for Phillips Connect because it offers another significant benefit to our customers.”

 

About Velociti

Velociti, a global provider of enterprise technology solutions for more than 25 years, helps meet complex business needs by optimizing technology investments, lowering costs, and improving employee and customer acceptance. Its innovative design, rapid installation and deployment, and proactive support services for a broad range of transportation and networking technologies are provided by a highly experienced full-time team of engineers, project managers, certified technicians and call center staff. Velociti serves transportation, retail, food service, manufacturing, distribution, healthcare, government, hospitality and outdoor venues, including many Fortune 500 companies. For more information visit http://www.velociti.com or call toll free (855)-233-7210.