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.

Your TMS Knows Your Trucks. Now It Knows Your Trailers. 

For years, the trailer has been the blind spot of fleet technology. Trucks have been connected, tracked, and optimized. Drivers have been monitored and dispatched with precision. But the trailer, the asset carrying the freight, the one that determines whether a load moves profitably, has largely been invisible to the systems that run fleet operations. 

That changes with Phillips Connect’s new integration with McLeod Software. 

The Gap That’s Been Costing Fleets 

Ask any fleet planner how they decide which trailer to assign to a load, and you’ll often hear the same answer: they check what they can find, make a few phone calls, and hope for the best. That’s not a technology problem. It’s a data problem. The information needed to make a smart decision — where is the trailer, how much space is left, is it mechanically ready to roll — has simply not been available inside the systems dispatchers and planners actually use. 

That gap shows up in empty miles, underutilized capacity, and loads that sit longer than they should. It shows up in the time planners spend chasing information instead of moving freight. And it shows up in the customer experience when a committed load can’t be confirmed because no one really knows what’s available. 

Trailer Intelligence Where It Belongs 

The Phillips Connect integration with McLeod Software puts smart trailer data directly inside the McLeod TMS – no separate app, no manual data pulls, no switching between platforms. Fleet planners and dispatchers gain real-time visibility into trailer location, tire health, brake and lights status, and, critically, what’s actually inside the trailer and how much capacity remains. 

That last capability, powered by Phillips Connect CargoVision, is where trailer intelligence takes a meaningful step forward. CargoVision uses an AI-powered camera to show exactly what’s loaded in a trailer and delivers volumetric measurements that support accurate load planning. For partial shipments, multi-stop routes, or any operation where load matching matters, this level of detail transforms the trailer from an unknown quantity into a capacity-aware asset. 

MNS1, the first fleet to complete the integration, saw the difference immediately. “Our planners and dispatchers can see inside every trailer, understand how much space is left and decide quickly which trailers are ready to deploy, and which need to be repositioned,” said Mike Narkys, President of MNS1. “The Phillips Connect integration with McLeod helps us turn loads faster, reduce empty moves and put our trailers to work where they make the most impact for our customers and our drivers.” 

More Than Location — A Full Trailer Picture 

What distinguishes this integration is the breadth of intelligence it delivers. Many connected vehicle solutions stop at location. Phillips Connect surfaces the full health and status picture of every trailer: tire condition, brake performance, lights — the mechanical readiness indicators that determine whether a trailer is actually ready to move. Combine that with cargo intelligence and volumetric load data, and fleets gain something they haven’t had before: a complete, real-time view of every trailer’s operational status, all inside the platform they already run their business on. 

“With the Phillips Connect integration, mutual customers gain cargo visibility and real-time trailer location inside McLeod,” said Ahmed Ebrahim, Senior Vice President of Strategic Partnerships and Integrations at McLeod Software. “This provides our customers with stronger insight into their networks and helps them plan more effectively across their fleet.” 

The First of Many 

This integration is the opening move in a broader Phillips Connect platform strategy. The goal is to meet fleets where they already work — not ask them to adopt another standalone system, but to bring smart trailer intelligence into the TMS, fleet management, and operational platforms they depend on every day. 

“Trailers become active contributors to fleet strategy when data such as tire, lights and brake health, cargo intelligence, and location are accessible in the platforms they already rely on,” said Todd Hodges, Director of Product Management for Phillips Connect. “This integration is the first of many that will help fleets bring their trailer intelligence forward, no matter what software platforms they use to run their business.” 

For fleets running McLeod across North America, the integration is available now. For the broader industry, it represents a clear direction: trailer data belongs in the operational core of fleet management, not siloed in a separate tool. 

The trailer has always been essential. Now it’s finally visible. 

Phillips Connect helps fleets maximize their ROI on every trailer, every load, and every mile. Learn more at phillipsconnect.com. 

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

One Less Thing for Drivers to Worry About 

Spend time around professional drivers, and you quickly realize how much they manage in a single shift. Traffic, tight delivery windows, inspections, yard congestion, and changing instructions. The job requires constant attention. Yet in the middle of all that, drivers are often asked to complete one more small but important task: select and confirm the trailer they’re pulling before they leave. 

On paper, that step sounds simple. In real life, it happens in busy yards, under time pressure, sometimes at the end of a long day. It’s one more screen, one more confirmation, one more opportunity for something to be entered incorrectly. And when it is, the consequences rarely stay in the cab. 

If the wrong trailer is associated with a trip, that mismatch can affect Hours-of-Service logs, trailer inspection records, dispatch visibility, load security, and even the timing of billing. A small moment at hookup can ripple across compliance, planning, operations, and finance. 

Phillips Connect TrailerID was designed to remove that friction. Instead of relying on manual selection, TrailerID automatically identifies the connected trailer at the moment it is physically hooked. Drivers do not have to choose it. They do not have to confirm it. The system reflects what actually happened. 

That change may feel minor in the cab, but it has a meaningful impact across the fleet. When trailer identification happens automatically, compliance records stay aligned with the equipment being pulled. Dispatch and planning teams can see which trailer actually left the yard. Security teams have clearer insight into when and where trailers were connected and dropped. Billing can begin based on verified events rather than waiting for follow-up. 

Under the hood, TrailerID relies on a tightly integrated hardware and software platform that detects the physical tractor-trailer connection, rather than estimating movement based on proximity alone. Drivers experience the benefit automatically through DriverAssist or integrated in-cab platforms like Geotab and Platform Science, while operations teams see the same confirmed events in Connect1. Everyone works from the same record of what actually happened. 

For drivers, the benefit is straightforward: one less manual step in a job that already demands focus. For fleets, it means fewer corrections, fewer assumptions, and a clearer picture of how trailers are moving through the network. 

Sometimes the most meaningful improvements are not flashy features. They are the quiet changes that remove friction, simplify the day, and make the rest of the operation run a little more smoothly. 

Phillips Connect TrailerID Turns Trailer Pairing into an Operational Advantage

TrailerID removes manual steps for truck drivers while extending automated trailer identification across dispatch, planning, compliance, security and billing 

What you need to know 

  • Phillips Connect TrailerID automatically confirms which trailer is connected, removing manual trailer selection from daily driver tasks 
  • Accurate trailer identification supports compliance, job execution, load security, and billing without adding steps for drivers
  • TrailerID combines tightly integrated hardware and software to deliver dependable trailer identification fleets can rely on 

IRVINE, Calif. and LAS VEGAS – Feb. 10, 2026 – Every day, trucks pick up and drop off trailers as freight moves through yards, terminals, and customer locations. Truck drivers are often asked to confirm which trailer they are pulling, usually by selecting it on a screen before moving on. When that step is rushed, skipped, or entered incorrectly, the consequences extend far beyond the cab. The wrong information can affect safety records, inspections, dispatch decisions, load security, and even when a company can bill for the work. That seems like a small moment at hookup can quickly create costly problems across an entire fleet. 

Phillips Connect TrailerID addresses that problem by identifying the connected trailer at the moment it is hooked. Instead of relying on manual input, Trailer ID confirms the trailer connection automatically and shares that information across the systems fleets already use. The result is a simpler experience for drivers and more reliable information for the teams responsible for keeping freight moving. 

“Accurate trailer identification affects nearly every part of a fleet’s operation,” said Mark Wallin, General Manager and Senior Vice President of Product at Phillips Connect. “With TrailerID, logs stay cleaner, jobs line up with what actually happened, trailers are easier to account for, and billing is easier to start and reconcile. TrailerID removes guesswork and gives fleet teams a shared view of what’s really happening with their trailers.” 

For fleets, that same automatic trailer identification carries through to compliance activities like Hours-of-Service logging and trailer inspections. When the correct trailer is already reflected in the system, logs and inspection records stay accurate without relying on manual entry, reducing errors, rework, and the risk of compliance issues while keeping the driver experience simple. 

TrailerID also helps fleets make sure that the trailer that was planned for a job is the one that actually left the yard. When the system confirms which trailer moved, teams can quickly spot mismatches, prevent mispulls, and understand which trailers are available or sitting idle. Dispatch and planning no longer have to guess or chase down updates to know what happened. 

The same clarity carries through to security and billing. Knowing exactly when and where a trailer was dropped helps protect the load and reduce the risk of theft or fraud. It also allows billing to start based on a verified event, instead of waiting on manual confirmation or follow-up. 

TrailerID is built on a vertically integrated hardware and software platform that delivers more dependable results than methods based solely on GPS or proximity. Trailer connections are detected through the physical tractor-trailer connection using the T/T Pair connector and then validated through Phillips Connect software. Drivers experience this automatically in the cab through DriverAssist, while operations teams see the same events through Connect1 in the back office. The result is a clear record of what actually happened rather than an estimate or assumption. 

For drivers, TrailerID removes one more manual step from an already complex in-cab experience. Trailer identification happens automatically, reducing screens, selections, and the chance for error. That same pairing information is immediately available to dispatch, safety, operations, and billing teams. 

TrailerID is available through multiple in-cab environments. Fleets can access TrailerID on the DriverAssist app directly through Phillips Connect or via integrations with leading in-cab platforms, including Platform Science and Geotab’s OrderNow Marketplace.  

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. 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. For more information, visit www.phillips-connect.com

What is Phillips Connect TrailerID?

Phillips Connect TrailerID is a solution that automatically identifies which trailer is connected to a truck at the moment of hookup, removing the need for drivers to manually select or confirm a trailer.

How does TrailerID work?

TrailerID detects the physical connection between the tractor and trailer and confirms that event through tightly integrated hardware and software, creating a verified record of trailer movement that fleets can trust.

What problem does TrailerID solve for fleets?

TrailerID eliminates errors caused by manual trailer selection, helping fleets avoid incorrect records that can affect compliance, dispatch decisions, load security, and billing.

How does TrailerID benefit drivers?

TrailerID removes one more manual task from the driver’s day by automatically identifying the trailer, reducing screens, selections, and opportunities for error in the cab.

How does TrailerID support fleet operations beyond the cab?

Verified trailer identification data from TrailerID is shared across dispatch, planning, compliance, security, and billing systems, helping teams understand what actually happened and act on accurate information.

How does TrailerID help with compliance?

By ensuring the correct trailer is automatically associated with Hours-of-Service logs and trailer inspection records, TrailerID helps keep compliance records accurate without adding extra steps for drivers.

How does TrailerID support job confirmation and planning?

TrailerID confirms which trailer actually moved, helping fleets align planned activity with real-world outcomes and maintain a clearer view of trailer availability.

How does TrailerID improve security and reduce risk?

Knowing exactly when and where a trailer was connected or dropped helps fleets protect loads, reduce theft or fraud, and investigate unexpected trailer movement.

How does TrailerID support billing?

TrailerID allows billing to begin based on verified trailer drop events rather than manual confirmation, reducing delays and reconciliation issues.

How is TrailerID different from GPS- or proximity-based trailer identification?

TrailerID relies on detecting the physical tractor-trailer connection rather than estimating proximity, making it more dependable than methods based solely on location or Bluetooth signals.

What is the relationship between TrailerID and T/T Pair?

TrailerID is the evolution of the T/T Pair capability, expanding automated trailer pairing into a software-led solution that supports multiple operational use cases across the fleet.

Where can fleets use TrailerID?

TrailerID works across multiple in-cab environments, including Phillips Connect DriverAssist and integrations with leading platforms such as Geotab and Platform Science.

Asset Utilization for Trailer Fleets: The 1% That Changes Everything

In freight transportation, profitability depends on how well fleets deploy their assets, not just how many they own. Too often, the assumption is that buying more trailers means more capacity, but in reality, poor utilization can turn new equipment into stranded capital, draining resources instead of generating returns.

Why Trailer Utilization Matters

A trailer parked in a yard represents more than idle steel. It represents tied-up capital, added maintenance obligations, and hidden inefficiencies across the network. The cost implications scale quickly:

  • Every additional trailer adds to fuel usage, inspections, and service requirements.
  • Slow turn times create bottlenecks that ripple through dispatch and delivery.
  • Idle trailers sitting without loads contribute nothing to revenue.

For a fleet managing 10,000 trailers, even a modest 1% reduction in excess assets equates to 100 fewer trailers to purchase, maintain, and insure. At an average cost of $40,000 per unit, that is $4 million that could be redirected toward true growth initiatives.

Small Gains, Outsized Returns

Improved utilization is not just about reducing fleet size. It is about making every trailer more productive. Fleets that optimize utilization can:

  • Haul more freight with the same number of trailers.
  • Eliminate wasted moves searching for available or road-ready trailers.
  • Cut deadhead miles that burn fuel and accelerate wear.

The equation is simple: more loads with fewer trailers translates directly into more revenue and lower operating costs.

Technology as the Unlock

True efficiency comes from visibility. Smart trailer technologies provide the real-time intelligence required to transform utilization from guesswork into strategy.

  • CargoVision from Phillips Connect delivers an unobstructed rear-mounted view inside trailers, helping fleets monitor fullness, predict unload times, and better allocate assets.
  • Connect1 detention scheduler uses geofencing and time-tracking to streamline detention management. By reducing dwell and improving trailer turn times, fleets keep assets moving instead of accumulating costly idle hours.

These tools are not designed to generate more detention fees. They are designed to accelerate cycles, maximize uptime, and unlock underused capacity.

A Proof Point from the Field

Nussbaum Transportation’s analysis illustrates the scale of impact. Their initial modeling assumed a modest $100 of incremental detention recovery per trailer annually over a decade, projecting $1 million in value. After adopting Connect1, results far exceeded that estimate:

  • Just 19 months with one customer produced $363,000 in billable detention.
  • Annualized, the return exceeds $2 million.
  • ROI rose from 653% to more than 718%, with a payback period measured in months, not years.

The Bottom Line

For large fleets, the difference between underutilization and optimization can represent millions of dollars annually. Capturing even a 1% gain in trailer utilization is more than a rounding error. It is a competitive advantage. By combining real-time visibility with actionable insights, fleets can reduce waste, accelerate turns, and generate higher returns from the assets they already own.

The Trailer as a Co-Pilot: Building Your Fleet for an Autonomous Future

Most conversations about autonomous trucking focus entirely on the cab. The sensors. The software. The virtual driver. But a tractor can only see what is directly in front of it. For autonomy to work at scale, the trailer must play an equally important role. An autonomous cab cannot operate safely without knowing what is happening behind it.

The path to that future is already taking shape. Autonomous trucking-ready trailer solutions are not about tomorrow. They are systems fleets can deploy today to create a smarter, safer, and more connected operation while laying the groundwork for an autonomous ecosystem.

Modern technology is transforming the trailer from a silent box into an intelligent asset that provides the essential data layer autonomy will rely on. Here is how connected trailers support both the present and the future.

The Trailer as the Eyes and Ears of an Autonomous System

Autonomous trucks depend on precise, real-time information. A connected trailer fills the visibility gap by providing the data an unmanned tractor cannot gather on its own.

Real-Time Load Awareness: Sensors confirm whether cargo is present, whether it is shifting, and whether it is balanced. This stability data supports safer decision-making for both human and autonomous systems.

Door and Security Status: Instant notifications for door openings protect cargo integrity and reduce the risk of theft when no driver is onsite to verify conditions.

Brake and System Health: Automated reporting on ABS performance, tire pressure, lighting, and other critical components helps ensure the entire vehicle is ready for the road. This is essential in an environment where a driver cannot respond to emerging issues.

This holistic situational awareness helps turn the trailer into a reliable and verifiable partner for any autonomous or semi-autonomous operation.

Building Operational Readiness Today While Preparing for Autonomy

Preparing for autonomy is not about waiting for a distant future. It is about making operational improvements that deliver value immediately. The same data a future autonomous tractor will rely on already strengthens the work of operations, safety, and maintenance teams today.

Operations: Teams can reduce empty miles and improve asset planning with real-time location, load status, and availability data.

Maintenance: Predictive alerts help shift maintenance from reactive to planned, improving uptime and reducing roadside events.

Safety and Security: Continuous visibility helps protect drivers, freight, and brand reputation by identifying security or safety concerns early.

Investing in autonomous trucking-ready trailer solutions provides instant operational ROI while positioning assets for a future where autonomy becomes more common.

A Straightforward Path Toward Full Integration

A strong foundation for autonomy requires systems that communicate easily. Modern connected trailer solutions are built on open and adaptable architecture so the data can integrate with fleet platforms today and advanced driver-assistance systems tomorrow.

This means the investments fleets make today will support future technology, not conflict with it. When autonomy reaches broader adoption, the trailer will already be prepared to participate in the ecosystem.

The Bottom Line: Build Toward the Future Now

Autonomous trucking will not be driven by the tractor alone. It will rely on a combination of intelligent tractors and equally intelligent trailers. Fleets that prepare early have an advantage. They benefit from better decision-making, improved safety, and stronger operational efficiency now, while creating a seamless on-ramp for the next generation of transportation.

The future of trucking is connected. The future is automated. And it begins with how fleets prepare the trailer.

How is your organization preparing its trailer fleet for the next stage of autonomy?

From Luxury to Necessity: Why Smart Trailers Are the Key to a Competitive Fleet

The future of fleet performance is not being driven by the tractor alone. It is unfolding behind it, in the trailer. Smart trailer technology has moved from a forward-looking investment to a baseline requirement for fleets that want to compete. Visibility, uptime, and safety now depend on connecting every asset on the road.

The future of fleet performance is not being driven by the tractor alone. It is unfolding behind it, in the trailer. Smart trailer technology has moved from a forward-looking investment to a baseline requirement for fleets that want to compete. Visibility, uptime, and safety now depend on connecting every asset on the road.

The time when trailer telematics was a “nice to have” is over. In today’s operating environment, fleets that cannot see the condition and availability of their equipment are leaving money and efficiency on the table.

Visibility That Drives Every Decision

You cannot manage what you cannot see. Without real-time awareness of trailer location, load status, and condition, fleet managers are forced to make decisions based on partial information. Smart trailer technology changes that equation.

With sensors and GPS delivering live data, teams know which trailers are loaded, available, or due for service. This visibility reduces idle time, improves dispatch accuracy, and removes the guesswork that costs time, fuel, and customer confidence.

From Reactive to Predictive Maintenance

Every unplanned breakdown costs more than a repair. It costs time, revenue, and reliability. Smart trailer systems continuously monitor critical components like brakes, tires, and lighting to catch problems early.

Automated alerts help maintenance teams prioritize repairs before they cause downtime. This proactive approach extends the life of every asset and keeps more trailers where they belong: on the road and earning.

Smarter Operations Through Data

When trailers are connected, operational decisions become sharper and faster. Real-time and historical data reveal which assets are underused, where bottlenecks occur, and how trailers can be repositioned to reduce empty miles.

That intelligence powers more efficient yard management, tighter coordination across teams, and more responsive service to customers. It turns visibility into measurable performance gains.

Connected Impact Across the Business

A connected trailer network does not just serve one department. It strengthens the entire fleet ecosystem.

  • Operations: Track utilization, movement, and detention in real time.
  • Maintenance: Schedule service based on need, not routine.
  • Safety: Detect unauthorized door openings or load shifts instantly.
  • Finance: Gain accurate asset data to guide capital planning and reduce waste.

When every team works from the same live data, accountability increases and decision-making accelerates.

Empowering the People Behind the Wheel

Technology is only as strong as the experience it enables. Smart trailer visibility helps drivers find and move the right equipment faster, minimizing frustration and wasted time. It keeps equipment ready, safe, and compliant, which are key factors in building driver trust and retention in a competitive labor market.

The Connected Standard

Smart trailer technology is no longer a sign of innovation. It is the standard for fleets that want to stay competitive. The next era of fleet performance will be built on data, on knowing not just where every trailer is, but what is happening inside and around it.

The question is not if your fleet will adopt smart trailer technology, but how quickly you can put it to work across your operation.

What Fleets Will Expect from Technology in 2026

As we head into 2026, fleets are entering the year with clearer expectations for the technology they rely on. They want systems that work together, data they can trust, and equipment that earns its place in the operation every day. After a period of uncertainty across the industry, what we’re seeing now is a renewed focus on making tractors, trailers and other assets work harder, smarter and more reliably.

Here are the shifts we believe will matter most in the year ahead.

Smart trailers will move to the center of the connected conversation.

More fleets are recognizing that the tractor only tells part of the story. The next wave of operational gains is coming from the trailer. Health, readiness, and cargo intel are becoming critical inputs for planning and dispatch, not just added visibility. At the same time, this shift is raising expectations for the physical systems that support intelligence. Data is only useful if the hardware delivering it is dependable. Power, connectors, and core trailer components have to perform day in and day out. When that foundation is strong, trailer intelligence becomes something fleets can trust and act on.

Utilization will matter more than expansion.

For many fleets, buying more equipment won’t be the first answer. With costs still high and freight patterns continuing to evolve, the focus is shifting to getting more value from the assets already in service.

We’re seeing leaders define utilization more clearly, track readiness more consistently, and build routines that turn insights into better forecasting and smarter decisions. When teams understand which trailers are available, which are ready, and which need attention, they can operate with greater precision and less waste. That discipline is becoming a real differentiator.

Trailer intelligence will reach the people doing the work.

Fleets don’t need more dashboards! They need information to show up where work actually happens. In 2026, the advantage will come from getting trailer intelligence into the systems and workflows teams already use to plan, dispatch, maintain and manage equipment.

The solutions that succeed will meet fleets where they are, delivering the right information to the right people at the right time. When that happens intelligence stops being something you check and starts being something you use.

Autonomous trucks will move from headlines to homework.

Autonomous trucking will continue to advance, but the real work in 2026 will be foundational. Preparing for automation means building connected vehicles from front to back, with real-time insight into everything that affects safety, uptime and cargo integrity.

That includes the often-overlooked physical connections between tractor and trailer. Standards matter. Reliability matters. Hardware has to support modern power and data demands without becoming a point of failure. As the industry raises expectations for performance and durability, these fundamentals will play a critical role in supporting what comes next, not just what works today.

Autonomy becomes practical when the tractor and trailer can surface what needs attention without slowing operations down.

The advantage will come from context, not more data.

Most fleets already have data. What they’re asking for now is clarity. In the year ahead, the advantage will come from knowing which trailers are available, which are ready to roll, and how much usable space remains. That kind of visibility helps teams prioritize work, respond faster, and keep operations moving without unnecessary friction.


Fleets are ready for a year where technology pulls its weight, hardware and software work together, and every trailer plays a meaningful role in the operation.After a period of disruption and adjustment, there is real opportunity ahead.

Over the past several years, more fleets across North America have chosen to rely on data and insights from Phillips Connect to help run their operations. We see that growth as a direct result of consistent execution, strong service, and solutions that continue to prove their value over time.

The companies that focus on reliability, integration, and execution will help set a new standard for performance in 2026 and beyond. We’re energized by the work still to come.

Top 10 Reasons Why Fleets Choose the Phillips Connect Platform

In commercial trucking, efficiency depends on visibility. Fleets can’t afford downtime, wasted miles, or preventable breakdowns, and yet what’s going on inside trailers is often a blind spot. Trailers are treated as passive boxes on wheels instead of critical, data-rich equipment. 

Connect1 from Phillips Connect is a fleet telematics/fleet management platform designed specifically for smart trailers. It unifies health, safety, and location data into one dashboard, helping fleets lower costs, improve trailer utilization, reduce risk, and extend asset life. By organizing trailer data into actionable insights, Connect1 turns blind spots into opportunities. 

Connect1 consolidates data from Phillips Connect sensors, gateways, and telematics devices into one easy-to-use system, giving fleets a single source of truth for trailer location, tire pressure (TPMS), brakes, cargo status, doors, lights, and more. 

 

1.Real-Time Trailer Tracking and Visibility Fleets can monitor trailer location and health in real time. No more switching between apps or spreadsheets. With Connect1, you know where trailers are, their load status, and whether they are ready to roll. 

2. Proactive Alerts and Notifications Custom alerts notify fleets about problems such as low tire pressure, brake wear, or unauthorized trailer movement. Acting on issues early prevents breakdowns and improves safety. 

3. Predictive and Scheduled Maintenance With mileage-based and time-based scheduling, fleets can plan service before failures occur. Predictive diagnostics identify patterns that point to future problems. This helps reduce downtime and extend asset life. 

4. Trailer Utilization and Efficiency Connect1 highlights which trailers are underused, sitting idle, or delayed at yards. Fleets can redeploy equipment quickly to maximize efficiency and cut costs. 

 

Fleet Analytics and Reporting 

The platform includes advanced analytics, historical reporting, and trend insights. Maintenance managers and executives can use data to guide better decisions, from shop planning to capital investment. 

5. Integration With Existing Fleet Systems Connect1 works alongside popular telematics, routing, and TMS platforms. Its open, sensor-agnostic design means fleets can connect the tools they already use without being locked into one system. 

6. Driver-Focused Trailer Data Through DriverAssist integration, drivers receive in-cab trailer health insights such as tire status or pairing confirmation. This reduces risk on the road and supports safer operations. 

7. Reduced Downtime and Cost Savings By streamlining maintenance and catching problems early, Connect1 reduces unplanned downtime. Fleets save money by keeping trailers road ready and minimizing costly service interruptions. 

8. Cargo Security and Theft Prevention Geofence alerts and live GPS tracking improve trailer security. Door and cargo sensors provide real-time information about potential tampering or theft.

9. Scalable and Customizable Platform Connect1 dashboards can be tailored to fleet priorities. Because the system is built to scale, fleets of any size can expand without replacing existing hardware. 

10. Data Security Standards  Phillips Connect is ISO 27001 certified, meeting global standards for protecting sensitive data. Fleets can be confident that their operational information is secure. 

For fleets that want to improve uptime, reduce maintenance costs, and maximize trailer efficiency, Connect1 delivers. By turning raw sensor data into actionable insights, the platform helps fleets transform operations and compete at a higher level. 

 

Connect1 is how Phillips Connect turns the lights on for your trailers.