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.