Vehicle asset registers are more than another piece of admin - they’re extremely useful tools.
The fleet asset register is a vital tool for fleet managers but like any other piece of equipment, will work only if operated correctly.
Simply, the register is a comprehensive and accurate account of every vehicle in the company fleet along with details of each allocated driver and a record of maintenance and other costs
Heather de Vos, General Manager Fleet Solutions and New Business at Eqstra Fleet Management explains: “It is a document every company should have and it should be kept updated at all times.
“Company fleets looking to move over to a full or partially managed service, such as those provided by EQSTRA Fleet Management, will be asked to provide this document so the details can be input into our system. This is particularly important if we are going to take over the fleet financially and handling any settlements or acquisitions.
“Quite often clients simply note vehicles as Nissan bakkie or Toyota sedan. We need to have a full, detailed description of the vehicle, the date of purchase, mileage and more,. as all of these elements are part of the ‘value’ of the vehicle. For example, a car bought in January of any year will have a different settlement or resale value to the same model bought in December of the same year.”
Driver details are also mandatory in an asset register. Current law requires any company providing an employee with a vehicle must know at all times who is driving that vehicle.
For a fleet management company this is also vital if tasked with the job of redirecting traffic fines from the company nominee to the actual driver – something the EQSTRA Fleet Management system handles automatically with an updated and accurate register.
Another useful inclusion on the register is to list the cost centre and task for each vehicle – e.g. Jhb Sales or Cape Town Deliveries.
“With this information, EQSTRA Fleet Management can then do data analytics and compare, for example, tyre replacement on vehicles in different parts of the country or fuel use statistics,” says De Vos. “All of this is vital information for fleets looking to maximise their efficiencies.
While extreme examples – some 30 000 vehicles that went ‘missing’ from the California administration in 2005 and 208 that vanished from the presidential fleet in Ghana in 2017 – it is not difficult for a large fleet with vehicles scattered around the country to lose track of these assets if they do not keep an updated and accurate vehicle register.
“The vehicles themselves are just the conduit for everything else,” says De Vos. “This is why the asset register is so important.”