The phrase “just send me a text” is commonplace during conversations nowadays, but the latest industry survey orchestrated by Vehicle Management Systems (VMS) showed that’s perhaps not the best option for top efficiency in fleet management.

Through that survey, the vehicle middleware platform serving both fleet and auto retail environments learned fleet operators continue to rely heavily on basic communication channels while showing strong interest in communication workflows that are easier to manage and more actionable in daily operations.

According to the survey data released on Tuesday, 72.9% of respondents said they have a telematics system, but the vast majority are not using telematics communication regularly, highlighting a broader gap in the fleet industry.

VMS indicated the current in-app telematics communications remain inadequate and underused, and not yet robust enough to support the next generation of agentic artificial intelligence-driven fleet operations.

Across fleet operations, communication remains a critical but fragmented part of the workflow.

VMS’ survey showed that text messages (29.8%), phone calls (27.2%), and WhatsApp (20.0%) are today’s primary communication channels, while in-app messaging via telematics or fleet software accounts for just 7.9%.

The company said these findings point to a clear opportunity for fleet technology providers to make communication more operationally useful, improve visibility, and reduce reliance on scattered, hard-to-manage workflows.

VMS highlighted eight other survey findings, including:

  1. Telematics adoption is high, but communication use is low

—72.9% of respondents say they have a telematics system, but only 25.1% say telematics communication is used regularly.

—66.7% of respondents say their telematics systems either include communication features they do not use or lack communication capabilities altogether, pointing to a gap between what the systems offer and what fleets are actually able to use in daily operations.

  1. Fleets still depend on basic communication channels

—29.8% primarily use text messages, 27.2% use phone calls, and 20.0% use WhatsApp during daily operations.

—Only 7.9% say telematics or fleet software is their primary communication channel, indicating that most fleets still rely on communication tools outside their core operational platform.

  1. Operational communication remains focused on tasks

—38.9% say trip assignments or routing are the main reason for communication, and 36.0% cite status updates.

—Maintenance issues (9.9%) and schedule changes (8.5%) represent a much smaller share of daily communication needs.

  1. Record keeping is a major gap

—55.1% say communications are not logged or recorded.

—Only 15.9% say records are captured automatically, while 25.1% say logging is done manually.

  1. Built-in messaging has strong appeal

—17.9% say they would definitely use alerts and messaging delivered through their existing enterprise tools, such as Slack or Teams, and 61.8% say they possibly would.

—Only 3.4% are not interested.

  1. Too many apps and poor history tracking are the biggest pain points

—34.7% cite too many apps as a communication challenge, and 33.1% say it is hard to track history.

—11.5% cite difficulty reaching drivers, while 9.2% point to poor connectivity.

  1. Demand for new tools is strong

—8.2% say they definitely plan to adopt a new communication tool in the next 12 months, and 65.2% say they possibly will.

—That indicates a market that is open to change if the solution reduces friction and consolidates workflows.

  1. Text remains the preferred alert channel

—50.7% prefer to receive alerts via instant messaging, followed by 24.6% through a mobile app and 12.1% by phone call.

—The results reinforce the importance of fast, familiar, and low-friction communication methods in fleet operations.

“Fleet operators are telling us that in the era of agentic and generative AI, communication is no longer a nice-to-have; it’s what determines whether a platform gets used at all,” VMS chief executive officer Dave Prusinski said in a news release. “Without better ways to interact, even the smartest systems risk going unused, just like so many non-AI tools before them.

“Ease of interaction is paramount, and the best path forward is technology that works with the systems fleets already rely on. Solutions, like our AI-powered Virtual Fleet Manager, VIC, are designed to feel like a teammate, not a static tool, so fleets can act faster and more naturally in the flow of work,” Prusinski continued.

As fleet communication needs continue to grow more complex, Prusinski reiterated that VMS remains focused on helping operators modernize workflows through technology designed to reduce app sprawl, improve record-keeping, and make daily communication more efficient.

Prusinski also discussed fleet management during this spring’s Used Car Summit in Miami, which is available through the Auto Remarketing Podcast episode in the window below.

For more information about the company, visit www.vms.ai.