Search for News

Polls

Which of the following would you rate as the worst bad habit among your fleet drivers:

View Results

Newsletter

Receive the latest news direct to your Inbox! Simply enter your email address below to sign up for our weekly newsletter.

News Categories

Show categories | Hide categories

Archive

Show archives | Hide archives

Pages

Show pages | Hide pages

Meta

1000s of fleet industry links
Essential for fleet managers and company car drivers

Tesco.com Win Fleet Award

Dino Papas, fleet manager at Tesco.com, was named Fleet Manager of the Year – Delivery/Logistics, at the first-ever Fleet Van Awards, held at the National Motorcycle Museum, Birmingham, last week.
Tesco.com, one of the first ‘Business Champions’ under the Department for Transport’s ‘Driving for Better Business’ programme, which is managed by RoadSafe, was launched in 1997 [...]

RSS news feed  Subscribe in a reader

Twitter iconFollow us on Twitter

Add your newsSend us your latest news - and put yourself in front of an audience of over two million users every month.

Dino Papas, fleet manager at Tesco.com, was named Fleet Manager of the Year – Delivery/Logistics, at the first-ever Fleet Van Awards, held at the National Motorcycle Museum, Birmingham, last week.
Tesco.com, one of the first ‘Business Champions’ under the Department for Transport’s ‘Driving for Better Business’ programme, which is managed by RoadSafe, was launched in 1997 with just one van, but now requires an army of 6,000 Customer Delivery Assistants to drive vehicles so it can carry out its role as the world’s largest online grocer, covering an estimated 60 million miles a year during visits to one million active customers.
But, like many growing fleets, road crashes were a serious problem. Mr Papas told delegates at the Fleet Van Conference, which preceded the awards ceremony: “A fleet this size will travel many millions of miles each year, have a diesel bill to match and present other significant commercial risks.
“For my team, delivering success for our customers and business, to a large extent, means mitigating against these risks, and more specifically managing van damage and fuel costs. We have done this best when combining technology and people.”
The judges recognised how best a best practice approach had driven safety to the heart of the fleet operation, which operates 2,000 vans making up to 65,000 deliveries a day to customers nationwide.
The judges said, “Fleets in this category operate in an incredibly tough environment and have an immense number of daily challenges to deal with, while meeting stringent delivery targets. Tesco.com’s fleet of vehicles has shown best practice vehicle management and has driven forward new developments among suppliers in a range of areas, from safety through to the environment.”
Tesco claims it recognised that driver attitude and behaviour were key and it introduced a Customer Delivery Assistant Instructor Team, which assessed all recruits and existing employees and drove forward the highest driving standards.
In addition, in-vehicle telematics was introduced to show exactly how vehicles were being used on the road and identify drivers in need of further help. It enabled a driver scoring system to be developed for every store, based on criteria from engine idling to speeding.
In addition, an accident review board was created to learn lessons from every preventable incident, while driving standards are revalidated every year.
As a result, while the fleet has jumped in size by 25% in the past two years, the crash rate per vehicle has nearly halved.
Dino Papas concluded, “As a result, we are talking about millions of pounds in savings. If the accident trend had continued, then we would have been spending £3.5 million more on van damage than we are today.”
‘Driving for Better Business’ programme manager Caroline Scurr said: “We are naturally delighted that the progress Tesco.com has made in reducing crashes has contributed to Dino Papas winning a major fleet industry award. Tesco.com has been involved in the programme since its inception. The company is an excellent example of a business that views cutting road crashes as an investment benefit. At a time of economic turmoil many other companies operating small, medium and large fleets and in all sectors of industry and commerce should follow Tesco.com’s lead and would see the financial benefits accrue. Public and private sector organisations improving their crash record should be one of the target areas for pro-active cost management.”
Simon McBride

Author: Simon McBride, December 8, 2008
Filed under: Fleet management, Fleet news, RoadSafe

No comments yet »

No comments yet.

Leave a comment

See also on TheGreenCarWebsite.co.uk

See also on ContractHireAndLeasing.com

See also

Latest road tests

Latest traffic information