Trimble’s transportation offerings focus on connectivity after big ELD deal

Mark Kornhauser addresses the opening session of Insight in Las Vegas. (Photo: Trimble)
Mark Kornhauser addresses the opening session of Insight in Las Vegas. (Photo: Trimble)

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LAS VEGAS – Trimble’s integration of its telematics business with that of Platform Science may have stolen the show at Insight, the enormous conference for Trimble’s customers, but what remains in Trimble’s transportation segment is getting a significant upgrade as well.

What’s headed to Platform Science is telematics. More specifically, the center of the combined transfer/equity stake transaction is Trimble’s ELD business (NASDAQ: TRMB).

But at the Insight conference earlier this month, the disclosure of the Platform Science deal came with a series of technology enhancements in the other parts of Trimble’s transportation sector that Michael Kornhauser, vice president of transportation and logistics, said were all driven by the same theme: connectivity.

Remaining at Trimble’s Transportation Group are transportation management system offerings that are housed in its enterprise group. The segment also has a maps division and Transporeum, the recently acquired German company whose transportation management offerings are being extended into North America.

It also contains Vusion, a tool for compliance with fuel taxes and other regulations.

“The biggest thing that we’re hearing from our customers is that they want their technology to be connected,” Kornhauser said in an interview with FreightWaves at Insight. “And when I say connected, it really means integrated.”

‘Swivel chair integration’

Kornhauser defined what that means, and it starts with something he called “persona-based functionality.” He used another term to describe what Trimble’s rollout of upgrades tries to avoid: “swivel chair integrations,” which suggests an image of somebody shifting from one application to another instead of being able to stay in the same place.

A “swivel chair integration,” Kornhauser said, is one that “really means functionality popping up in new windows or new applications.” But what customers want, Kornhauser said, is an “all-in-one connected workflow.”

“They want this stuff to be seamless, and that’s what we’ve been focused on building,” he said.

The connectivity theme came up again when Kornhauser was asked where he saw the FreightTech industry headed in the next 10 years. His answer: “I would get back to things being connected, things being integrated, everything that we build seamlessly working within the workflow of our customers.”

It would be a new type of integration. Previous steps to integrate systems – and leave behind the swivel chair – had a “history of being bespoke,” he said. They would be “customers by custom, and they are quite difficult to manage over time. Each customer basically has a different kind of version of the software.”