DTNA CEO Martin Daum talks to trucking journalists. Photo: Deborah Lockridge

DTNA CEO Martin Daum talks to trucking journalists. Photo: Deborah Lockridge

LAS VEGAS — Despite a challenging truck sales environment and not hitting a few goals laid out last year, Daimler Trucks North America is still confident it can remain the industry leader in this “new normal” environment, president and CEO Martin Daum told reporters at the American Trucking Associations Management Conference & Exhibition Monday.

In DTNA’s annual roundtable, Daum said the company’s projections a year ago for growth in 2016 “were much more optimistic” than reality, but the company, which sells Freightliner and Western Star trucks, is looking for a turnaround in truck sales in mid-2017.

“We are facing some headwind,” Daum said in a bit of understatement, noting that the company is now projecting that 2016 Class 8 sales in the U.S. will be around 184,000, down 26% from 2015’s 249,000. Looking at Class 6-8, that number is projected to be down 16% to 304,000, reflecting a stronger Class 6 and 7 market.

“The big question is, how will it go into next year,” Daum noted. “We think by mid year (next year) the speed will pick up again but not enough to compensate what we lose in the first half. We see next year at the same level or a little lower but with a positive outlook into 2018.”

Nevertheless, Daum said, DTNA continues to hold the lion’s share of the market, with 42% of the U.S. Class 8 sales as of August, up 1.7% from last year.

One of the reasons for Daum’s optimism is the next-generation Freightliner Cascadia unveiled last month.

“A lot of times you announce something as a new truck and it’s just a facelift. But here we really, from the ride to the electronics to the cab, we really really changed a lot. The truck really is awesome, it’s better than we expected.”

The roundtable covered a wide range of topics:

GHG Phase 2 regulations

Daum called the new Phase 2 greenhouse gas/fuel economy regulations unveiled by the EPA and NHTSA this summer “challenging but achievable” and “a tough but management compromise.”

“When I summarize why we are so positive about the rule, it gives us the flexibility how to achieve the targets — we didn’t want mandated technology. And we have the lead time. It’s not that you have to do something tomorrow. so you have time to really study, plan, test, push. Long term planning gets rewarded. And it gives us certainty, with clear targets between now and 2030 for each vehicle and engine category.”

This should help avoid the disruptive pre-buy cycles that plagued the emissions regulations of the 2000s, he said, noting that we are still seeing the “aftershocks” fro the huge oscillation after the 2006 prebuy.

Connectivity game-changer

While a lot of the buzz in the industry and outside of it is focusing on autonomous vehicles, Daum said connectivity and analytics are what are truly the game-changer for fleets. He pointed to Detroit Virtual Technician, noting that customers now say they can’t live without it.

“Welcome to real connectivity,” he said, pointing to enhancements to Detroit Connect suite of connected vehicle services.

DTNA announced that AT&T will provide Internet of Things connectivity for the new Detroit Connect Truck Data Center platform. Exclusive to the new Freightliner Cascadia, the platform features communications hardware that will deliver new capabilities for Detroit Connect, including Detroit Connect Remote Updates, which enables over-the-air engine programming and powertrain electronic firmware update capabilities for customers, as well as the ability to integrate third-party telematics applications.

Daum noted that Detroit Connect is now a five-year standard base package, and predicted that even second owners will be using it beyond that.

For the next year, Daum said he is going to challenge his team to launch “unexpected killer apps.”

As for autonomous vehicles, even though DTNA has been a leader in demonstrating these technologies, he noted that what will happen with the regulatory framework is not very clear. While government and industry worked together to come up with a compromise on the greenhouse gas rules, he said, that’s easier because we’ve been dealing with emissions regulations since the late 1990s, and because there are concrete goals as far as reductions in C02 and improvements in fuel efficiency.

“But autonomous is far more elusive. A, we don’t know yet what all is possible. … then you have the passenger car industry big time in it, we are coming from a completely different mindset than the passenger car guys.” Even the ambitious startups, he said, don’t seem to be thinking in terms of heavy trucks driving autonomously in cities, unlike some of the automotive technologies. “We think of going from the outskirts of Las Vegas to the outskirts of Chicago, potentially having the driver sleeping.

“With GHG we have clear targets, but with autonomous i would say it’s too blurry…. at the moment we are still in the exploratory phase.”

Some things need work

Daum candidly acknowledged that a couple of areas need more work, including its customer service initiative, and the fact that the uptake so far on the new DD5 medium duty engine has not been as high as hoped.

It’s one thing to talk about improving the turnaround of truck repairs at dealerships, Daum said, and another to meet concrete metrics set forth in its Express Assessment and Elite Support programs.

“As a technology-driven company it’s important to me we have true metrics to measure.… for us it’s every single truck has to be back on the road in less than 72 hours and the customer knows what’s going on with his truck in the first two hours.”

The programs have seen success, moving from about 65% of trucks out in 72 hours in the fourth quarter of 2014 to 71% in the second quarter of 2016, but that’s not good enough, Daum said. The current goal is to be at 85% by the end of 2017.

One way they’re addressing that, he said, is by focusing its certification process more on attitude and continual improvement rather than “just checking the box.” He compared it to students taking an exam and getting an A on the test, but promptly forgetting what they’d learned. “I got an A+ in chemistry, but I’m not a chemist,” he noted. “That is not what we would allow for our dealers. It has to be a regular, day to day attitude.”

At the same time, DTNA is expanding its parts distribution center network to get replacement parts closer to where they are needed. A new PDC recently opened in Dallas and Daum said more network tweaks are in the works.

Moving forward, he said, the goal is to “use service as a differentiator — not just a marketing slogan. To really push the needle farther.”

As for the Detroit DD5 medium-duty engine launched this summer, Daum said there will be 500 units sold this year. “I thought we would be a little further down the road,” he said, “but it seems it takes a little longer to accustom the market to a new engine. That should be a warning sign to whoever wants to enter the North American market with a new engine — it’s not that easy.”

While the DD5 is built on a global engine platform, Daum emphasized that it is truly a Detroit engine, designed for North America.

Staying ahead of the competition

In looking at goals for the coming year, Daum took aim at both established and new-entry competitors when discussing the goal to “stay far ahead of the competition.”

“Market share is one thing, but it is more than market share,” he said. “We want to be the leading brand, the leader in technology.”

He noted that prototypes are one thing, but “between prototype and mass production and hitting the road, there are years in between and thousands of questions to be answered. We want to be the answer.” He noted that it applies to any competition, “not just established, but any newcomer.”

About the author
Deborah Lockridge

Deborah Lockridge

Editor and Associate Publisher

Reporting on trucking since 1990, Deborah is known for her award-winning magazine editorials and in-depth features on diverse issues, from the driver shortage to maintenance to rapidly changing technology.

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