Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

More Than a Logo: What HDT’s Rebrand Means for Heavy-Duty Trucking Fleets

Editor and Associate Publisher Deborah Lockridge explains in this editorial why Heavy Duty Trucking has a new logo and how it reflects how trucking, and HDT, are evolving.

Deborah Lockridge
Deborah LockridgeEditor and Associate Publisher
Read Deborah's Posts
September 18, 2025
Editorial column header featuring Deborah Lockridge with a futuristic looking background

We’ve spent a lot of time this year taking a good look at the industry and ourselves and how we can help you be more successful.

HDT Graphic

3 min to read


Changing a longtime logo is not for the faint of heart. Just ask Cracker Barrel.

In fact, the marketing world has dozens of cautionary tales about famous logo redesigns that flopped. Tropicana’s 2009 new look resembled a generic store brand and was quickly scrapped. Gap’s 2010 logo redesign lasted a week. Pepsi’s 2008 new logo, which was supposed to look like a cheeky smile, was recently retired in favor of the signature red-white-and-blue waves.

Ad Loading...

Heavy Duty Trucking’s logo isn’t as iconic as these consumer brands, and it’s gone through several iterations since the magazine first appeared under that name in the 1960s.

This month, we announced a bold new logo that we feel honors our 100-plus-year legacy but also moves us into the future. We're refreshing the design of everything from our print magazine to our videos to our award logos.

This new forward-leaning Heavy Duty Trucking logo signals movement and momentum. It’s modern but also has a bit of a retro feel that gives a nod to the nostalgia of old-school trucking. 

We’ve gone back to the full name, Heavy Duty Trucking, from the “HDT” we’ve used since 2011. Heavy-duty trucking is our focus, and we wanted that to be quite clear. Fleets using Class 7/8 trucks, heavy-duty trucking fleets, face challenges that can be quite different from those faced by, say, a work truck fleet or a last-mile delivery fleet. 

Heavy Duty Trucking's logo has changed several times over the years since it first appeared under this name in the 1960s. 

HDT Graphic

Why Heavy Duty Trucking's Changes are More Than a New Look

But the changes go deeper than a new logo and refreshed look. 

Ad Loading...

At Heavy Duty Trucking, we’ve spent a lot of time this year taking a good look at the industry and at ourselves and how we’re serving our audience — you — to help you be more successful, to operate your fleet safely and profitably.

When I started covering trucking in 1990, CDLs were new, electronic engine controls were emerging, and cabovers still roamed the highways. Satellite communication was cutting-edge technology.

When we last redesigned our logo in 2011, the industry was wrestling with CSA 2010, EPA-mandated aftertreatment systems, and the first wave of e-logs.

Today, the industry is shifting again, with a younger generation of leaders, rapidly changing technology, and new ways of consuming information. 

But we’re not just looking back — we’re moving forward.

Ad Loading...

Telling Trucking's Story, Past and Future

Heavy Duty Trucking has been telling the trucking industry’s story for more than a century. I’ve been doing it for 35 years. While much has changed in trucking and in journalism, what hasn’t changed is our commitment to provide the context, analysis, and insights you depend on.

We’re embracing new tools, but our focus is still the people who keep the country moving. We’re committed to delivering human-created content with personality, insight, and analysis.

Our audience isn’t just about the number of site visitors or newsletter opens. It’s about connecting with YOU, one human connecting with another human.

That’s why you won’t find AI-written content at Heavy Duty Trucking. And on the rare occasions we do use AI-generated content, such as images, we will be transparent about it.

We’re exploring new ways to deliver our content, so you can get that information wherever you are, however you prefer it, in a trucking industry that’s changing faster than ever.

Ad Loading...

“Driven by our Legacy, Designed for What’s Next.” Yes, it’s a marketing slogan, but it’s also a good description of not just our new logo, but of our renewed commitment to you.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Fleet Management

HDT Top 20 Products Award Logo
Fleet Managementby Deborah LockridgeFebruary 13, 2026

HDT Top 20 Products 2026: The New Tools, Technologies, and Ideas Shaping Trucking

From pricing intelligence and compliance tools to charging infrastructure, diagnostics, tires, and AI, HDT’s 2026 Top 20 Products recognize the new tools, technologies, and ideas heavy-duty trucking fleets are using to run their businesses.

Read More →
Geotab's Neil Cawse on stage during keynote at Geotab Connect 2026
Fleet Managementby Deborah LockridgeFebruary 12, 2026

Adapt or Die: Geotab’s Neil Cawse on AI’s Rapid Reinvention of Fleet Management

Artificial intelligence is evolving faster than fleets can keep up, and telematics must evolve with it, Cawse said during Geotab Connect. The future? A single AI coordinating every system — and leaders who know how to guide it.

Read More →
Illustration with question mark and graph illustrating uncertainty
Fleet Managementby StaffFebruary 12, 2026

After Three Years of Pressure, Motor Carriers and Brokers See Early Signs of a Turn

Survey data show carriers and brokers expect improving demand in 2026, even as rates lag and capital investment remains on hold.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Photo of GO Focus Pro dashcam
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 11, 2026

Geotab Launches AI-Powered GO Focus Pro Dash Cam With 360-Degree Visibility

Geotab launches GO Focus Pro, an AI-powered 360-degree dash cam designed to reduce collisions, prevent fraud, and protect fleets from nuclear verdict risk.

Read More →
Knowledge Hub fleet intelligence system.
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 10, 2026

Augment Launches Freight-Native Knowledge Hub to Preserve Operational Know-How

Knowledge Hub is designed to turn scattered tribal knowledge into execution-ready intelligence and help logistics teams make faster, more consistent decisions.

Read More →
Avery Vise, FTR vice president of trucking.
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 10, 2026

FTR: Trucking Conditions Hit Four-Year High as Rates and Capacity Tighten

Improving freight rates and tighter capacity push FTR’s Trucking Conditions Index to its highest level in nearly four years.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Quester fleet maintenance dashboard.
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 10, 2026

Questar Predictive Fleet Health Platform Now Available Through Geotab Marketplace

Quester’s AI-driven maintenance insights aim to help fleets reduce unplanned downtime, improve repair planning, and better understand the true cost of maintenance decisions.

Read More →
Photo of Jim Mullen
Fleet Managementby News/Media ReleaseFebruary 9, 2026

Truckload Carriers Association Names Jim Mullen President

Mullen has trucking experience with government, associations, trucking companies and suppliers.

Read More →
Illustration of football stadium with bar graph and freight on dock
Fleet Managementby StaffFebruary 5, 2026

How The Big Game Impacted Freight Volumes

Super Bowl LX drove a spike in trucking freight volumes into San Jose. New data shows which equipment types benefited most.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Cyberstop column header depicting images related to threats, AI, and a locked cargo container
Fleet Managementby Ben WilkensFebruary 4, 2026

How Cybercrime Is Reshaping Cargo Theft and Fleet Risk in 2026

Artificial intelligence is changing how cybercriminals and cargo thieves target trucking fleets—and how fleets defend themselves. As phishing, impersonation, and cargo theft converge, cybersecurity is becoming a core part of fleet safety and operations.

Read More →