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Fleet utilisation is a planning problem that data solves

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Anuradha Parakala, Co-founder, Chief Strategy and Product Officer, Fleetronix Systems, explains how GPS, geofencing and analytics are reshaping cement logistics operations.

Digital fleet management systems are now transforming this landscape through real-time tracking, geofencing and data analytics. These technologies are helping cement companies improve turnaround time, reduce pilferage and optimise fleet utilisation. In this interview, Anuradha Parakala, Co-founder, Chief Strategy and Product Officer, Fleetronix Systems, discusses how smart fleet technology is building the foundation for modern cement logistics.

How is digital fleet management changing logistics efficiency for cement manufacturers in India?
Cement moves on trucks. That sounds obvious, but for years, the moment a truck left the plant gate, it basically disappeared. You’d send it off and just wait and hope it reached on time. Hope nothing went wrong on the way.
What tracking has actually done is close that gap. Now I know where my truck is right now. I know if it stopped somewhere it wasn’t supposed to. I know how long it sat at the customer’s site. When you’re running hundreds of trips a day across multiple plants, that’s not a small thing — it changes how you plan, how you price, what you can promise a customer.
But I’ll say this honestly — the technology isn’t the real change. The real change is what happens to the people using it. Most logistics teams in this industry have been running on phone calls and gut feel for 20-odd years. Getting them to trust data over habit that’s the actual transformation. The systems just make it possible.

What are the biggest challenges in cement logistics visibility, and how does real-time tracking help?
Three things I keep seeing come up.
Firstly, what happens after the truck leaves. I call it the post-gate black hole. Once it’s out, you have no idea what’s actually happening on the road. Did it stop somewhere it shouldn’t have? Was the load tampered with? Was the driver asleep somewhere for three hours? Without tracking, that uncertainty just becomes a cost you absorb and don’t question.
Second is turnaround time. Trucks sitting idle is probably the biggest silent drain in this business — at the weighbridge, at loading, at the customer’s gate. The problem is nobody measures it properly, so nobody fixes it. You can’t fix what you can’t see.
Third is route adherence. Drivers have their own rhythms built up over years. Their own stops, their own shortcuts. Most of it is harmless. Some of it isn’t. The trouble is, without visibility, you can’t tell which is which.
Real-time tracking directly fixes all three. But the bigger effect — and I’ve seen this in practice — is what happens to behaviour once people know the system is watching. Before you have done any deep analysis, before you have changed any process, the behaviour improves. That alone makes it worth it.

How do GPS, geofencing and IoT sensors prevent pilferage in cement transport?
I’ll say something the industry doesn’t like saying out loud. A lot of pilferage isn’t random theft. It happens through small, quiet arrangements — a route deviation that someone chose to look away from, a stop that nobody asked about. The moment you have a clean digital record of every trip, much of that stops on its own. Nobody wants to be the one trip that looks different from everything else in the data.
Geofencing is particularly powerful. You draw a corridor, which is the acceptable path from Point A to Point B. The second the truck steps outside that corridor, an alert fires. No one needs to be watching a screen. The system catches it automatically. Add IoT sensors, such as door open/close events, weight sensors, tamper alerts, and you are not just tracking location, you are also tracking what’s happening with the cargo. GPS tells you where the truck is. Sensors tell you what’s going on inside it. Together, that’s very hard to argue with after the fact.
And I want to be clear — this isn’t about treating people as criminals. When the system makes doing the right thing the easiest thing, most people just do the right thing. That’s really all it comes down to.

How does data analytics improve route planning, turnaround time and fleet utilisation?
Honestly, most companies are still at the very beginning here. They have got tracking and they know where their trucks are. But that historical data is mostly sitting there unused. Nobody’s really digging into it.
Take route planning, for instance. If you have six months of trip data, you can tell exactly which routes run slow on which days, at what times and why. You can build that into your routing instead of just leaving it to whatever the driver decides. The fuel and time savings from even small improvements, at scale, add up fast.
Turnaround time is the same story. The data shows you where the delay is actually happening. We had one situation where a customer found out that 40 per cent of their delay was happening in the last 500 metres — at the point of unloading. They had absolutely no idea. Once you see it, you can do something about it.
Fleet utilisation is really a planning problem that data solves well. Which vehicles are sitting idle, which routes can be consolidated, when to use which truck. The data stops telling you just what happened — it starts telling you what you should do next.

How critical is fuel management, and what can technology do about pilferage and costs?
Fuel is almost always one of the top two or three costs in any heavy fleet. In cement, with large vehicles, long distances, every single day, it is enormous. And fuel theft has been one of the oldest, quietest leakages in this industry, mostly because it’s so hard to catch without the right setup.
The thing about fuel theft is it doesn’t announce itself. A driver fills up, the receipt looks fine, but what actually went into the tank was different. Or fuel gets siphoned out during a long, unscheduled stop. Without sensors cross-referenced against trip data, you’re completely blind.
What technology enables is correlation. You know the fuel level at the start, the distance covered, the speed, the terrain. From that you calculate expected consumption. If actual consumption is way off, you investigate. That logic has helped surface leakages our customers genuinely didn’t know were happening.
Beyond pilferage, and this is the part people underestimate, driving behaviour alone affects fuel consumption by 15 to 20 per cent. A driver who over-revs, brakes hard, idles too much, is burning money on every kilometre. Catching that and coaching drivers — not punishing them, actually coaching them — is probably the fastest return on investment I’ve seen in this space.

What role does driver behaviour monitoring play in safety and efficiency?
I want to be careful about how I frame this, because it gets misread a lot. This is not surveillance. Done properly, it is a feedback system. It is something that helps drivers do their job better and gives managers information to support people, not just catch them out.
The reality is most drivers genuinely want to do a good job. They just don’t have real-time feedback on how they are performing. When you give someone regular data on their driving — speed, braking, how they handle the vehicle — and you pair that with actual recognition when things improve, you get real change. Not because they feel watched, but because they now have information they didn’t have before.
For cement specifically, the stakes are real. Heavy vehicles, difficult terrain, long hours. A serious accident is first a human tragedy, and then a legal and reputational one. Taking safety seriously isn’t optional — it is just part of running the business responsibly.
And the efficiency payoff is real too. Better driving means lower fuel costs, fewer breakdowns, lower insurance and less downtime. It compounds a lot across a large fleet over a year.
But there’s a bigger picture here that I think is worth saying plainly. When drivers and transporters operate within a monitored ecosystem — GPS-tagged, sealed, auditable — something shifts. Not because anyone is being forced to behave differently. It just happens. Idle time comes down. Unscheduled stoppages decline. Route discipline improves. When something does go wrong, when someone flags it before it becomes a crisis, escalations become proactive.
That’s what a well-built monitoring system actually is. It is not surveillance but operational signalling. The system is telling everyone — drivers, managers, customers — what’s really happening, in real time. And when people have that signal, most of them respond to it well.
This is the backbone of modern logistics. Not the trucks. Not even the routes. The ecosystem that keeps everything honest and moving.

How do integrated logistics platforms help cement companies achieve true end-to-end visibility?
The word ‘integrated’ matters a lot here. What most cement companies have today is pieces — a tracking system, an ERP, manual customer communication, a separate compliance tool. None of this talk to each other. The gaps between them are where information gets lost, delays compound and costs pile up.
Integration connects those dots. When the truck leaves the plant, despatch updates automatically. Thirty minutes from delivery, the customer gets an alert and no phone call is needed. When the truck arrives, a digital confirmation feeds back into invoicing. If any deviation happens, the right person knows instantly. The information flows on its own. Nobody has to chase it.
From what I have seen working with large operations. The biggest gain from integration isn’t any single feature. It’s how much coordination overhead disappears. In a large cement company, there are dozens of people whose main job is basically calling other people to find out what’s happening. A properly integrated system makes a lot of that redundant, and frees those people up for work that actually needs human judgment.
There’s also a customer side to this. Cement buyers are getting more demanding. They want estimated time of arrival (ETAs) that they can rely on, proof of delivery and alerts when something goes wrong. That’s a competitive differentiator now, not a bonus feature.

How will smart fleet technology reshape cement logistics over the next five years?
Three shifts, each bigger than the last.
Firstly, moving from reactive to predictive. Right now, operations react to problems. A vehicle breaks down, everyone scrambles. In five years, predictive maintenance will flag that breakdown two weeks before it happens, based on what the sensors are seeing. That shift alone changes a lot.
Secondly, intelligent despatch and planning. AI-driven systems will allocate trucks, optimise routes in real time with live traffic, predict arrival windows more accurately than any human team can manage at scale. That doesn’t mean people become irrelevant. It means people get elevated to the decisions that actually need judgment — things a machine still can’t handle.
Thirdly, compliance just happens in the background. E-way bills, FASTag, vehicle fitness records — the government’s push on digitisation isn’t slowing down. In five years, compliance won’t be a manual burden you manage separately. It’ll be built into the platform.
My honest take: the gap between companies that are building these capabilities now and those who are waiting is going to widen significantly. The early movers will have a structural cost and service advantage by 2029. The others will be catching up in a market that’s already moved on.

  • -Kanika Mathur

Concrete

Ramco Cements Campaign Wins Six Kyoorius Honours

Hard Worker campaign wins Grand Prix for Eco Plaster film

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The Ramco Cements Limited’s Hard Worker campaign has achieved a major milestone at the prestigious Kyoorius Creative Awards, winning six honours including the coveted Grey Elephant Grand Prix for the Eco Plaster film. The awards were announced and presented at the Kyoorius Creative Awards Night 2026 held on 23rd May 2026 at the Jio World Convention Centre, Mumbai.

Competing alongside some of the country’s leading brands and agencies, the campaign received recognition across multiple creative categories, reaffirming the power of authentic storytelling rooted in the lives of hardworking people. The Eco Plaster commercial, which highlighted the importance of water conservation through innovative construction solutions, emerged as the campaign’s biggest winner, securing most of the honours.

The campaign’s wins include: 
Grey Elephant (Grand Prix) – Eco Plaster 
Blue Elephant – Best Film – Eco Plaster
Blue Elephant – Best Direction – Eco Plaster
Blue Elephant – Best Music – Eco Plaster
Baby Elephant – Best Direction -Tortoise & Hare
Baby Elephant – Best Use of Humour – Eco Plaster

Established in 2014, the Kyoorius Creative Awards recognise and celebrate creative excellence across India’s advertising, marketing and communications industries. Presented by Zee Entertainment Enterprises and powered by the USA-based The Clio Awards, the awards are regarded among the country’s most respected creative honours.

Known for their ethical and neutral judging process, the Kyoorius Creative Awards evaluate work purely on merit through a non-hierarchical awards structure, without Gold, Silver or Bronze distinctions. The iconic Elephant symbolises memorable work that leaves a lasting impact on the industry.

The Hard Worker campaign by The Ramco Cements Limited was conceived around the insight that true strength and progress are built through everyday hard work. Through emotionally resonant storytelling, distinctive craft and culturally rooted narratives, the campaign connected strongly with audiences across markets. The integrated campaign was rolled out across television, digital platforms, outdoor media and extensive on-ground activations, helping strengthen the brand’s connect with consumers, engineers, masons and trade communities alike.

Commenting on the achievement, A V Dharmakrishnan, CEO of Ramco Cements, said: “Winning at the Kyoorius Creative Awards is a proud moment for all of us. The Hard Worker campaign was created as a tribute to the spirit of hardworking people who form the backbone of our industry and our nation. These recognitions reaffirm our belief that authentic, meaningful storytelling has the power to create a deep and lasting connection with people.”

Balaji K Moorthy, Executive Director – Marketing, Ramco Cements, added: “The Hard Worker campaign was built on a simple but powerful insight – that hard work deserves recognition and respect. We wanted the communication to feel rooted, emotional and culturally relevant while also pushing creative boundaries. Winning six honours, including the Grey Elephant Grand Prix, is a tremendous validation of the idea, the craft and the collaborative effort of everyone involved in the campaign.”

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Concrete

GP Petroleums Q4 PAT Rises 8%

Lubricant maker reports Rs 9.3 crore profit in Q4FY26

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GP Petroleums reported an 8 per cent rise in PAT to Rs 9.3 crore in Q4FY26, compared to Rs 8.6 crore in Q4FY25. Revenue from operations stood at Rs 163 crore, compared to Rs 183 crore in the corresponding quarter last year.

EBITDA for Q4FY26 increased to Rs 14.7 crore from Rs 13.2 crore in Q4FY25, while EBITDA margin improved to 9 per cent from 7 per cent. The company said its performance was supported by operational efficiencies, strong customer relationships and an expanding product portfolio.

For FY26, revenue from operations rose 5 per cent to Rs 643 crore, compared to Rs 610 crore in FY25. EBITDA stood at Rs 44.7 crore, against Rs 42 crore in the previous year. PAT was Rs 26.50 crore, marginally higher than Rs 26.30 crore in FY25.

The company said FY26 PAT was impacted by a wage provision of Rs 3.25 crore, representing about 12 per cent of PAT. GP Petroleums continues to see opportunities in industrial lubricants, process oils and premium automotive lubricants, though geopolitical developments and crude-linked raw material cost volatility may pose short-to-medium-term challenges.

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Ramky Infra Order Book Crosses Rs 13,000 Crore

New order wins support resilient FY2026 performance

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Ramky Infrastructure reported a resilient FY2026 performance, supported by disciplined execution, cost efficiency and fresh order wins. The company secured new orders worth Rs 4,500 crore during Q4, taking its total order book above Rs 13,000 crore as of 31 March 2026.

Consolidated PAT grew 40 per cent year-on-year to Rs 283 crore in FY2026, compared to Rs 202 crore in FY2025. Standalone PAT rose 28 per cent to Rs 332 crore, while consolidated revenue from operations stood at Rs 1,846 crore. Standalone revenue from operations was Rs 1,679 crore.

During the year, the company secured orders worth Rs 6,500 crore across water, wastewater and industrial infrastructure. Key wins included a Rs 3,000 crore industrial park project from Maharashtra Industrial Development Corporation for a 1,000-hectare land parcel at Dighi Port Industrial Area, Maharashtra.

Ramky also secured a Rs 2,100 crore water and wastewater project from Hyderabad Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewerage Board for water transmission lines, and a Rs 1,400 crore EPC contract from Maharashtra Industrial Township Limited for the Dighi Port Industrial Area project.

The company generated Rs 160 crore through asset monetisation and Rs 165 crore through the stake sale of a stabilised asset, supporting equity requirements for new projects. The Board also recommended a final dividend of 10 per cent of the nominal value per share, subject to members’ approval.

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