For the last five years, Sterling Pratz has been asking big questions:
Why do we need a credit or a debit card? Why do we need to put a box in our cars for tolling and parking, an app on our dash for fuel and EV charging, and have ACH processes for service and repair? And how can we prevent transactional fraud?
Pratz’s answers to those questions formed the basis of the company he founded, Car IQ Inc. “We’re rethinking how things get paid,” he says, which means scrapping the credit card process entirely.
“I was frustrated that people still use credit cards,” he says. “I find it ironic that we use 40-year-old credit card technology to buy dead dinosaur juice for our cars. (Credit cards) have limited visibility into the transaction and they’re not very intelligent.”
Car IQ has created a payment network that eliminates the need for physical credit or fleet cards and enables vehicles to connect to merchants and transact securely. The payment network is built around proprietary identity management technology that uses the unique data stream of each vehicle — allowing the vehicle itself to become the payment device.
“That became what Car IQ was all about,” he says, before asking another question: “How do we use the data from the car and around the car to create trust between the vehicle, the bank, and the merchant, so that the vehicle can transact without using cards or human processes?”
How the Tech Works
When a Car IQ-enabled vehicle passes the geofence for a partnering fuel station, EV charging station, or toll booth, the system connects to the vehicle and scans the telematics data from the car’s onboard sensors.
Before the pump or charger is turned on, the system, called Car IQ Pay, triangulates information between the vehicle, the bank, and the fuel station or merchant, by identifying:
- the vehicle matched to the account;
- source and availability of funds to pay for the fuel;
- account’s transaction history;
- whether the vehicle is lost or stolen;
- fuel tank size;
- present amount of fuel in tank, and
- frequency of stops at the present fueling station and competitive stations.
After the data is collected and the vehicle passes security clearances, the pump or charger is enabled. The driver enters the pump or charger number into their phone or in the future the dash app, dispenses the fuel or electricity, and the transaction is recorded to the account.
There is no waiting for the system to process. Pratz claims Car IQ Pay is faster than any credit card or mobile app on the market today.
After the fuel is dispensed, the system does something a credit card can’t — it scans the vehicle again to identify the amount of fuel it received and compares it to what the pump says was dispensed. Any inconsistencies between existing fuel in the tank, tank size, and amount of fuel pumped is flagged immediately.
“We tell the merchants that the transaction was real,” Pratz says. “And we tell them that there was no fraud, no friendly fraud, no chargebacks, no disputes, no man-in-the-middle scenarios. All that goes away.”
Streamlining Costs & Back Office
Car IQ also aims to streamline the inefficiencies in how organizations with fleets process payments for hundreds or thousands of cars and all the merchants with which they interact.
The average fleet vehicle is involved in 20 to 30 transactions per month — from purchasing fuel eight to 12 times and paying five to 10 tolls, to paying parking citations and service and repair bills.
Users of the Car IQ platform add fleet vehicles into the system, associate a bank account, pick their merchants, and set parameters around time and spending, such as when a certain vehicle is allowed to transact and for what amounts.
The transactions are processed in a real-time ledger that can be sorted by make, model, brand, merchant, payment type, and other factors. “Imagine instead of having 10 people in your finance department scrolling over 20,000 payment transactions per month, you literally have one document that you can sort by whatever data you choose,” Pratz says.
Payments can be settled in close to real time if needed, instead of a 30- to 60-day settlement period.
Fraud represents another cost and inefficiency, which occurs in about 3% to 8% of transactions. Of overall fraudulent transactions, “friendly fraud,” when the cardholder willfully fills up another vehicle’s tank, accounts for another 5% to 7%. “It’s the fraud no one can measure because when they have a credit card, they have the right to use that card,” he says, “but they’re just using it for purposes that weren’t intended.”
Reducing Fees & Unused Cards
With a more streamlined system, Car IQ is then able to reduce fees.
Like traditional fleet payment cards, the same interchange rates for mobile payments applies for Car IQ. However, 8% to 15% of a traditional card’s monthly billing is associated with fees. Because the Car IQ platform is virtual, there are no fees for setup, mailing, or lost or stolen cards.
Of the universe of credit cards, some 30% go unused. This happens in the fleet world when drivers are given a card associated with their vehicle, and the driver changes vehicles, leaves the card somewhere, or leaves the organization. These unused cards become another management and cost issue, with the company paying card-on-file fees.
“They’re paying for that credit card to sit there and ‘hang out.’” Pratz says. “We make all that go away as well.”
Incentivizing Behaviors & Loyalty
Car IQ connects to telematics systems that collect data around driving behaviors such as speeding and harsh braking and other metrics such as fuel economy and revenue per stop. Tied to Car IQ, this data can be used to reward or incentivize drivers. For instance, if a driver achieves a goal around efficiency or safety, the system could trigger an offer from a fleet manager or a sponsor for the driver to pick up a free lunch at a participating merchant.
Or if drivers frequent a certain merchant, they can accumulate points for rewards through integrations with merchants’ loyalty programs.
Expanding Footprint & Payment Types
Car IQ’s customers range from fleet management companies and large commercial fleets in various vocations to last-mile delivery. A new partnership with a large trucking manufacturer will allow new trucks to come off the assembly line as “payment capable.”
Car IQ contracts with close to 25,000 fueling stations nationwide today with another 25,000 expected to come on board by year’s end. (There are about 110,000 gas stations in the U.S.)
In the future, payments will extend beyond just fuel: If the driver wants to purchase a burrito and a soda from the merchant, a QR code is sent to the driver’s phone to scan instore. The app can be configured for that merchant’s branded experience.
Car IQ has partnered with a carwash company, Everwash, for contactless transactions. Car IQ is also talking to daily rental companies, as the system alleviates the renter interaction in paying for fuel and tolls, along with greater control and visibility into payments for the rental company.
The company also has agreements with companies that manage tolling transactions. Taking it one step further, Pratz says Car IQ is investigating using vehicle data in lieu of license plate readers or scanning bar codes. This will lower transactional costs as it alleviates the need for software and cameras and mitigate fraud relating to cars with switched license plates.
Municipality as Merchant
When it comes to partnerships, Pratz is thinking bigger, and asking more questions: “What if fleets could connect directly with municipalities, and digitizing a payment turns a municipality into a merchant?”
Taking last-mile delivery fleets as an example, delivery vehicles typically get about one or two parking tickets or traffic citations per week from multiple municipalities. Settling those payments could take up to 10 hours every two weeks by multiple staff members.
Through Car IQ, municipalities could form relationships with fleets that travel within their boundaries and administer fines using participating vehicles’ geolocations and data, reducing the need for parking enforcement officials or expensive cameras to monitor parking. With reduced overhead, the municipality could reduce the cost of the citation. And the fleet could pay quicker, with only a single virtual ledger to pay.
At the same time, the municipality could identify areas in which it would be beneficial for fleets to park, and then charge them virtually through the system.
“The data in that car can be traded with the city; it’s highly valuable,” Pratz says. “My belief is that cars will trade data for the right to transact, and the city will benefit from it like any merchant such as Shell, Sinclair, or Sunoco.”
Originally posted on Automotive Fleet