Murphy Plant has selected the new Driver E-Learning Programme from Licence Check’s DAVIS platform to evaluate the risks its drivers face and to introduce interventions where appropriate.

Headquartered in north London and part of the J Murphy & Sons engineering and construction company, Murphy Plant manages and maintains more than £100 million worth of plant, transport and specialist equipment with 15,000 assets on its books.

It operates a large and diverse fleet of vehicles comprising 1,350 commercial vehicles, 400 cars and 200 grey fleet vehicles, with some 2,400 company drivers who come under the corporate driving policy.

The company has been employing Licence Check’s Driver and Vehicle Information Solution (DAVIS) to check all driving licences across its various businesses for the last five years, and to provide driver risk profiling services for the past 18 months.

In the past six months it has also implemented the Driver E-learning programme, which aims to prioritise driver safety and well-being through e-learning modules that provide ongoing tuition and support for drivers.

The company employs a driving standards traffic light warning system, with red providing a reputational risk to the business and green representing drivers of a good or exemplary standard.

Driver feedback is based on telematics data relayed directly from the company vehicle fleet to identify those drivers who are performing badly and represent the greatest risk to the business.

Murphy fleet manager Tony Murphy said that, since its introduction, the driver e-learning programme was working well and having a positive effect on driving standards.

He explained: “Since we introduced driver risk profiling and specific modular interventions, we have seen a marked improvement in driving behaviours, with well over 50% of our most at-risk drivers moving from red to amber or green.”

He said it was too early to say whether the improving driving standards were being recognised in terms of lower insurance or accident costs. “We will probably see the cost benefits of that within the next 18 months,” he continued.

“Driving has been identified as posing the greatest risk to our business and the whole board, from the CEO down, has bought into the idea of driver risk profiling as a means of improving our driving standards.

“The e-learning programme allows us to identify areas where our at-risk drivers are weakest, such as speeding or awareness for example, and then use specific online learning modules for those particular issues to help correct their driving behaviours.”

The DAVIS Driver E-learning programme offers 22 e-learning modules through an online hub designed to help drivers further develop their knowledge and skills. They range from urban driving to hazard perception and speed awareness to eco-driving and road rage. 

Terry Hiles, general manager at Licence Check, now part of the Ebbon-Dacs Group, said: “It’s great to see Murphy Plant getting such promising results from implementing e-learning and driver risk profiling in this way.

“For a company such as theirs, where occupational driving poses the highest risk to the business, it makes absolute sense to employ these risk intervention techniques, and they are now seeing the tangible benefits from doing so.”