Efficient device management in the construction industry

Written by Lisa Lokotsch | Mar 27, 2026 1:30:31 PM

The construction industry is one of the most complex industries of all. Dozens of machines, devices and vehicles are spread across several construction sites at the same time, often on changing projects and under difficult conditions. If you lose track, you lose money - through unplanned downtime, inefficient utilization, unnecessary rental costs and avoidable fuel wastage.

This is exactly where digital device management comes in. And the pressure to act is growing.

The construction industry and digitalization: an honest assessment

According to the PwC 2025 study on the German construction industry, construction companies and planners recognize the great potential of digital technologies - but the gap between theoretical possibilities and their own capabilities has been widening for years. This is particularly evident when it comes to IoT solutions on the construction site: 62% of respondents believe that this technology offers great opportunities, but only 10% have strong skills in this area.

This is the gap that IT decision-makers in the construction industry can - and must - close.

Another recent study by Bluebeam (December 2025) based on over 1,000 construction professionals surveyed shows that Although 84 percent of companies plan to increase their technology investments by 2026 - only 11 percent are currently considered fully digitized.

What smart device management does in practice

Digital device management means more than just a digital inventory list. It creates a networked ecosystem of machines, data and processes that provides information in real time and acts automatically.

The central building blocks at a glance:

  • IoT sensor technology and GPS tracking: IoT can be used to network, manage and maintain all construction machinery on the construction site. With smart equipment management, construction equipment is optimally utilized - unnecessary transport routes and costs can be avoided in a targeted manner.
  • Real-time monitoring and telematics: GPS trackers continuously record location, movement status and operating parameters and transmit the data securely to a cloud platform. Operating hours, maintenance planning and performance reports can be accessed at any time.
  • Predictive maintenance: Telematics systems send automatic alerts in the event of maintenance requirements, unusual operating patterns or potential mechanical problems - helping to avoid costly downtime before equipment failure occurs.
  • Geofencing and theft protection: devices that leave defined areas automatically trigger an alarm. This increases security and reliably protects valuable machines.
  • SAP integration: Machine data flows automatically into existing ERP systems - cost center allocation, billing and maintenance planning run without manual intermediate steps.

A concrete example

A project success from our own company shows what this looks like in reality. The IoT platform solution from prodot enables construction companies to use, plan and manage vehicles and construction machinery such as wheel loaders, excavators and pavers more efficiently. Relevant data is aggregated from various telematics systems - including MiX Telematics, CAT and Liebherr - and automatically synchronized with SAP. prodot - Success Story

Thanks to the intelligent processing of the data, fuel costs can be reduced by around five to ten percent. Inefficient processes such as downtimes with the engine running or incorrect operation of the machines are identified in the software - across all manufacturers and in almost real time. prodot - Success Story

The result: more transparency, less waste, higher machine availability.

The biggest hurdles - and how to overcome them

The technology is available. What slows down implementation are usually not technical, but organizational factors.

According to the PwC study, the biggest obstacle to digitalization in the construction industry is the lack of technical expertise: 82% of the companies surveyed cited this as the main problem.

Added to this are established IT landscapes, heterogeneous machinery from different manufacturers and the pressure to quickly amortize investments.

The pragmatic approach that works in practice:

  • Start with a clearly defined use case, for example telematics for the largest machines in the fleet
  • Choose cross-manufacturer platforms that integrate existing systems instead of replacing them
  • Scale step by step instead of converting everything at once
  • Integrate SAP and existing ERP systems at an early stage to avoid data silos

The key benefits of equipment management in the construction industry

1. real-time overview
Location, status and operating hours of all machines at a glance

2. optimize maintenance
Predictive maintenance prevents breakdowns before they occur

3. save fuel
5-10% less fuel costs thanks to intelligent data analysis

4. SAP integration
Machine data flows automatically into existing ERP systems

Conclusion: If you don't know your machines, you can't control them

Companies that rely on digital tools at an early stage secure long-term competitive advantages and are better equipped for future requirements.

For IT decision-makers in the construction industry, this means that digital device management is not an IT project - it is a strategic decision that has a direct impact on costs, efficiency and project success.

The question is not if, but when and how.

Would you like to know how your existing machine fleet can be digitally networked - across manufacturers and integrated into SAP? Get in touch with us. We will show you what is possible with your data.