Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Enterprise sees pre-pandemic trends returning

- Tom Krisher

DETROIT — When Enterprise started to see automobile supply problems after the pandemic hit in 2020, the car and truck rental, fleet management and mobility company decided to cater to its long-term customers.

Now that travel has made a comeback, Chrissy Taylor, CEO of the newly renamed Enterprise Mobility, sees rental cars growing again, but she says most of the St. Louis-based company’s business is still with its core customers.

Enterprise is now up to more than 2.3 million vehicles in its fleet, more than the company had right before the pandemic.

Question: With a shortage of cars and trucks during the pandemic, but leisure travel making a big resurgence, what’s going on with your business now?

Answer: A third of our business happens in the airport, and two-thirds happens in our suburban market. And our suburban market has been growing exponentia­lly with our contracted business, which includes the corporate customers and the road warrior. They are back, and they do travel regionally. So we do have a lot of that business, not just at the airport but in the home city, and then insurance replacemen­t. People still have been driving the last several years, even with the pandemic. So accidents happen. And so we have longterm relationsh­ips with insurance partners. That business has also been back on track. Travel demand was through the roof, through the summer. We have also experience­d that both domestical­ly and globally and in Europe in particular. And so the airport business is growing. We have a very diverse business line. All of it is growing right now.

How did you end up with most of your business not being rental for travel?

We’re coming back online with our leisure customer. About 25% of our business is leisure, and the rest is contracted. During the pandemic, when supply chain and vehicle availabili­ty were difficult, we made the decision to prioritize those long-term contracts with corporate customers and insurance customers because they’ve been with us for decades. And now with vehicle availabili­ty, we’ve been able to bring that leisure customer back online.

Rental vehicles got very expensive when the pandemic hit. Have prices stayed high and what do you see in the future?

As demand loosens, we have seen prices moderate year over year, but we’re happy where pricing is. People continue to travel. Pricing is also a factor because we’re in the suburban market. It is based on availabili­ty of vehicle, what location you’re going to, what vehicle type you are trying to rent. So there are different factors that go into pricing. The experience needs to be positive, but we feel good about where pricing is.

Are you still seeing a shortage of vehicles because demand is high?

We definitely are not buying as many vehicles as we were pre-pandemic. Vehicle supply is down, but we are in a much better place. And so we partner with all of our OEM (original equipment manufactur­er) partners, not just the big three in Detroit, but we’ve got great relationsh­ips. We are talking to them on a daily basis and working on what works for them, what works for us. And so we feel really good about vehicle supply coming into the back half of the year.

What about the autoworker­s’ strike against the Detroit Three?

When we look back at everything that we’ve been through, whether it’s a financial crisis, whether it’s a pandemic, whether it’s the supply challenges, we are in a great position with our local operators and great leadership and great partnershi­ps with the OEMs that we can weather anything that’s coming our way. We feel good about the car flow that’s coming in really through December and into the first part of the year. And if some of that is delayed, that is normal course of business because things don’t always come in when you think they’re going to come in.

How long are you keeping vehicles now?

Even though our miles are up and we are holding vehicles longer, our customer service has never been higher. So our peak was about 2022. That has come down this year. It is still elevated over pre-pandemic, and you really have to dig in to make and model of our fleet because some of the vehicles just are not readily available from the manufactur­er, and they’re in high demand in the summer. Everybody wants a minivan; they want a large SUV. We tend to keep those a little longer because the demand has been so high. We have a team dedicated on the maintenanc­e, the miles and how long we keep those vehicles to make sure the customer is getting a great product.

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