Six steps from blank page to a running program — the same framework we use with fleets, whether you have 15 drivers or 1,500.
A driver recognition program isn't a budget line for swag — it's a retention system. Here's how to stand one up, step by step. For the strategy behind it, see the recognition programs guide; to size the payoff, use the turnover calculator.
Start with the four moments that matter most: onboarding, Driver Appreciation Week, safety milestones, and years of service. A small fleet can begin with just onboarding + DAW and add the rest as it grows.
Assign a budget to each moment — commonly $25–$50 for a fleet-wide DAW gift, up to $200+ for a milestone. See the budget table in the gifts guide.
Pick custom-branded kits for each stage so every touchpoint looks like it came from the same intentional program — not a random gift card.
Tie kits to triggers: hire date (onboarding), mid-September (DAW), safe-mile thresholds, and tenure anniversaries. Reorders can be as few as 1 unit per new hire.
Delivery timing and presentation are half the impact. Kits arrive before the moment; pair them with public recognition and a signed note from leadership.
Track turnover before and after, multiply the reduction by your per-driver replacement cost, and weigh it against program spend. Recognition consistently returns multiples of its cost.
Start by picking two moments to recognize — onboarding and Driver Appreciation Week — set a per-driver budget, choose branded kits, and tie them to hire dates and the September week. Expand to safety and tenure recognition as you grow.
Budget $25–$200 per driver per moment depending on the milestone. Weigh it against your turnover cost — one retained driver typically covers many drivers' worth of recognition.
Compare driver turnover before and after the program and multiply the improvement by your replacement cost per driver. The turnover calculator estimates that number for you.
Send us your headcount and the moments you want to recognize; we'll return a scoped program with kits, branding, and a cadence.