Fleet connections that keep repair requests, shop work, and billing aligned across orgs
Coordinate repair requests between fleets and service providers with a shared workflow that still lets each side operate inside its own environment.
Receive and process fleet repair requests in a structured shop workflow
Keep one linked work order per request for operational clarity
Preserve customer and billing context without separate manual tracking
CreoFleet
Fleet connections keep teams aligned on
Incoming and outgoing repair requests
Linked work order creation and progress
Customer-facing estimate and invoice context
Operational status across organization boundaries
Cleaner fleet-shop coordination
Replace email chains and phone follow-ups with a shared operational workflow.
Less request ambiguity
Keep each repair request tied to one work order so teams know what job represents the request.
Better customer continuity
Carry customer, asset, status, and billing context through the full repair lifecycle.
Core capabilities
Built to support real operational execution
These pages exist because the product area is real. Each capability below maps to a concrete workflow in the platform.
Cross-org repair requests
Let fleets send work into shop queues with structured service context.
Linked work order generation
Turn approved requests into operational jobs without re-entering the request by hand.
Invoice from the work order
Keep billing grounded in the same work order that executed the repair.
Status sync for the request lifecycle
Reflect work-order progress back into the request so both sides stay aligned.
Operational flow
How teams typically run it
Receive the repair request
A fleet or partner sends structured work into the shop with customer and asset context intact.
Create the linked work order
Turn the request into one operational job record that the shop can actually run.
Close out with billing and status clarity
Issue the invoice from the work order and keep the request lifecycle updated automatically.
Keep exploring
Related product pages worth reviewing next
World-class SaaS sites do not bury the rest of the story in homepage anchors. These pages are built to help buyers compare workflows and evaluate the platform more concretely.