Abstract image of wavy blue lines

Companies looking to maximize their investments can’t afford to choose new locations arbitrarily. Learn how transportation data can guide enterprises toward high-potential areas to enhance profitability.

To set up a new business location for success and reduce financial risk, companies must initiate a careful commercial site selection process in advance. With thousands to millions of dollars invested any time new real estate is proposed, an organization can stand to lose a fortune if they choose a poor location. This article will explore what commercial site selection is, why it’s imperative before a new location is established or acquired and how transportation analytics streamline the process.

 

What is commercial site selection?

Commercial site selection is the process of using data and insights to pinpoint high-potential areas for a new business location. Insights like transportation analytics, demographic and median household income data can all help a commercial organization uncover where their ideal customer profile is geographically and place new business locations near them, priming them for a profitable result.

This process is important because it gives an organization’s leadership confidence in a project’s potential, generating buy-in and leading to more lucrative outcomes. Understanding what motivates your target buyer as well as how far they’re willing to travel for your business’s offering are additional important factors to consider when site selecting. For businesses like restaurant chains, retailers and downstream oil and gas companies, transportation insights are one of the most important types of data to study.

 

How Geotab ITS helps businesses and real estate developers optimize site selection

Geotab ITS provides detailed transportation analytics that can help you construct a strong business case for a new store location. Conversely, our insights can also help you identify areas where it’s wise to avoid building new locations or acquiring new land. Our data is contextualized, providing you with insight on commercial vehicle classes, types and vocations for even smarter site selection. Our transportation analytics additionally show you where these vehicles are most commonly coming from, where they’re going and the most frequent areas they’re stopping.

Origin & Destination Insights: Aggregated commercial vehicle travel insights paint the full picture of where your ideal customers are headed. Analyze O&D data to help prove a business location concept. Make an educated site decision based on where most buyers are headed as well as where they are driving from.

Route Analysis and Expansion Factors: Dig into driver preferences, journey totals and travel durations. See popular routes that vehicles take throughout a new area your business wants to expand into. Our Expansion Factors additionally provide insight into how the entire fleet population moves throughout an area, helping you accurately assess total regional vehicle movement trends.

Stop Analytics: Identify where most trucks usually stop while en route to their destinations. High-traffic rest areas provide a golden opportunity for new businesses such as fuel stations, convenience stores and restaurants to be built, as customers are already stopping at these areas. Pinpoint effective locations for new real estate accordingly.

Regional Travel Metrics: Analyze metrics like average annual daily traffic (AADT) counts to understand the total number of vehicles traveling through a region. Compare AADT metrics for different areas and choose higher volume ones for better business outcomes..

 

How to use transportation data for optimized real estate site selection

Transportation data guides better real estate site selection by backing choices up with evidence of consumer behaviors. Using insights around customer travel tendencies and preferences gives companies confidence that their projects will work.

  • Choosing high-potential areas: Base real estate or development decisions on travel data from your ideal customer profiles. By validating where your target buyer is coming from and most frequently going, you can place new business locations in optimal areas.
  • Gaining a competitive foothold: Stake your business’s claim in a prime real estate area before your competition can and be the first to attract new customers. Capture new business by securing the best real estate available.
  • Allocating resources efficiently: Align your business resources and objectives with data-driven indicators. Study vehicle patterns and demand to validate business hypotheses. Evaluate the effects of a business decision based on the data to plan better for future projects.
  • Testing a pilot of EV chargers: Fuel stations and convenience store businesses can use data to choose the best spots to add a small number of EV charging stations and test the results of doing so before potentially rolling them out across all their locations nationwide. Capture new customers by installing EV charging options at your stop centers.
  • Identifying the total addressable market: Home improvement companies, department stores and larger retailers can analyze traffic data to assess the whole potential market in a new area by surveying traffic data. See the total volume of commercial vehicles in an area and infer where smart investments could be made as a result.

Here are three primary examples of using transportation data for optimized site selection.

 

Example #1: Market Analysis

This map breaks down the potential addressable market for a new business location based on heavy-duty vehicle counts. Knowing which directions these vehicles are moving helps organizations such as fuel companies place new sites on the sides of the most traffic-heavy roads.

 

Example #2: Travel Volume Analysis

This visualization shows where traffic is heading in relation to three different sites and additionally highlights key differences in overall vehicle volume. The bar graphs detail the vehicle stop breakdowns at each location, helping a company understand how much traffic competing locations might be receiving compared to theirs.

 

Example #3 – Stop Locations

Maps showing the disparity in vehicle stops for two competing businesses’ locations along the same road. Location D is seeing a higher percentage of stops from vehicles traveling north westbound, while Location A is experiencing a higher share of stops for vehicles moving south eastbound. Knowing which direction of traffic is contributing to a majority of a location’s business helps companies better understand consumer behaviors and tailor their strategies accordingly.

 

Making better site decisions with stratifiable transportation insights

When it comes to choosing your next business location, our data is worth the investment. Geotab ITS provides trustworthy, ultra-reliable transportation analytics that cover 99.9% of primary roadways in the U.S and Canada as well as 85% of secondary roadways. Our contextualized insights can be stratified into vehicle types, vocations, classes and more, giving you unparalleled depth of knowledge to support virtually any site selection project you’re working on. Reach out to us to learn how we can help set your next business location up for a profitable outcome.

Schedule a demo of our Altitude platform to learn about how our insights can guide you to a data-driven site selection strategy.

 

 

You might also be interested in

BLOG

Geotab ITS at Connect 2025: Our mobility insights pitstop for transportation planners and businesses

Learn about Altitude at Geotab Connect 2025, featuring real-world use cases, hands-on workshops and a glimpse into the future of transportation planning.

BLOG

A tale of North American resilience: Unearthing the unique stories of five bridges using rich mobility insights

Our latest eBook highlights how mobility insights can help surface indicators about the resilience of five key bridges and regions in North America.

BLOG

What are contextual vehicle insights and why are they beneficial for transportation planners?

Discover why contextual vehicle insights are a must for transportation planners as they develop more effective policies and infrastructure.