When Jennifer Wilson, co-owner and operations manager of Inland Empire Fleet Maintenance, first walked into the shop she and her husband owned in 2019, she had already been in the transportation industry for over a decade. After holding a bevy of positions, from driver to dispatcher to terminal manager, it was safe to say she’d already faced all kinds of challenges.
“I’ve been dealing with the ‘women have to do it twice as good to be equal to a man’ the whole time,” she noted at a conference panel discussing women in the heavy-duty repair industry in 2024. “No matter what it was, driving, turning wrenches, etc.”
“You have to prove yourself a little bit, but when you know your stuff, you know your stuff. It doesn’t matter who you are,” Wilson added. “You just have to be confident that you know what you’re doing and that you get it.”
But looking at the shop she and husband Steve Wilson built together, she knew she’d found her place and was determined to succeed, no matter what it took.
“It's just my own stubbornness of, ‘You know what? We're not going to fail at this,’” Wilson recalled later.
Luckily, the 51-year-old has practice handling the unexpected problems that pop up in commercial maintenance. She’s cultivated a cool head in crisis situations and while volunteering as a firefighter over the years. This grit and tenacity have seen her thrive in a field where only 10.4% of truck and tractor operators and 21.8% of transportation, storage, and distribution managers are women, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.