The first job of FuelMap is simple: help people find nearby stations that are more likely to have the fuel they need. But availability is only the first layer of utility.
Over time, the product can become much more valuable by helping people react earlier and plan better.
Notifications that are actually useful
Future notifications should not behave like generic promotional push. They should be practical. For example: a person could follow a nearby station for Petrol, ask for an alert when confidence improves, or get a notice when fuel becomes available within a chosen radius.
That kind of notification turns the product from a map you occasionally check into a tool that reduces repeated manual searching.
Fuel prices and planning
Price visibility is another strong next step. Once availability is useful, people naturally want to compare where fuel exists and where it is worth buying. That unlocks better trip decisions, not just emergency decisions.
The long-term ambition is a calmer, more actionable fuel utility: live availability today, clearer alerts tomorrow, and stronger price and planning intelligence after that.