論説
Digital Strategy for Utilities
Digital Strategy for Utilities
Understanding the disruptive forces changing the electricity sector can help executives focus on the most promising opportunities.
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論説
Understanding the disruptive forces changing the electricity sector can help executives focus on the most promising opportunities.
At a recent meeting that brought together utilities executives from around the world with Silicon Valley energy innovators, attendees were discussing, among other topics, the state of energy storage. One utility executive asked the Silicon Valley hosts when they expected to see utility-scale storage deployed broadly. “Oh, not for a long time,” one of the new energy executives replied, “maybe 2019.”
For the stunned utility executives, most of whom think of a “long time” as decades, the remark was a wake-up call to the pace at which new ideas and technologies are disrupting their industry. Today, most of the electricity sector lags behind the progress that other sectors have made in digitalization, customer engagement and the everyday use of advanced analytics to generate value from data. But change is beginning to unfold quickly, and it’s now clear that the sector will look dramatically different in a decade or so.
Some of those differences will improve operations, such as the new data-analytic capabilities that one North American utility is using to improve its accuracy in forecasting the duration of power outages. Others will happen “beyond the meter,” with new products and services designed to make life easier for customers—a task that will be no small trick for executives who have sometimes referred to their customers as “meter points.” These are only a few of the hundreds of opportunities developing as the potential of digitalization dawns on the industry.
Utility executives know the direction that change will take, and they are beginning to see what their industry will look like as this transformation takes root. But while the direction is known, the pace is less certain—and probably more rapid than most executives are anticipating. In the interim, executives are beginning to grapple with the challenges of this transition, and many are identifying the opportunities.
With all this in mind, how should utility executives determine their digital strategy? While every company’s situation is unique, we see some common themes to successful digital strategies.
Some of the most intriguing opportunities in the electricity sector are in services and products beyond the meter, where consumers interact with their energy use. Consumer services will require an entirely new set of capabilities that many utilities have not adequately developed. Success in this domain will probably require partnerships with new energy companies that have emerged without the legacy and regulatory issues that can slow down utilities. Most of these new companies have demonstrated their ability to design and market services from the customer perspective outwards.
Moreover, utility executives could miss critical innovations if they look only at their own sector. The clearest example of this is the innovation in the automotive sector that will have an enormous impact on utilities: as electric vehicles (EVs) become more popular, the experience curve in making their batteries will enable cost-effective energy storage at a utility scale, far quicker than if the utility sector were left to bring down those costs on its own.
With these opportunities in mind, where should utility executives focus their efforts and deploy capital in pursuit of the most fruitful opportunities? According to Bain’s analysis of the investment within utilities and among new energy insurgents, six digital themes within three categories (assets, operations, customers) appear to be more important and promising than others (see Figure 1).
To gain a better understanding of how utilities are prioritizing their investments in digital transformation, we talked with executives about their plans and their organizations.
Most of the executives we surveyed believe that digital is being deployed to deliver more personalized, integrated and interactive relationships with customers (see Figure 2). But fewer than half of those we surveyed believe their companies have a compelling case for change, or have invested in executing their digital vision. More than 50% indicated that their companies are not yet leveraging digital technologies to reduce R&D times, improve safety or gain more insight into their supply chain, and only 28% said their companies are at work embedding digital technology to capture the benefits of Big Data, automation and predictive analytics. Perhaps most worrying, 73% indicated their companies did not monitor for disrupters or invest in new business models.
The electricity sector has been slow to change, due to a range of barriers, including its unique regulatory and business model dynamics (see Figure 3). From here on, however, change is likely to accelerate. Traditional boundaries in the value chain are breaking down, even if the regulatory models are slow to reflect that. The cost-of-service economic model, which offers no reward for taking risks or innovating, will have to evolve. Old cultural biases for things developed “in house” will need to give way to a recognition that partnerships and alliances with third parties are necessary in order to gain access to much-needed capabilities.
To bring about such radical change, utility teams will need to broaden their thinking about which people and projects to support. When developing digital strategy, most leadership teams have both doers and dreamers. Doers are focused on the here and now. They want to cut through the digital hype and direct the company’s energy toward implementing practical digital initiatives. Because the utilities industry depends on a high degree of confidence and an aversion to risk for capital-intensive and mission-critical investments, the leaders of utility organizations often are pragmatic engineers, who tend to embrace such specificity.
But digital transformations also need dreamers, those who focus on the long term. Dreamers want to define the full set of ways that digital could create opportunities, and they don’t shy away from a chance to become the disrupter. These opportunities for new value are often discovered in the seams between traditional lines of business, places that would be overlooked in a traditional capital-deployment model that depends on established business themes, usually within specified siloes. The perspective of dreamers is critical, but often scarce in utility organizations. To move forward, utilities will have to learn how to tap the insights and energies of these visionaries.
Most companies are not lacking in ideas about how to put digital technology to work. The challenge is figuring out how to harness those ideas into a coherent set of strategy-based initiatives that can deliver meaningful impact. Digital transformation efforts often founder on the sheer complexity of using technology to increase a company’s speed and learning at scale. Most leadership teams understand the opportunity, but underinvest in the changes to the culture that enable speed, learning and agility. Digital leaders think about their transformations in terms of several broad themes.
Chart pathways from digital departure to digital destination. Successful transformations set bold ambitions and build the capabilities to achieve them. Leading teams understand the point of departure, learn where gaps exist and then hire or partner with others to fill them. They invest in analytics capabilities and IT architecture that enable them to develop rapidly and draw meaningful insights from data. Great orchestration boils down to a system that identifies the ideas with the most potential to have enterprise-wide impact and then rallies the organization around them, top to bottom. This requires a coordinated effort at all levels of the corporation—alignment at the top, agility in the middle and mobilization at the front line (see Figure 4).
If this sounds like a recipe for disrupting everything at once, it often is—digital transformation involves change at every level of the organization. However, careful and deliberate orchestration makes the problem manageable. Digital leaders learn to break big ideas down into well-defined waves of practical, achievable stepping-stones that offer steady, incremental progress. They create what amounts to a digital factory that industrializes the process—prioritizing the best ideas, nurturing them, testing them and ultimately scaling them into game changers. Collectively, these waves of innovation build to sustained levels of superior performance over time, allowing the organization to make progress across many fronts simultaneously without overwhelming the organization.
Of all the pathways, utilities often struggle most with platforms and partners, and the operating model.
Understand disruptive forces in platforms and partners. Most investment in new energy technologies is coming from outside the utilities sector, including venture capital that is flowing into digital-native, new energy start-ups, particularly in electrification (including development of smart-charging and vehicle-to-grid systems), decentralization (including microgrids and renewable generations), and digitalization (including energy management, customer information systems, and monitoring and security).
Given the low success rates of new ventures, utility executives should continue to outsource early-stage innovation and the risk that accompanies it. They can then forge partnerships, and acquire or license technologies once they are proven. In the UK, Centrica built its connected-home service, Hive, through acquisitions, including deals of 65 million pounds in 2015 to buy AlertMe and 13 million pounds to buy FlowGem in 2016.
Evolve the operating model to support a digital utility. Operating models serve as the blueprint for how resources are organized and operated to get critical work done. As executives design the digital strategy of their utilities organizations, they are also reconfiguring the operating model, the organizational design and business processes to support a digital company. The model guides decisions about how people work together within and across the boundaries of the utility; how the center supports the rest of the organization, including field operations; and what norms and behaviors should be encouraged.
Digital and new energy technologies tend to traverse traditional boundaries, wreaking havoc on siloed organizations. Energy storage, for example, is a hybrid: a bit like a peaking plant, while also providing ancillary services and bearing qualities that make it part of the distribution infrastructure. Digital operating models must consider all of this, ensuring that accountability and information flow freely across the organization.
Only a year or two ago, many utilities executives were still sitting on the sidelines, deciding whether and how to advance on digital initiatives within their companies. This is much less common today: Nearly everyone we speak with now recognizes the opportunity and potential value at stake in the broad digital transformation under way in the electricity ecosystem. The most urgent tasks for senior executives today are understanding their point of departure, setting ambitious but realistic targets and moving quickly to capture advantage.
As leaders begin their digital transformation, they can start by taking a hard look at their current position and asking several pointed questions.
Julian Critchlow leads Bain & Company’s Utilities & Renewables practice globally, and Jason Glickman coleads the practice in the Americas. Julian is a partner in Bain’s London office, and Jason is a partner in San Francisco.