Smart Home Services: Electric Vehicle Management ITRON Utility Week 2012
By Gerry Vurciaga Director - Global Smart Energy Services & Partners at Capgemini.
Cambridge Consultants' success factors for smart appliancesRachelHarker
An overview of the factors that will be important for successful smart appliance development, taking into consideration: Working with the wider ecosystem, providing real benefits to the consumer, roadmapping and system design
From Subscriber to Silicon: Why end-to-end technology value chain insight is ...IHS
How do technology adoption trends impact the entire supply chain? What future opportunities are shaping today's raw materials, semiconductors, and displays?
It's a brave new world where "everything technology" is a common denominator for an otherwise uncommon explosion in disruptive innovations, shifting consumer behaviors, and volatile swings in supply and demand that reverberate throughout all technology-consuming markets. As the downstream battle for subscribers intensifies, the upstream battle for the silicon, intellectual property, and raw materials that are increasingly used within automotive, medical, industrial, and other sectors is just as fierce.
While most savvy organizations understand the interconnected nature of the supply chain, many also lack a fundamental understanding of the issues that will impact them most.
Join IHS and Supply & Demand Chain Executive as they share insights into some of the top issues impacting technology, media, and telecommunications value chains. They will raise questions to key issues like the future of pay-TV and how this impacts set-top boxes, software platforms, mobile devices, network operators, and chip production. They will outline the importance of having supply chain intelligence from "subscriber to silicon" by addressing such topics as:
How do technology adoption trends impact the entire supply chain?
How is the consumer having such a major impact on operator strategies and subscribers?
What future opportunities are shaping today's raw materials, semiconductors, and displays?
How are themes like higher resolution, touch, or interface adoption driving the supply chain?
How are pay-TV, smart technology, and other ecosystems disrupting adjacent markets?
Who are the winners and losers and why should you care?
Rapidly changing upstream and downstream events shape today's technology landscape, the effects of which can create immediate winners and losers in the supply chain. Don't miss this chance to learn the importance of understanding the end-to-end dynamics influencing your supply chain.
Cambridge Consultants' success factors for smart appliancesRachelHarker
An overview of the factors that will be important for successful smart appliance development, taking into consideration: Working with the wider ecosystem, providing real benefits to the consumer, roadmapping and system design
From Subscriber to Silicon: Why end-to-end technology value chain insight is ...IHS
How do technology adoption trends impact the entire supply chain? What future opportunities are shaping today's raw materials, semiconductors, and displays?
It's a brave new world where "everything technology" is a common denominator for an otherwise uncommon explosion in disruptive innovations, shifting consumer behaviors, and volatile swings in supply and demand that reverberate throughout all technology-consuming markets. As the downstream battle for subscribers intensifies, the upstream battle for the silicon, intellectual property, and raw materials that are increasingly used within automotive, medical, industrial, and other sectors is just as fierce.
While most savvy organizations understand the interconnected nature of the supply chain, many also lack a fundamental understanding of the issues that will impact them most.
Join IHS and Supply & Demand Chain Executive as they share insights into some of the top issues impacting technology, media, and telecommunications value chains. They will raise questions to key issues like the future of pay-TV and how this impacts set-top boxes, software platforms, mobile devices, network operators, and chip production. They will outline the importance of having supply chain intelligence from "subscriber to silicon" by addressing such topics as:
How do technology adoption trends impact the entire supply chain?
How is the consumer having such a major impact on operator strategies and subscribers?
What future opportunities are shaping today's raw materials, semiconductors, and displays?
How are themes like higher resolution, touch, or interface adoption driving the supply chain?
How are pay-TV, smart technology, and other ecosystems disrupting adjacent markets?
Who are the winners and losers and why should you care?
Rapidly changing upstream and downstream events shape today's technology landscape, the effects of which can create immediate winners and losers in the supply chain. Don't miss this chance to learn the importance of understanding the end-to-end dynamics influencing your supply chain.
Brief introduction to Rubik Financial Limited - the 'Bank-in-a-Box' for financial institutions.
Rubik has product specialities in core, cards, collections and channels, but also delivers a Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) complete banking system.
Review of the changes impacting operators, and their need for applications developers to use their network to remain relevant to their customers as operators.
ODCA Forecast 2012 Keynote: Curt Aubley, President, Open Data Center Alliance; VP/CTO NexGen Cyber Innovation & Technology; Lockheed Martin Information Systems & Global Services
Why Smart Meters need to define interfaces to the Internet and Consumer HANRuth Thomson
Richard Williams gave this presentation at the IET conference on 8th March 2011.
Across the world governments, utilities and industry bodies are working hard to define and roll out Smart Metering Systems which will work for their customers, industry structure and regulatory environment. There are many issues that need to be considered, including the interfaces to the internet and Consumer HAN
IBM collaborates with government leaders to transform services, improve outcomes of social programs, facilitate global trade, protect borders and enhance public safety.
The digital transformation: Used car retail performance management 2.0Jörg Höhner
E.N.G. Vehicle Remarketing Summit 2016
The digital transformation: Used car retail performance management 2.0
Jörg Höhner
Global Managing Director INDICATA, Autorola Group
Amsterdam – January 26, 2016
Brief introduction to Rubik Financial Limited - the 'Bank-in-a-Box' for financial institutions.
Rubik has product specialities in core, cards, collections and channels, but also delivers a Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) complete banking system.
Review of the changes impacting operators, and their need for applications developers to use their network to remain relevant to their customers as operators.
ODCA Forecast 2012 Keynote: Curt Aubley, President, Open Data Center Alliance; VP/CTO NexGen Cyber Innovation & Technology; Lockheed Martin Information Systems & Global Services
Why Smart Meters need to define interfaces to the Internet and Consumer HANRuth Thomson
Richard Williams gave this presentation at the IET conference on 8th March 2011.
Across the world governments, utilities and industry bodies are working hard to define and roll out Smart Metering Systems which will work for their customers, industry structure and regulatory environment. There are many issues that need to be considered, including the interfaces to the internet and Consumer HAN
IBM collaborates with government leaders to transform services, improve outcomes of social programs, facilitate global trade, protect borders and enhance public safety.
The digital transformation: Used car retail performance management 2.0Jörg Höhner
E.N.G. Vehicle Remarketing Summit 2016
The digital transformation: Used car retail performance management 2.0
Jörg Höhner
Global Managing Director INDICATA, Autorola Group
Amsterdam – January 26, 2016
The Smart Metering Networking & Operations Summit provides the opportunity to exchange strategies and best practices for implementing a more stable grid – from required components to the recognition of realistic deadlines for deploying advanced technologies.
Engage with your peers to build a NEW BUSINESS MODEL for smart grid projects, ensure you are making the RIGHT INVESTMENT in technology and secure PUBLIC SUPPORT for your AMI pilots
Learnings of how to simplifying io t solutions and securing business valueDan Mårtensson
Sierra Wireless presentation from M2M Forum April 2015 covering:
- Key learnings and recommendations from IoT projects
- Tips on how to simplify IoT implementations and securing business value
- Customer references
Implementing and Monetizing Solar & Storage ApplicationsCapgemini
Learn the biggest challenges faced by utilities and equipment manufacturers in the solar and energy storage value chain. This presentation covers those challenges with the help of case studies. You will also find recommendations to adapt to this new environment and in particular build the required digital platform.
2012 Carrier Innovation Priorities – Summary slides from TC3 2011Telecom Council
13 global telecom carriers took the stage at TC3 2011: Telecom Council Carrier Connections to draw attention to their innovative sides - what innovations they'd like to see from the startups and vendors and how to best work with them. This presentation includes the summary slides from many of the carriers who presented. These slides include the particular innovations they have a special interest in as well as contact information.
Save the date for TC3 2012 - held September 12-13 on the Juniper campus in Sunnyvale, CA.
Be sure to join our mailing list at www.telecomcouncil.com
COVID-19 heightened chronic challenges within the global healthcare industry. It became a catalyst amid fierce competition and tight regulations for health providers and payers to focus on digital health, cybersecurity, patient data transparency, and a variety of customer-centric and operational enhancements. As a result, we found the 2022 trendline pointing to improvements in access and quality of care.
Healthcare challenges such as optimizing the cost of care while simultaneously enabling personalized interventions and consumer-friendly shoppable services are long-standing − but, historically, the industry has been slow to react.
Read our Top Trends 2022 report to examine the lingering ramifications of the pandemic, responses from medical and insurance organizations, and the worldwide impact of ever-changing regulatory standards and mandates.
A combination of factors − the pandemic, catastrophic weather events, evolving policyholder expectations, and insurers’ drive for operational efficiency and future relevance − are sparking P&C industry changes.
In a post-COVID, new-normal environment, the most strategic insurers are building resilient, crisis-proof enterprises poised to take advantage of emerging and future business opportunities. They are leveraging advanced data analytics and novel technologies to assure agility and achieve positive revenue and customer satisfaction outcomes. Competitive advantage will hinge on accelerated digitalization and faster go-to-market. Therefore, win-win partnerships and embedded services with InsurTechs and other ecosystem players are critical.
Read Capgemini’s Top P&C Insurance Trends 2022 for a glimpse at the tactical and strategic initiatives carriers are undertaking to boost customer-centricity, product agility, intelligent processes, and an open ecosystem to ensure profitable growth and future-readiness.
This analysis provides an overview of the top trends in the commercial banking sector as they shift to technology high gear to boost client efficiency and battle a volatile, uncertain, competitive, and evolving landscape.
First, it was retail banking. Now, advanced technology is shifting to – and disrupting − the commercial banking space. Many commercial banks, known for paperwork, red tape, and branch dependency, were unprepared to support clients during their post-COVID-19 ramp-up. But now, the digital pivot to new mindsets, partnerships, and processes is in overdrive.
As commercial banks grapple with competition from FinTechs, BigTechs, and alternative lenders, their inability
to fulfill SME demands and pandemic after-shocks necessitates transformative process changes and a move
to experiential, sustainable, and inclusive banking models. We expect banks to strive to meet the demands
of corporate clients and SMEs by digitally transforming critical workflows and improving client experience.
Additionally, incremental process improvements in the middle and back-office that leverage intelligent
automation will keep the competition at bay because engaged clients are loyal.
Adopting newer methods to mine data and moving to as-a-Service models will prepare commercial banks
to flexibly respond to newcomers and find ways to co-exist through effective collaboration. The time has come for commercial banks to put transformation on the fast track as lending losses in wallet and market share could spill over to other functions!
How incumbents react and respond to 2022 trends could determine their relevancy and resiliency in the years ahead.
The Covid-19 pandemic necessitated the payments industry undergo a facelift, sparked by novel approaches from new-age players, fostered by industry consolidation, and customers’ demand for end-to-end experience. Crossing the threshold, the industry is entering a new era – Payments 4.X, where payments are embedded and invisible, and an enabling function to provide frictionless customer experience. As customers make a permanent shift to next-gen payment methods, Digital IDs are critical for a seamless payment experience. The B2B payments segment is witnessing rapid digitization. BigTechs, PayTechs, and industry newcomers are ready to jump in with newfangled solutions to help underserved small to medium-sized businesses (SMBs).
As incumbents struggle with profits, new-age firms are forging ahead to take the lead in the Payments 4.X era by riding the success of non-card products and services. The new era demands collaboration, platformification, and firms can unleash full market potential only by embracing API-based business models and open ecosystems. Data prowess and enhanced payment processing capabilities are inevitable to thrive ahead. The clock is ticking for banks and traditional payments firms because the competitive advantage is not guaranteed forever. As industry players seek economies of scale, consolidations loom, and non-banks explore new territories to threaten incumbents’ market share. While all these 2022 trends are at play, central bank digital currency (CBDC) is emerging globally and might open a new chapter in the current payments landscape.
As we slowly move out of the pandemic, financial services firms have learned the criticality of virtual engagement to business resilience. Wealth management firms will need capabilities to cater to new-age clients and deliver new-age services. This report aims to understand and analyze the top trends in the Wealth Management industry this year and beyond.
A year ago, our Top Trends in Wealth Management report emphasized how the pandemic sparked disruption and digital transformation and changing investor attitudes around Environmental, Social, and Corporate Governance (ESG) products. As we begin 2022, many of those trends continue to hold as COVID-19’s wide-reaching effects continue to influence the wealth management industry.
As wealth management (WM) firms supercharge their digital transformation journeys, investments in cybersecurity and human-centered design are becoming critical to building superior digital client experience (CX). Another holdover trend − sustainable investing – is gaining mainstream attention and generating increasingly sophisticated client demands. Data and analytics capabilities will become ever more essential for ESG scoring and personalized customer engagement. As large financial services firms refocus on their wealth management business while new digital players make industry strides, competition is becoming historically intense. Not surprisingly, client experience is the new battleground.
This analysis provides an overview of the top trends in the retail banking sector driven by the competition, digital transformation, and innovation led by retail banks exploring novel ways to create and retain value in evolving landscape.
COVID-19 caught banks off guard and shook legacy mindsets to the core. With 20/20 (2020) hindsight, firms are more aware, digitally resilient, and financially stable as they head into 2022. The trials of the past 18 months forced firms to shore up existing business and consider new models and revenue streams.
Customer-centricity remains at the top of most FS agendas and is a 2022 focal point. Banks will focus on achieving operational excellence as diligently as delivering superior CX. In 2022 and beyond, it will be paramount for FIs to explore and invest in new technologies to remain relevant and resilient.
Banking 4.X will arrive in full force in 2022 with platform-supported firms monetizing diverse ecosystem capabilities and aggressively harvesting data to create experiential customer journeys through intelligent and personalized engagements. The new era will compel future-focused banks to finally abandon legacy infrastructure and collaborate with third-party specialists to solidify their best-fit, long-term roles. Increasingly, open platforms will make banks invisible as banking becomes embedded into customer lifestyles. At the same time, banks will shed asset-heavy models and shift to the cloud for greater agility, speed to market, and faster innovation. The shift will act as a precursor to adopting new technologies on the horizon – 5G and Decentralized Finance.
The recent past was filled will extraordinary lessons for financial institutions. Now is the time to act on those learnings and move forward profitably.
While COVID-19 has sparked the demand for life insurance, it has also exposed the operating model vulnerabilities in distribution, servicing, and customer retention. In a post-COVID, new-normal environment, insurers need to enhance their capabilities around advanced data management and focus on seamless and secure data sharing to provide superior CX and hyper-personalized offerings. Accelerated digitalization and faster go-to-market are vital to remaining competitive, and win-win partnerships with ecosystems are critical in the journey.
Read our Top Life Insurance Trends 2022 to explore the tactical and strategic initiatives carriers undertake to acquire competencies around customer centricity, product agility, intelligent processes, and an open ecosystem to ensure profitable growth and future readiness.
Property & Casualty Insurance Top Trends 2021Capgemini
The Property & Casualty insurance landscape is evolving quickly with the changing risk landscape, entry of new players, and changing customer expectations. The ripple effects of COVID-19 on the P&C insurance industry and natural disasters such as forest fires have adversely impacted insurance firm books.
In this scenario, to ensure growth and future-readiness, the most strategic insurers strive to be ‘Inventive Insurers’ – assuming a customer-centric approach, deploying intelligent processes, practicing business resilience and go-to-market agility, and embracing an open ecosystem.
Read our Property & Casualty Insurance Top Trends 2021 report to explore the strategies insurers are adapting to remain competitive amidst the evolving business landscape and how they can explore new ways to enhance their profitability.
A combination of factors such as demographic changes, evolving consumer preferences, and desire to become operationally efficient were already spurring changes in the life insurance industry. Enter 2020 – the COVID-19 pandemic is having a significant impact on the industry.
At the peak of disruption, the focus was on ensuring business continuity, but new initiatives are cropping up to tackle the challenges as the industry is adapting to the new normal.
Furthermore, COVID-19 has acted as a catalyst, pushing life insurers to prioritize their efforts on improving customer centricity, developing go-to-market agility, making processes intelligent, building business resilience, and embracing the open ecosystem.
Read our Life Insurance Top Trends 2021 report to explore the strategies insurers are adopting to manage the changing market dynamics.
The uncertainty of 2020 is setting the global tone for the immediate future in the financial services industry. So it is no surprise banks are laser-focused on business resilience, emphasizing both financial and operational risks. The need to adapt quickly to new normal conditions through virtual customer engagement is clear.
Customer centricity continues to drive commercial banks’ solution designs. And, the pandemic compelled products that deliver immediate client value ‒ quick digital onboarding, seamless lending, and support for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). The onus is now on banks to go to market more quickly, which requires the implementation of intelligent processes and integrating corporates’ enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems with banking workflows.
To achieve go-to-market agility, banks across the globe are investing in and collaborating with FinTechs. Many of these partnerships are focused on boosting digital lending and providing seamless support to anxious small-business clients in need of assurance.
With newfound impetus for FinTech collaboration, commercial banks have picked up their step on the path toward OpenX. COVID-19 made it evident that survival during turbulence is manageable through collaboration with ecosystem players.
Read our Top Trends in Commercial Banking 2021 report to explore the strategies banks are adapting to transform their businesses from a product-led, siloed model to an experiential and agile plan.
When we published the Top Trends in Wealth Management 2020, little did we foresee the pandemic that would sweep through the world and disrupt life as we knew it. Yet, when we reviewed last year’s trends, we found that many still hold and some have taken on even greater relevance. One such trend is sustainable investing, which had begun to gain prominence as investors became more aware of ESG considerations, and firms rolled out more sustainable investing offerings. Another trend that has accelerated in the post-COVID world is the importance of investing in omnichannel capabilities and technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance personalization and advisor effectiveness. The pandemic has driven wealth management firms to accelerate their digital transformation journey, with some immediate focus areas being interactive client communications and digital advisor tools.
There is no denying that time is of the essence. Yes, budgets are tight, but the Open X ecosystem offers wealth management firms opportunities to reimagine their operating models and deliver excellent customer experience cost-effectively.
Top trends in Payments: 2020 highlighted the payments industry’s flux driven by new trends in technology adoption, innovative solutions, and changing consumer behavior. The pandemic has tested the digital mastery of players, who are already grappling with transition. Non-cash transactions are on a robust growth path, accelerated by increased adoption during COVID-19. Regulators are working to instill trust and address non-cash payments risk amid unparalleled growth as players collaborate to quell uncertainty. Regional initiatives, such as the P27 (Nordics real-time payments system) and the EPI (European Payments Initiative), are gaining traction in response to country-level fragmentation and competition.
Investment in emerging technologies is looked upon as an elixir to mitigate fraud, data-driven offerings are being considered for providing value-added propositions, and distributed ledger technology is in focus for digital currency solutions, efficiency enhancement, and cost gains. New players, such as retailers/merchants, are integrating payments into their value chains while technology giants are upscaling their financial services game by weaving offerings around payments as a center stage. Constrained by budgets, firms consider business models such as Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) to provide cost-effective and superior customer experience.
A combination of factors, including demographic changes, evolving consumer preferences, and regulatory and compliance mandates, were already spurring change in the health insurance industry. Enter 2020 and the COVID-19 pandemic, which is having sweeping implications for the industry.
At the peak of disruption, the focus was on ensuring business continuity, but new initiatives are cropping up to tackle the challenges as the industry adapts to the new normal.
Furthermore, some changes are here to stay, and it will be prudent for the industry players to be resilient to the market shifts by being agile, improving member centricity, making processes intelligent, and embracing the open ecosystem.
Read our Health Insurance Top Trends 2021 report to explore the strategies insurers are adopting to manage the external pressures.
The banking industry’s resilience is being tested as banks navigate through a remarkable 2020 filled with uncertainties. The impact of COVID-19 has been about setting the tone for future operational models. Retail banks have shifted focus towards integrated risk management with a more holistic view of operational risks. Adapting to the new normal, banks have prioritized cost transformation while engaging customers virtually. Incumbents sought to be more responsible within fast-changing environmental conditions and ESG remained a critical focus.
To provide more experiential services, banks are leveraging techniques such as segment-of-one to hyper-personalize offerings while aiming to humanize digital channels for increased engagement. Banks are also revamping middle and back offices, going beyond the front end leveraging intelligent processes. Open X is enabling banks to play on their strengths and use the expertise of ecosystem players. Going forward, banks are poised to become an enhanced one-stop shop by providing consumers value-adding FS and non-FS experiences.
To acquire customers in cost-effective manner, retail banks are tapping value-based propositions ‒ such as POS financing and mortgage refinancing. Further, Banking-as-Service provides incumbents a way to provide their high-value offerings to other players. In preparation for the future, banks will be looking to improve their go-to-market agility by leveraging the benefits of cloud. This analysis outlines the top 10 trends in retail banking for 2021.
Explore how Capgemini’s Connected autonomous planning fine-tunes Consumer Products Company’s operations for manufacturing, transport, procurement, and virtually every other aspect of the supply-value network in a touchless, autonomous way.
Financial services is undergoing a paradigm shift that is forcing incumbent retail banks to rethink growth strategies as they struggle to remain relevant. Growing competition from BigTechs, FinTech firms, and challenger banks has added to the complexity created by increasingly stringent regulatory and compliance requirements. Customers now expect a seamless customer journey and personalized offerings because they have become accustomed to top-notch individualized service from GAFA giants Google, Apple, Facebook, and Amazon. The changing ecosystem offers established banks new, unexplored opportunities and encourages a transition beyond traditional products to meet the exacting requirements of today’s customers. Bank collaboration with FinTech and RegTech partners is becoming commonplace. Incumbents are exploring point-of-sale financing and unsecured consumer lending, while they also boost their digital channel competencies to reach a broader customer base. Banks are beginning to accept open APIs and are working with third-party specialists to create an open shared marketplace. Technological advancements such as AI are fueling efforts to evolve customer onboarding and touchpoint processes. Increasingly, banks are turning to design thinking methodology to understand the customer journey, extract deep insights, and develop a more refined user experience across the customer lifecycle.
Our analysis of the top retail banking trends for 2020 offers a glimpse into the fast-changing banking ecosystem and explores the tools and solutions being used to face new-age challenges.
Aspects of the life insurance industry have remained constant for years – and so have premiums. Traditional savings products have taken a huge hit in terms of attractiveness because low interest-rates prevail. Meanwhile, the risk landscape is shifting, and insurers need to align better with the emerging business environment, manage changing customer preferences, and improve operational efficiencies. Within today’s scenario, industry players are undertaking tactical and strategic shifts in attempts to manage unpredictable market dynamics. Insurers must develop alternative products to breathe new life into policies and leverage emerging technologies (artificial intelligence (AI), analytics, and blockchain) to improve efficiency, agility, flexibility, and customer-centricity.
Read Top Trends in Life Insurance: 2020 for a look at the innovative steps future-focused insurers are considering to meet industry challenges and opportunities.
The health insurance industry is evolving and undergoing significant changes. As the risk landscape shifts, insurers are working to improve operational efficiencies, meet evolving customer preferences, and align better with the changing business environment. Accordingly, payers must adapt and align business models and offerings. An incisive tactical approach is required to accommodate members’ needs and related emerging risks — medical, health, and environmental. Advanced technologies such as artificial intelligence, analytics, automation, and connected devices are enabling insurers to manage these changes proactively, partner with members, and help to prevent risks, all the while continuing to fulfill payer responsibilities.
Read Top Trends in Health Insurance: 2020 to learn which strategies insurers are adopting to navigate and align with today’s challenges.
Similar to other financial services domains, payments is evolving into an open ecosystem. The EU’s Payment Services Directive (PSD2) pioneered open banking by encouraging banks and established payments players to securely open the systems to foster competition, innovation, and more customer choices. In tandem with non-cash transaction growth, regulations are driving banks and payments firms to expand their array of payment methods and channels. Governments are encouraging financial inclusion by also promoting the adoption of non-cash payments. Increasingly, merchants and corporates seek to offer alternative payment systems because of widespread popularity among consumers. Alternative payments also enable merchants to provide real-time and cross-border payments to boost business efficiency.
Banks, payment firms, card firms, BigTechs, FinTechs, and other players are continuously developing new technology to cash in on market changes. However, data breaches and fraud continue to hinder innovation as firms devote countless resources each year to address security issues. Many governments are also designing new regulations to reduce ecosystem threats. All these measures are expected to make the current ecosystem much more secure and simple for players as well as customers.
Top Trends in Payments: 2020 explores and analyzes payments ecosystem initiatives and solutions for this year and beyond
11. EVM Service: Open Framework
• Provides the utility to enable
integration to DERs efficiently
• Uses Open Standards Interfaces to
enable competition of vendor
solutions
• Leverages AMI and other systems to
provide data/information to
customers
• Flexible architecture enables utilities
to implement new tariffs and
programs
• Utilities can effectively manage
DERs to optimize the grid because
of improved monitoring and control
16. EVM Service: Preparedness Roadmap
The Smart Services Platform enables the adoption of clean transportation
vehicles and integrate them into the wider smart, sustainable economy.
EVM Service allows utilities to have full visibility and management of electric
vehicle charging using open standards. The platform also provides
customers with mobile and web-based applications to monitor
and control charging sessions. Maturity Phase
Growth Phase
Task V – Implementation Task VIII – Program Expansion
of the EVM Service EVM Services scalability
Pilot roll-out Measure EVM Services
Early Adoption Obtain baseline data performance on the grid
Phase Task VI – Evaluate / Test Offer incentives to customers
Show initial results to participate
Task I – Align with Utility EVM Goals
Encourage customer Task IX – Monitor Achievements
Task II – Identify Stakeholders participation Celebrate Achievements!
Task III – Understand Requirements Task VII – Adjust EVM
Define utility specific goals for EVM Service as necessary
Service
Task IV – Determine Timeline
Create the Vision Set the Foundation Achieve the Results
Months 12 -18 Months 24 - 36 Years 3+
In collaboration with