{"id":3967,"date":"2017-05-05T17:20:00","date_gmt":"2017-05-05T17:20:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/projects\/horsesforsources\/accenture-utility-energy-conference_050517\/"},"modified":"2021-12-03T04:36:26","modified_gmt":"2021-12-03T04:36:26","slug":"accenture-utility-energy-conference_050517","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.horsesforsources.com\/accenture-utility-energy-conference_050517\/","title":{"rendered":"How a chicken, Clay Christensen, Nikki Beach and a bunch of Utility executives provide a sunny outlook"},"content":{"rendered":"
This week we crossed the Atlantic to meet the cream of the crop of the utility industry in Miami for the International Utilities and Energy Conference, hosted by Accenture. A packed agenda entertained the brightest minds in the utility space from around the globe.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n We were in for a surprise: from the first session to the closing key-note it was one big future-oriented gig, focusing on business value instead of enabling technology. No sales pitches from the provider (many providers can learn from this), zero bad jokes… and a highly engaged audience (yes, we are still talking about utility executives here) that wanted to smell, touch and work towards a better future with more and better client interaction. They all want to be more profitable but more important (for real) greener! Their customers demand it; the infrastructure is ripe for an upgrade, and so the question is, why not make it happen? <\/span><\/p>\n Fossil is the new uncool, and renewable energy (with loads of digital components for their clients) the new hipsters, the future of utilities!<\/span><\/p>\n Let us explain with a couple of fantastic examples that had a high impact on your peers at this week’s event. Over to you Derk!<\/span><\/p>\n Thanks, Bram. We had an interesting time for sure. Let me give you some quick pointers on the new, the unexpected and the future that headlined IUEC 2017. <\/span><\/p>\n A dizzying barrage of industry shattering disruptions thrown at attendants<\/strong><\/p>\n As one Utility executive put it; the first day of the event was a succession of shock and awe, fear and nausea. Florida Power & Light CEO Eric Silagy set the stage immediately; the unstoppable force of renewables and how being clean is good business. It is a vision that not everyone dares to execute on as radically as Florida Power & Light, but they are doing it without hesitation. CEO Silagy provided an excellent example of lowering his customer’s bills by taking the most polluting oil and coal plants offline. <\/span> <\/p>\n