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Communicating Smart Meter Value

Sep 9 2010 - 2010-01-01 12:00:00 - Your City

If you are involved in Management or Customer Service and are responsible for communicating the value of smart meters to your utility customers, you don’t want to miss this online discussion - Communicating Smart Meter Value.  more...

Social Media: The new frontier in recruiting, communications and marketing

Sep 13 2010 - 2010-01-01 12:00:00 - Your City

Join social media mavens Matthew Burks and Amanda Shewmake as they provide an insider's perspective on how HR, communications and marketing professionals in energy companies can harness the power of social media to be more effective and productive. more...

Eliminating Obstacles and Delivering the Benefits of the Smart Grid - IBM's Optimized Energy Value Chain (OEVC)

Sep 14 2010 - 2010-01-01 12:00:00 - Your City

The convergence of power and information technologies in the smart grid has created opportunities for finer grained and broader controls of energy flows. These opportunities can improve electric service in multiple dimensions: lower cost, greater reliability, greater customer satisfaction, and more...

Achieving Operational Excellence - What to Consider Before Implementing or Upgrading Your Distribution Management Solutions

Sep 16 2010 - 2010-01-01 12:00:00 - Your City

Significant cost over runs. Changing business requirements. A well thought out plan is essential. Attend this free webcast discussion to hear inside hear three experts in utility operations discuss what utilities need to evaluate when they are considering upgrading or more...

Outsmarting the Smart Grid: IT, Security and Communication Infrastructure  Challenges & Opportunities for Utilities

Sep 21 2010 - 2010-01-01 12:00:00 - Your City

The smart grid is shifting the playing field for utilities. And when the game changes, it pays to be prepared. A nimble solutions partner can help you design the solutions that keep operations on track, even as new challenges come more...

1st CSP Today Concentrated Solar Thermal Power Summit India

Sep 7 2010 - Sep 8 2010 - New Delhi India

Deliver a profitable, productive and commercially successful large scale CSP business in India. Building on the success of past events in USA, Europe & MENA, CSP Today brings to New Delhi the most relevant international experience for the concentrated solar more...

Offshore Wind Energy in North America's Great Lakes Conference

Sep 9 2010 - Sep 10 2010 - Toronto

Two day conference that tackles the most important challenges. A blend of European knowledge from the companies who have been installing offshore wind turbines for the last decade alongside local state governing bodies and leading project developers. Permitting, securing long more...

Autovation 2010

Sep 12 2010 - Sep 15 2010 - Austin, TX - USA

Autovation 2010 is a not-to-miss educational forum that will attract utility executives from around the world looking for new ways to optimize their operations through automation technologies. more...

Global Sustainable Bioenergy North American Convention

Sep 14 2010 - Sep 16 2010 - Minneapolis, MN - USA

The North American convention provides a remarkable opportunity to play a part in guiding renewable energy policy for the 21st century. Attendees will create a resolution that, along with similar resolutions already drafted on four other continents, will help set more...

GridWise Global Forum

Sep 21 2010 - Sep 23 2010 - Washington, DC - USA

Hosted by the GridWise(R) Alliance and the U.S. Department of Energy, the GridWise Global Forum will convene thought leaders from the highest levels of government, business, NGOS, and academia from around the world to discuss the ultimate enabling potential of more...

1. Intro to Nat Gas Trading & Hedging 2. Option Applications in Energy

Sep 20 2010 - Sep 23 2010 - Houston, TX - USA

Introduction to Natural Gas Trading & Hedging - This program provides a comprehensive understanding of the structures that underlie Natural Gas trading. Beyond Essentials: Option Applications in Energy - This course provides a solid practical and conceptual (non-quantitative) understanding of more...

Electric Business Understanding Seminar

Sep 20 2010 - Sep 21 2010 - Houston, TX - USA

Electric Business Understanding provides a comprehensive overview of the electric industry. Position yourself for career advancement by gaining a solid understanding of how the electric business works including key physical, market, and regulatory aspects and how market participants navigate this more...

Electric Market Dynamics Seminar

Sep 22 2010 - Sep 23 2010 - Houston, TX - USA

Electric Market Dynamics offers participants an in-depth understanding of North American electric markets and how they function. Enhance your career by furthering your knowledge of market structures, pricing mechanisms, services offered in markets, and how various participants use the markets more...

Gas and Electric Business Understanding Seminar

Oct 5 2010 - Oct 6 2010 - Los Angeles, CA - USA

Gas and Electric Business Understanding provides a comprehensive overview of the natural gas and electric industries. Position yourself for career success by gaining a solid understanding of how each business works, including key physical, market and regulatory aspects, as well more...

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Future Workforce: Meeting the Demands of Tomorrow's Utility
6.23.09   Ryan Cook, VP, Employment Services Division, Energy Central

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    Interested in this topic? Need more information? Energy Central has created a complete information service focused only on Mobile Workforce Management. There is no better way to stay informed. Get more information on Mobile Workforce Management today!
    What does intelligence mean in relation to the utility workforce of the future? According to Wikipedia, intelligence is "a property of the mind that encompasses... abilities such as the capacities to reason, to plan, to solve problems, to think abstractly, to comprehend ideas... and to learn."

    Intelligent utilities will need an intelligent workforce, but this doesn't mean that today's employees aren't intelligent. To better understand this statement, think back to computer engineers who built the first commercial computers in the early 1950s. They were intelligent, but unlike any other product ever invented, the computer has aided mankind in exercising our intelligence. With more information available to them, today's computer engineers are able to solve increasingly complex issues; think more abstractly; better comprehend ideas; and improve planning and problem solving.

    In essence, computer engineers have not become more intelligent over time, but they now have tools to help them better leverage their intelligence. The smart grid and intelligent utility will do the same for the utility workforce.

    The Paradigm Shift

    In today's utilities, employees' knowledge, skills and abilities (KSAs) are based primarily on providing electrical power as a product. These KSAs support the rules-based, process-oriented, functionally structured, and cost-focused business needs of today's utility.

    In the future, however, there will be a massive paradigm shift from providing just a product to providing customers with customizable services and solutions for their unique energy needs. The result will be a shift toward KSAs that support a more agile, innovative, collaborative, cross-functional, service-oriented utility of the future. Employees will need to deal with constantly evolving technology. They will need to adapt to the changes quickly and have the ability to analyze copious amounts of information from many sources and make objective decisions based on that information.

    How It Will Impact Employees

    To better understand how the utility of the future's workforce will need to change, I spoke with Mike Carlson -- now an executive with GridPoint -- when he was chief information officer and vice president, business systems, Xcel Energy, about the changes Xcel Energy is identifying as it builds a smarter grid in Boulder, Colo. "Field engineers and technicians need to take on a whole new skill set of technology and communications. Today, when a smart device fails, we need to determine whether or not to send field technicians or network technologists," explained Carlson. "A field crew isn't trained to handle fiber-optic splicing and technologists aren't able to jump in a bucket to evaluate signal degradation. Even if they were, the technologists haven't been trained on power zone risks."

    At some point, utilities will need to retrain an entire workforce of field technicians and network technologists. Carlson and I considered coining the term "field technologists" or employees with the ability to assess the power side of the line as well as the communication and network protocol aspects of a smarter grid. Combining divergent skill sets into the role of a field technologist is indicative of the types of changes that will need to occur in order to support intelligent utility initiatives.

    Tomorrow's field technologists will need to have an advanced understanding of technology as well as power systems. They will need to adapt to frequent changes in technology, and quickly make objective decisions based on complex, real-time data made available through mobile computing and instant connectivity to their peers and the company's knowledge network.



    These changes are not exclusive to field operations. Digitizing the grid will also impact the back office. Customer service representatives will have to not only deal with today's issues of power outages and billing inquiries, but also future needs like troubleshooting online demand side management systems and customer Web interfaces. Customer service will likely move from reactive to proactive -- taking on a sales aspect by helping customers upgrade their services. This will require continual workforce development and a dedication to serve the customer's needs.

    Dr. Ralph Masiello, senior vice president, energy systems consulting, KEMA, and board member of the GridWise Alliance, along with Rob Wilhite, senior vice president, intelligent networks and communications practice, KEMA, shared their perspectives on the future workforce. Masiello emphasized the importance of product management, marketing, matrix management and value-added accounting concepts to tomorrow's utility. According to Masiello, "the utility of the future will look more like computer companies of today." Wilhite added that "recruitment will likely go outside traditional channels because the skill sets needed to support the utility of the future will be transferable from companies who've already made a change over to a more solutions-based business model."

    Looking Ahead

    A little over 20 years ago, when the Internet began trickling into the mainstream, who knew that someday there would be Internet marketing managers or Twitter applications developers? Now, as we stand at the precipice of a new utility era, I wonder what new jobs will emerge? Will we indeed have field technologists? How about high voltage wireless transmission engineers? Or perhaps bioelectric interface specialists? We can't be certain. But what we can see is that KSAs will change to accommodate the vast influx of information and technology that will help make us all a more intelligent workforce.

    Subscribe to Intelligent Utility magazine today.
    Intelligent Utility magazine is the new, thought-leading publication on how to successfully deliver information-enabled energy. This article originally appeared in the May/June 2009 issue.

    For information on purchasing reprints of this article, contact Tim Tobeck ttobeck@energycentral.com.
    Copyright 2010 CyberTech, Inc.
     
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