PUBLISHED DATE: 2024-03-22 03:04:44

How Utilities Can Recharge the EV Customer Journey

Sartaz Ahmed

Executive summary:

The electric vehicle (EV) revolution is revving up. As EV adoption is accelerating, consumers are moving along the adoption S-curve from early adopters to the early majority with a variety of options available to them. The growth of EVs not only creates relationships between customers and new vehicles; it also has the potential to reshape the relationship between customers and utility operators. While strong customer relationships have always been crucial for utilities, the expansion of the EV market offers an avenue through which utilities can elevate them. What can utility organizations do to strengthen these relationships in the age of EVs? They can invest in the customer journey and enhance their charging experiences. Ultimately, such investments will benefit utilities, giving them access to new insights and value.

Utilities are on the frontline of the EV revolution

A combination of factors fuels the EV revolution. Government incentives have encouraged Americans to purchase EVs and construct charging stations across the country. The United States’ Inflation Reduction Act, for example, provides $7.5 billion for EV charging stations as well as individual tax credits. Similarly, consumer-led factors—including gas price anxiety, desire for digital cars and environmental concerns—have also contributed to the rapid adoption of EVs. At the same time, EV adoption varies widely across the U.S., with California accounting for the largest number and share of EV sales, followed by Florida, Texas and New York. This growing demand will impact utilities. According to Sector & Sovereign Research, EV electrification could increase residential electricity demand by 25 percent. Heightening demand for electricity means customers will likely engage more with operators, and this will ultimately give utility organizations an opportunity to deepen the customer experience.

Support EV customers on the customer journey

To fully support customers, utilities must first understand their needs. This means prioritizing both physical and digital engagement to meet shifting customer expectations. Additionally, they must customize their approach to each customer, such as residential owners, fleet managers and EV infrastructure providers (e.g., government agencies, commercial property owners and charging operators), all of whom have different needs and goals. Yet, all customers go on customer journeys (Figure 1), which provide an avenue through which utilities can deepen their understanding of customers and visualize their habits. By providing an experience that is light, ethical, accessible and dataful—what Publicis Sapient calls a LEAD framework—utility operators can offer targeted, impactful customer journeys.

What does the customer journey look like for EV users, and how can utilities use it to better support them?

Figure 1: Customer journey

  1. Awareness
    Customers are aware of their own needs and passively observe new EV brands, models and features.
    How can utilities help?
    • Marketing and awareness outreach: Address broader audiences to inform them of investment benefits and incentive programs
    • Customer engagement: Create a strategy to connect with prospective buyers
  2. Discovery and learning
    Customers are actively engaged in preliminary research and self-needs assessment
    How can utilities help?
    • Education on EV ownership: Outline benefits, expectations, maintenance and costs to both customers and dealership providers
    • Self-driven assessment tools: Provide customers and dealerships with resources and tools
    • Information on grants and incentives: Communicate and guide customers through the application process for grants and incentives
  3. Evaluation
    Customers are actively researching and evaluating EVs, charging and financing options.
    How can utilities help?
    • Warranty programs: Offer warranty programs to assist with installation and maintenance
    • Customized packages: Provide bundling and finance options to alleviate upfront cost apprehension
  4. Purchase and installation
    Customers get oriented and learn to use their new EV and home charger.
    How can utilities help?
    • Cross-sell: Sell add-ons and accessories to customers for the future (e.g., better monitoring software tools)
  5. Ownership
    Customers integrate both their EVs and charging into their journey planning and overall lifestyle.
    How can utilities help?
    • All-in-one data management platform: Provide a centralized charging hub for customers
    • Peer recognition and comparison: Provide a platform for customers to recognize savings and connect with one another
  6. Advocacy
    Customers transform into advocates and are ready to educate, refer and convert others.
    How can utilities help?
    • Customer engagement and loyalty: Create referral programs, identify advocates and create strong branding to showcase loyalty

Appropriately engaging with customers at every step of the journey enables utilities to articulate a clear value proposition and provide them with a frictionless experience.

To support customers, invest in infrastructure

One of the best ways that utilities organizations can support EV customers is by ensuring that they have access to convenient charging stations powered by a reliable grid.

Charge into the future

American charging station networks are poised to exponentially increase in the coming decades, especially as private and public spaces alike are prioritizing them (Figure 2). Walmart, for example, has announced plans to significantly expand its charging network by 2030.
Source: S&P Global Monthly, January 2023

Figure 2: EV chargers forecast (U.S.)

Customers require multiple charging options, including at their homes, workplaces and in public places. Until EV charging stations are as ubiquitous as fuel stations, utilities have a role to play in helping customers locate and access chargers. Utilities can help develop rapid charging stations and make it easy for businesses to install them on their premises. At the on-site level, utilities can also manage the connection journey for residential, commercial and public chargers. Operators can prepare local chargers to integrate new technologies, such as stationary battery storage, on-site generation and future enhancements (e.g., rapid charging capabilities and increased charger capacity).

Organizations should go beyond simply providing charging stations—they can also help customers find them. Publicis Sapient partnered with car manufacturer Renault to develop an app that helps EV owners access a network of 1,000 residential chargers across Europe. Similar utilities-developed apps can empower customers to locate available chargers in real time.

Powering up grids

Networks of charging stations need reliable grids to support them, especially as the acceleration of EV ownership will impact distribution systems. As a result, utilities must plan for infrastructural investments to prepare distribution systems for growing demand. For instance, they can proactively upgrade transformers to get electricity to charging stations. With the growth of renewables, utilities also have an opportunity to optimize EV charging in areas with high solar and wind penetration for local grid reliability.

Leverage customer preferences to balance load at the local grid level

As renewable sources of energy and EVs accelerate simultaneously, utilities will encounter uncertainty with both supply and demand. Renewable sources of energy like solar and wind are not always reliable, and EV customers may increase demand on the grids as more people charge their vehicles at once. A holistic understanding of customer behavior and their consumption patterns will enable utilities to effectively balance this uncertainty at the local grid level. Knowing customers’ charging habits will equip operators with the insights they need to anticipate when the grid may be under increased pressure and strategize load-balancing initiatives accordingly. Ultimately, this may alleviate the need for additional upgrades to grids as demand for EV charging intensifies.

Enhancing the EV customer journey creates opportunities for utilities to realize new value

EV adoption offers utilities an opportunity to forge closer relationships with consumers based on the charging experience. Gaining a better understanding of customer behavior has several benefits for utilities:

EV adoption and investments in infrastructure also create new ways that utilities organizations can realize value by:

Elevate the customer experience with robust digital platforms

How can utilities effectively engage with customers and realize new value? By adopting a robust digital platform that optimizes increasingly variable supply and shapes variable demand to build a managed charging system for customers. Currently, customer data typically exists in silos across numerous platforms, inherently limiting the delivery of an optimal customer experience. To fully support customers, get a holistic view of them and benefit from their engagement, utilities should build integrated platforms with up-to-the-minute monitoring of information. Insights also enable personalization between demand segments, such as multi-unit residential dwellings and big-box stores. Utility providers need dynamic systems that allow for real-time exchanges of both demand and supply data to balance load at the local grid level. These systems ultimately help utilities organizations balance uncertainty with supply and demand; and they can keep rates down for customers, who can plan their charging times based on reduced time-of-use (TOU) rates.

To further elevate the customer experience with digital platforms, utilities organizations can:

Incorporate the EV experience into a plan of action

The acceleration of EV adoption creates a unique opportunity for utilities to support customers through elevated journeys and the charging experience. Whether deepening the customer experience, enhancing infrastructure, offering new products and services, entering new markets, introducing new models or mapping out customer touchpoints, a robust digital platform should be at the heart of operators’ plans. Publicis Sapient is a full-service digital transformation partner that equips utilities organizations with the tools they need to get to know their customer, map customer journeys and develop the right digital capabilities to unlock new value. Reach out to learn how digital platforms elevate customer journeys.

SSR Research Report Cited

SSR – February 14, 2022, The Electrification of Light Duty Vehicles Will Increase Electricity Demand by a Quarter; We Expect PCG, EIX, NEW and ES to See the Largest Increases in Sales

Sartaz Ahmed

Associate Managing Director

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