• Solution design
  • Identification of options for customer service for second tier electricity supply
  • Fault management

Energy Utility – British Gas Trading

New entrant to second tier electricity supply

British Gas decided to enter electricity supply, leveraging its large customer base to generate additional annuity revenues. In the re-regulation that enabled competition, complex industry processes needed to be administered in order to support sales and service for electricity customers.

British Gas invested in a major IT and process change project spanning, billing and all aspects of customer service. David was asked to analyse customer service issues around fault reporting and develop proposals for a launch and longer term solution. He identified customer service and market positioning issues BG faced in entering electricity supply and recommended the levels of customer service required to be competitive. David identified the gaps between planned infrastructure and processes, and those required to achieve various customer service scenarios. He developed a set of options that would address to varying degrees these gaps, analysed them against busiess orientated criteria, then facilitated workshops to enable decisions to be made. Key criteria were cost and ‘implementation risk’. To this end David estimated the capital expenditure required and impact on P&L of implementing these options, and the degree of strain that they would pose to the rest of the project.

BG decided to outsource all fault management to distributors, to avoid the cost and duplication of attempting to deliver service from it own customer service functions.