This article originally posted on Energy Central. Click here to read the Energy Central article.
Imagine with me for a second. You’re scrolling down your favorite news site when you see a sidebar ad for an amazing shirt that’ll be perfect for the summer rafting trip you just booked. And it’s on sale! So, you click the photo of the ad with the intention of making a quick purchase. But when the web page finally loads, it’s not a product detail page on an e-commerce site; it’s a webpage with a lot of words and a form to sign up to have someone come to your house and talk to you about it, so you can buy that cool shirt directly from them. They’ll even help you try it on! And they’ll have a conversation with you at your kitchen table about all the places you can wear it.
Now, you may also need to fill out some rebate paperwork – but only if you want that discount you saw in the ad. Don’t worry, it’ll be a fillable PDF and you’ll get a check in 8 weeks. And did I mention they have to call you back and play phone tag for a few days before you can even get the appointment scheduled? You give up, of course. Because rafting trip or not, no shirt is cool enough to justify that level of hassle.
And yet, we play out this ludicrous scenario in utility programs all over the country, all day long. The only difference is we’re hawking smart thermostats and HVAC equipment instead of cool shirts you can wear rafting. With so many hurdles along the way, it’s no wonder we have trouble getting people to participate. Shoppers want their experiences to be quick, easy, and friction-free. So, how can utilities meet these needs?
But we’re still making it way too hard to learn about more complicated products like EV chargers, stack rebates from various EE and DR programs, get financing for big ticket items like heat pumps, and coordinate installation for larger projects like weatherization. And we’re not really connecting the online and offline worlds into a seamless experience for rebates. Or seamlessly segmenting customers behind the scenes to show them the bigger rebates they qualify for—if they’re low-income, for example.
In a recent study by Jaywing, 73% of utility marketers ranked “improving the digital customer contact strategy” as a top priority. By leveraging an integrated marketplace, utilities can go beyond keeping up with Amazon and the expectation it creates for customers. They can provide an entirely new, comprehensive approach to program participation that offers all the benefits of online shopping and none of the clunkiness our industry has become known for. An approach so tailored, in fact, that our user testing found customers were more likely to invest in a larger purchase on their utility’s integrated marketplace than elsewhere online. And they made these big-ticket purchasing decisions shockingly fast. Let’s dig into what makes it work.
With a platform as robust as the integrated marketplace, utilities are not poised to compete with Amazon but instead to perform in a class all their own. By removing as many barriers to customer engagement as possible, and leveraging the lucrative incentives utilities already offer, an integrated marketplace is the utility’s ideal tool to promote product sales, program enrollment, energy savings, electrification and more. It establishes trust and builds a positive relationship with customers who already see their utility as an authority on energy. To return to the metaphor of purchasing the shirt, an integrated marketplace isn’t just the place to buy a shirt for your rafting trip—it’s also the place to research and book the entire excursion. What could be simpler than that?