http://www.utilitydive.com/news/got-evs-why-utilities-should-promote-electric-vehicles-to-consumers/417638/
Got EVs? Why utilities should promote electric vehicles to consumers
April 19, 2016  Michael Shepard

[images  / Flickr; National Renewable Energy Lab
http://www.utilitydive.com/user_media/cache/c8/52/c8526f47b7bc5b50da1f2d1acde22983.jpg

http://www.utilitydive.com/user_media/diveimage/PGE_ev_2.png
An advertisement promoting EVs from PG&E  / PG&E

http://www.utilitydive.com/user_media/cache/53/93/53937599be14e078423a0f267cceecb8.jpg
The EV section of Austin Energy's website  / Austin Energy
]

Electric utilities may have the greatest motivation to drive a major
promotional effort around electric transportation

Editor's Note: The following is a guest post written by Michael Shepard.
Shepard is the chairman of energy research and advisory firm E Source. This
article is the third in a five-part series from Shepard on the opportunity
for utilities in electric vehicles. ​You can find the first article, "The
$100B prize: Why EVs are the opportunity of the century for utilities," here
and the second article, "Why the time for utilities to promote EVs is
now—and why the moment could quickly fade," here. If you are interested in
submitting a guest post, please review these guidelines.

One of the biggest barriers to rapid adoption of EVs is that most consumers
barely know they exist.

Scan auto industry ads and it’s easy to see why—the overwhelming majority
are for conventional vehicles. Just as it has taken a couple of decades and
huge amounts of advertising money to convince Americans to pay a premium for
pickup trucks, it’s going to take a major outreach effort to get most
Americans to even consider buying an EV.

UC Davis researcher Ken Kurani surveyed households that shopped for or
bought a new vehicle in 2015.  In two of the hottest EV markets in the
country—California and Oregon—only 7% of households actively shopped for an
EV. Across the northeastern states the survey found that only 3-4% of car
buyers looked at EVs. A number of the surveyed households didn’t even
realize EVs were for sale in their area.

Automakers will have to ramp up their marketing of EVs if they hope to raise
consumer awareness. But because they’ll have to keep pushing their standard
vehicle lines too, they won’t be sending a consistent message to drive
electric.

Given that electric utilities have so much to gain from the adoption of EVs,
they may be the business institution with the greatest motivation to drive a
major promotional effort around electric transportation.

Many utilities publish information about EVs on their websites, and some
promote EVs at ride and drives or other community events and in their
newsletters. This is a good start, but these channels alone will not move
the needle significantly on consumer awareness. That’s going to require
mainstream advertising.  Think something akin to the dairy industry’s “Got
Milk?” campaign, with local and regional differences that reflect the unique
characteristics of individual utilities, customer demographics, and market
and regulatory conditions.

Fortunately, utilities have a lot of “street cred” when it comes to EVs.
Consumers trust utilities to provide accurate information about EVs, more
than they trust government and auto industry sources, according to research
conducted by an unnamed EEI member utility. This credibility is reinforced
by the fact that utilities promote EVs as a class, rather than try to sell
any particular make or model.

A small but growing number of utilities already have creative EV marketing
campaigns. PG&E, for example, has managed to pack a lot of the benefits of
EVs into some of its recent ads.

Another potent angle is to leverage the passion that EV owners have for
their cars. Austin Energy has done that with its “Charge Forth” campaign,
which features testimonials from Austin customers that drive EVs.  The
campaign includes billboard, newspaper, TV, and radio ads, including spots
during the local weekly broadcast of NPR’s "Car Talk." The results were
impressive: Traffic to the EV portion of Austin Energy’s website rose
four-fold, according to the utility, and the city has one of the highest
concentrations of EVs in the nation.

Utilities don’t have to shoulder the full load of promoting EVs on their
own. There are many other stakeholders that utilities can partner with to
boost awareness and uptake of electric cars. A partial list includes Plug in
America, the Electric Drive Transport Association (EDTA), with its
GoElectricDrive portal, the Electrification Coalition, which is partnering
with cities and utilities across the country to promote electric
transportation, and the Edison Electric Institute which maintains an EV
portal, The Electric Generation.

It’s time for utility leaders to shake one another down for the funding to
do this right and to convince regulators that such a marketing investment is
in the interest of all utility customers, because of the public health and
environmental benefits, as well as the downward pressure EVs put on rates. 
The industry could make a mass-market impact without a Super Bowl–level
advertising budget by coordinating on a set of messages and ads that they
commit to distribute through newsletters and bill stuffers, plus local media
channels, complemented by a carefully targeted and timed set of national ad
placements.

If this succeeds, many more consumers will become aware that EVs are
available and that they offer a wide range of benefits. That heightened
awareness will lead more of them to take the all- important step of visiting
car showrooms to try out electric vehicles.

Utilities might understandably think that if they can get consumers to the
showroom, their work is done. Unfortunately, that’s not the case, because,
as it turns out, many auto dealers do a lousy job of selling EVs. But there
are things the utilities can do to help in this area as well. We’ll tackle
that topic in the fourth installment of this series—coming next week.
[© 2016 Industry Dive]



https://www.americanprogress.org/issues/green/report/2016/04/21/136137/electric-utilities-and-the-future-of-clean-transportation/
Electric Utilities and the Future of Clean Transportation
April 21, 2016  Darshan Brahmbhatt plugs a charger into his electric vehicle
at the Sacramento Municipal Utility District charging station in Sacramento,
California, ...
https://cdn.americanprogress.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/20132503/PRIMARY.jpg




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