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How EY can help
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Discover how EY's customer experience transformation team can help energy providers empower their workforce, engage customers & drive long term value. Learn more.
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It's time we acknowledge consumers as the heart of the energy system, and the biggest driver of change. This will require providers to put consumers at the heart of their own business, making changes around the 3 As of energy – affordability; access; appeal – to move consumers from ambition to action. It’s important to note that these are not sequential steps. The rapid pace of change and sustainability targets demand organisations act now to get the fundamentals right, by delivering quick wins while setting the right path to achieve long-term goals.
1. Affordability
Many Australian consumers EY teams surveyed are struggling with energy affordability. Energy bills are a budgeted expense for most people and the majority – 65% - told us they couldn’t absorb an increase of 10%. Affordability concerns are also the biggest barriers to adopting sustainable solutions, with 62% of Australian consumers telling us they’ll be more likely to invest in clean energy solutions if prices came down or more government rebates were available.
Addressing this challenge requires providers to think beyond the basics of price. Considering the issue through a broader lens of wellbeing and lifestyle can help companies create more value for consumers, even as prices remain volatile.
Understand different customer behaviours and values. Australian energy consumers are a diverse group, ranging from extremely tech-savvy, eco “champions” to people who just want the cheapest electricity, with little interest in sustainability. With a deeper understanding of what drives different customers, providers can develop a range of energy options that meet different needs. These may include, for example, the pre-pay options that almost half (47%) of Australians say they would prefer. Enthusiastic energy champions with EVs, solar panels and smart homes may be prepared to pay higher prices for a more interactive energy experience, self-service, and control. Generational differences can also reveal opportunities. EY survey found that 33% of Gen Z consumers are willing to pay more for sustainable options, while only 7% of Boomers said the same. Providers that deepen their behavioural science capabilities can even provide the right prompts that drive action among the 42% of Australians resisting making sustainable changes due to a mix of inertia, indifference, and scepticism.