In my last post, I mentioned the smart grid / energy intelligence "panel" at the Future Forward event last week. It ended up being a great informal conversation between the panelists and attendees, so I thought I would share a bit of what I heard that I thought was interesting.
The participants included:
Eric Emmons, of Siemens Venture Capital, and one of the smartest guys I know on all things cleantech-related.
Martin Flusberg, CEO of Powerhouse Dynamics, a networking and energy software serial entrepreneur. Powerhouse Dynamics has developed a home energy monitoring system.
Tom Pincince, President and CEO of Digital Lumens, a former networking hardware entrepreneur and analyst. Digital Lumens has developed a cost-saving lighting controls system (to date, integrated into their proprietary LED fixtures) which among numerous features also includes a strong energy intelligence / data gathering aspect. [Self-promotion alert: DL is a portfolio investment of my firm]
Here are some takeaways that I found interesting (all obviously very paraphrased by me):
1. Smart grid and energy intelligence are coming, albeit slower than some may have expected. And it's a bit like we're building out the lower layers of the "stack" right now -- there will be opportunities for a lot of applications to eventually ride over the intelligent energy networks being put in place now. Automation, device management, dynamic real time pricing interactions, even social networking and gaming are possibilities. That having been said, the long-held vision of a "third pipe into the home" serviced by electric utilities seems to be (pardon the pun) just a pipe dream. This energy data is quite often utilizing small-bytes networking capabilities to connect to the main utility grid. But energy-intelligent devices inside the meter are coming, slowly but surely.
2. Standards will need to be developed to allow energy-intelligent devices to more readily connect into and function on these emerging energy networks. It's too difficult to think about your refrigerator manufacturer negotiating with a home energy monitoring system manufacturing negotiating with a smart meter vendor negotiating with a utility to make them all work seamlessly. But if some basic information-exchange and controls standards can be decided upon (by which link in that chain, I'm not yet certain) it would unlock more plug-and-play capabilities.
3. The sector needs more experienced networking execs to get involved. However, the experienced execs involved in this conversation also had some very cautionary notes to share. First of all, there are some big differences between telecom companies and utilities, and those are mostly negative differences. Second, public utility commissions are much more of an obstacle to smart grid technology for utilities than they were to new telecom equipment for ILECs and CLECs. Third, in this sector it's easy for startups to fool themselves into falsely thinking they're not selling to utilities but only to end consumers and thus protected from the difficulties of selling to utilities; even "inside the meter" energy intelligence will somehow (via rebates, standards setting, etc.) involve utilities as critical stakeholders, and thus present a real rate-of-adoption challenge. And fourth, the channels stink for these technologies. How do you get intelligent devices sold to end customers? Hopefully you're not planning on early sales/installations through utilities. And hopefully you're not counting upon fragmented efforts through broader retail channels like Home Depots and online direct sales. Finding channel partners who are already inside the homes / businesses and selling through them is key. Net-net, the panelists acknowledged that selling into these markets is more difficult than selling into networking equipment markets, even though there are some very analogous lessons to be drawn.
4. There's an emerging schism in the richness of data inside versus outside the meter. Inside the meter the trend is toward richer customer data, more data points, more detailed use of the data for a variety of purposes. Outside the meter (on the grid side) the trend seems to be toward getting the data as pared down as possible, to only what's really necessary for the utility and associated purposes. Unclear what impacts this schism will have, but it's an interesting trend.
5. A big positive difference between networking and smart grid is that, with both being concerned at a very basic level with managing network capacity, only on the energy side can you create "negawatts" and free up capacity by curtailing usage. Tough to free up telecom capacity by curtailing video-on-demand, etc. And as with telecom you can shift demand out time-wise to accommodate peak traffic. However, with the electric grid it always has to be in balance, unlike with the telecom grid. So there are different motivators and value creation opportunities from one sector to the other.
My thanks again to those panelists, in the end we and the handful of audience members just pulled our chairs into a circle and ended up having a pretty good conversation amongst ourselves.
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On a completely other topic, I also was struck by a couple of things said during an earlier angel / seed investor panel at Future Forward. Granted, I didn't hear any mention of cleantech on that panel, but even still (or perhaps BECAUSE of that) a couple of lessons struck me.
One panelist mentioned how Boston-area angel investors typically invest in sectors they know, and in people they know, and so most angels are previously successful businesspeople investing into the next wave of their industry. For cleantech, we really haven't had that first wave. So it helps explain why, despite lots of overt interest in cleantech, I'm finding that actually active angel cleantech investors here in this region are few and far between.
And partly in response to that above observation, another panelist urged entrepreneurs to go out there and make their own angel investors. In other words, rather than just trying to find existing angel investors who are probably pretty inundated with investment opportunities anyway, find the former colleagues who used to sit around the corner in the same office; and businesspeople who have recently gotten lucrative returns from their own related business efforts. Even if they haven't been angel investors in the past, if it's a personal and professional connection they may be convinced to get involved.
I see a lot of seed-stage cleantech startups these days scrambling for funding and many ask me for help in identifying angel investors, so I thought I would pass along the above advice in case it's helpful.





