Transformational Ability of Energy Network Companies: The Role of Institutional Logics and Boundary Spanners
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Boundary Spanning to Enhance the Transformational Ability of Energy Network Companies
Boundary Spanning
3. Methodology
3.1. The Case of an Energy Network Company
3.2. Sampling
3.3. Data Analysis
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. External Boundaries
“…we actually say that we do not want to follow regulation, but we want to steer the regulation. Additionally, if you want to steer regulation, you have to be on the right stakeholder level. So, you have to be inside The Hague and The Ministry on the right level and the same in the cities. You have to be a partner in the right level. So, I think that we are trying to move up to get more influence… and not only to influence but to get our voices heard in The Hague on the highest level and, well, Amsterdam on the highest level as well.”
Or as illustrated by Respondent I:“…we realize that cooperation is needed to deal with the challenges of the energy transition and to achieve the transition goals. The need for collaboration is also acknowledged by our external stakeholders. Regularly, we are sitting around the table with them to discuss the goals, policies, regulations and requirements regarding our common interest, the energy transition.”
“I think that the relationships with the public partners–they are […] the municipalities or the provinces or the national governments [are lacking]. You need to lobby a lot in The Hague. I think that needs to increase a lot, not only on the level of the board but also on our level–so we need to be outside rather than inside”
4.2. Internal Boundaries
“What is difficult is that we should also deliver, and we have difficulties in connecting everyone at this moment, because the energy transition is going so fast.”
“…within Liander, there is the opinion that New Business costs a lot of money. Additionally, we do not want that to be the opinion, we want to contribute financially to Alliander and not cost a lot of money. So, we focus more on the short-term financial investments of our companies but the consequence is that we invest more in mature companies that already have a market because they are attractive and they earn money and the young companies that can potentially be very disruptive and interesting, also for a networking company, they cost a lot of money and it often takes seven years for a start-up to […] have a return on investments. Seven years is a long time, and we do not have that patience anymore, I notice.”
“…profits are not the main reasons why these startups are here. The main reason is that they can come with the type of solution that is impossible to develop within a large organization.”
“If you have a large network and it’s all about scale, then you come up with the idea of smaller networks that have everything else but scale, and you optimize it from a digital perspective,”
“Every day, we build new cables that are […] from a technical view, […] not necessary. So, we build more grids than [are] necessary.”
“Of course, you cannot try to win every battle, so you have to […] focus on certain things. I think we have learned in the past; we had the tendency to show the world that we know what is needed. However, that is of course, from our perspective. Additionally, there are different angles to look at the problems.”
“It is also your network. Normally, a starting engineer knows nobody. Additionally, they are going to communicate to the team leader, the team leader communicates it farther into the company. However, if you know some key persons, you can put them in the CC of the mail and then hope they will see it and pick it up.”
“I think it’s a cliché, but still, I think you have to teach technicians to think customer-centric. Because they are very technically driven, and they forget that there is a customer at the end.”
“For instance, we have the department “Klant en Markt”–customer and market–and we have [the department of] Asset Management. […] they have the relation manager at the customer side and the relation manager at the Asset Management side–they cooperate together. […] one is the more technical party and they manage the internal world but they often go together to external stakeholders.”
4.3. Synthesis
5. Conclusions and Policy Implications
5.1. Policy Recommendation for the Profession Logic and Innovation
5.2. Policy Recommendation for Technical and Non-Technical Staff
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Respondent | Gender | Position/Level |
---|---|---|
A | Male | Engineer |
B | Female | Corporate Venture Developer |
C | Male | Strategy Consultant |
D | Male | Cluster Lead |
E | Female | Cluster Lead |
F | Female | Innovation Manager |
G | Female | Program Manager |
H | Male | Program Manager |
I | Male | Senior Program Manager |
J | Male | Senior Strategy Advisor |
K | Male | Director |
L | Female | Director |
Liander | New Business | Engineers | Managers | Engineers | Internal Policy Staff | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Community | X | |||||
State | X | X | X | X | ||
Market | X | |||||
Profession | X | X | X | X | ||
Corporation | X | X | X |
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Shnayder, L.; Kranenburg, H.v.; Witjes, S. Transformational Ability of Energy Network Companies: The Role of Institutional Logics and Boundary Spanners. Sustainability 2021, 13, 13582. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132413582
Shnayder L, Kranenburg Hv, Witjes S. Transformational Ability of Energy Network Companies: The Role of Institutional Logics and Boundary Spanners. Sustainability. 2021; 13(24):13582. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132413582
Chicago/Turabian StyleShnayder, Larissa, Hans van Kranenburg, and Sjors Witjes. 2021. "Transformational Ability of Energy Network Companies: The Role of Institutional Logics and Boundary Spanners" Sustainability 13, no. 24: 13582. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132413582
APA StyleShnayder, L., Kranenburg, H. v., & Witjes, S. (2021). Transformational Ability of Energy Network Companies: The Role of Institutional Logics and Boundary Spanners. Sustainability, 13(24), 13582. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132413582