What happens when you gather together with joint use professionals and utility industry leaders and give them an open forum to share ideas and speak frankly?
At the 2022 Alden Conference, we came together with asset owners, attachers, and engineering and service firms to discuss common challenges as well as opportunities to work better together. During the conference, Alden One users networked with colleagues, and learned about how utilizing the platform’s features translates into time savings.
The most exciting part was what happened when we asked this question: How can we start working better together? This simple question revealed that joint use stakeholders have more to agree upon than meets the eye.
We all know that utility stakeholders are being asked to do more than ever before to meet increasing 5G demands. And it’s not just volume that is ramping up: it’s the complexity of projects, requiring more intimate coordination with more entities involving new modes of technology.
Despite the diverse aims, there’s a lot of common ground among structure owners, attachers, and service firms. Each would like the other to standardize more processes to help ensure accountability and accuracy, with the aim of keeping projects on time, while improving safety.
Establishing that everyone in attendance shared a common interest was key to understanding each stakeholder’s role in joint use collaboration. It’s important to acknowledge what is working well. For example, structure owners and service firms both reported appreciating how attachers are the bridge to connecting communities. And structure owners and attachers place a high value on the professionalism and preparedness that many service firms contribute to their projects. Meanwhile, structure owners were appreciated for establishing standards and procedures, while extending mutual trust to partners.
Clarity and time are of the essence. Attendees communicated that making even a few small adjustments can be the difference between a frustrated partner and a successful collaboration that fulfills regulatory guidelines and meets expected timelines and safety standards.
Have you ever wondered what could improve your interactions with the companies you work with?
At the conference, we asked each party – asset owners, attachers, and engineering/service firms – to list one thing that the other could improve and then come up with suggested actions that could help. Below is a summary of responses.
Participants shared that they need owners to take steps to decrease misunderstandings. Examples included providing more clarity around the scope and timeline of a project, providing more accurate records, and offering more flexibility when the job called for it.
Suggested actions:
When it comes to this group, the refrain that echoed was to improve adherence to codes and achieve better response times, whether returning communications or rectifying a safety issue. It was generally acknowledged that staffing turnover often contributed to the need for more context around project standards.
Suggested actions:
A recurring theme in most comments centered on communication. We heard requests for firms to be clearer about where they seek to attach to avoid post-inspection issues and just to be clearer in general, whether with internal communications or in clarifying requirements. This was the same as attachers when representing the attaching company, and same as asset owners when representing them.
Suggested actions:
It’s clear that almost all users reported the need for a single source of truth that gets (and keeps) all parties on the same page.
At Alden, we believe in creating better communities through better infrastructure. When industry stakeholders come together to ask the right questions, we can begin to elevate the conversation about joint use challenges and begin to seek actual solutions. The interactions from our conference indicate that improved collaboration among all joint use stakeholders is not just a lofty aim, but rather an achievable goal.
It’s been said that a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step. Sometimes, that step is simply to listen and understand first. Let's keep the conversation going – send us your thoughts or questions today. We are listening.