Introducing
Your new presentation assistant.
Refine, enhance, and tailor your content, source relevant images, and edit visuals quicker than ever before.
Trending searches
Managing energy trilemma
Technological innovations, renewable energy sources, decentralized energy production
Proposition 1: The transition towards sustainable energy solutions will disrupt the traditional business model of the incumbent
Proposition 2: Changing market structures demand for a new role of business in the energy transition.
Review energy transition: identifies key facts, figures, trends
Gap: translation to Dutch energy market and implications for business
CSR theory: responsibilities and role of business increasingly complex and important
Gap: define business' role in energy transition
Innovation theory: disrupting traditional business models + incumbent's curse
Gap: application of incumbent's curse to energy transition
Business model concept: traditional versus sustainable business models
Gap: management and configuration of SBM
Proposition 4: The incumbent's curse: incumbents face more difficulty in transitioning towards sustainable practices.
Proposition 3: The changing role of the incumbent demands for the implementation of sustainable business models.
Limitations
Further research
What is the role of the incumbent in the Dutch energy transition?
Energy security and expected growth prosumerism should take accessibility into account
Incumbent's ability and role to create scalable energy solutions
Role to coordinate and link market of centralized and decentralized energy production and consumption
Incumbent's SBM not focusing on owning all assets anymore; energy efficiency instead of solely focusing on volume
Proposition 1: innovations +
new ways or organizing energy production and consumption
disrupt TBM
Proposition 2: overall role of
business is changing; incumbent
focus on niche; still centralized production; scalability; managing energy trilemma
Proposition 3: social + technical transition; overall management and configuration
Proposition 4: incumbents face
more difficulty but also have advantages over new entrants