How utilities are making their field tools easier to use and manage

Editor’s note: Originally published by SSP Innovations under SSP MIMS. Updated by the 3-GIS Team with the current product name, 3-GIS | MIMS, and other revisions. 

Mobile technology continues to evolve, and in the utility industry, mobile solutions are now everywhere. Many utilities run multiple applications from different vendors, often without a cohesive strategy for managing them. Some are essential, others overlap, and a few may even duplicate functions. So how do you get control of your mobile environment and make sure it supports your goals? The answer is to develop an enterprise mobile strategy. 

 

Consolidation and standardization 

The first step is to inventory all the mobile applications and custom tools in use across your organization, along with their use cases. Get management support early, so people understand why the work matters. Catalog your data capture tools, inspection forms, and work management solutions. Look across engineering, operations, field services, and asset management for common requirements and duplicate sources of data. 

This process highlights overlaps and helps identify candidates for consolidation. Expect some resistance — people often become attached to the tools they use. At this stage, though, the goal is simply to gather information to inform the strategy. 

Once you understand the landscape, you can identify opportunities for consolidation or standardization. For example, not every piece of equipment needs its own inspection form. Transformers, load break junctions, and switchgear can often be consolidated into one.  

The same holds true for maps. Instead of custom displays for each user, many can work from a standard base map. Reducing the number of forms and maps makes administration easier and helps field workers know which tools to use. 

 

Involving field workers 

Field workers are critical to the success of a mobile strategy. Beyond understanding why data is collected, they should be part of prototyping and trial runs. Their feedback ensures that the process is realistic and efficient. 

Ask questions like: 

  • How much time should it take to collect the required data at each site? 
  • Is the information feasible to gather in the field? 
  • What frustrations or challenges might arise? 

Complicated forms or unrealistic expectations lead to poor data and frustrated users. Keeping forms simple and intuitive is key. 

 

Forms and data management 

As you consolidate and standardize, also evaluate why each form exists and how the data is used. Consider: 

  • Are some fields unnecessary? 
  • Are important details missing? 
  • Is too much data being collected? 
  • Are field workers actually using the forms? 

To maintain data integrity, limit freehand typing. Dropdown menus and standardized options create consistent, repeatable results. 

Finally, design processes that are flexible enough to adapt. Field conditions rarely match the ideal, and requirements can change quickly due to new findings or corporate priorities. Your strategy should allow for adjustments without major disruption. 

 

The enterprise landscape 

Any enterprise mobile strategy has to fit within your organization’s broader technology environment. That landscape typically includes: 

  • System of record for asset location and connectivity: Tracks where assets are located and how they are connected (e.g., electrical conductor or gas pipe). 
  • System of record for assets: Stores details such as manufacturer, purchase date, and lot number. Options often include IBM Maximo, SAP, Oracle, or home-grown systems. 
  • System of record for work management: Manages work performed on assets, often tied closely to asset management systems. 
  • Other enterprise systems: Document management, customer information, outage management, and regulatory compliance databases. 

Any mobile technology you adopt will likely need to interact with one or more of these systems. If you’ve completed the assessment from earlier steps, you should already understand what those interactions look like. 

 

Mobile technology options 

There are several categories of mobile technology available: 

  • Incumbent enterprise solutions 
  • No-code and low-code platforms 
  • Custom-developed applications 
  • Single-purpose mobile apps 
  • Commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) solutions 

Rather than simply listing pros and cons, it’s best to evaluate these holistically. The goal isn’t to fit a specific technology into your organization but to find the one that best aligns with your infrastructure and business needs.

Here are some questions to guide the evaluation: 

1. What is your budget or appetite for licensing?
Some options may already be covered under existing license agreements but may have limited customization or integration capabilities. 
2. What is your budget or appetite for outside implementation services? 
Certain solutions can be rolled out by internal staff, while others require a consultant-led effort. 
3. What is your budget or appetite for ongoing maintenance? 
Custom or homegrown solutions may save on external costs but shift a growing maintenance burden to internal resources. 
4. How many apps are you comfortable asking your field workers to use? 
Some solutions are intuitive but narrow in scope, requiring multiple apps for different tasks. 
5. How utility-specific or customizable does your solution need to be? 
General-purpose apps may not support utility workflows or adapt easily to changes in data models. 
6. What is your appetite for customization at all? 
Some platforms offer rich customization, while others rely on configuration and out-of-the-box features. The right balance depends on your priorities for cost, complexity, and user experience. 

Conclusion 

Implementing an enterprise mobile strategy is never simple. It’s unlikely that every use case can be rolled into a single platform. But with careful analysis of your business drivers, consolidation of overlapping tools, and thoughtful evaluation of available technologies, you can reduce complexity, improve efficiency, and give both office and field teams a strategy that works. 

3-GIS | MIMS offers utilities a path to standardize mobile processes while still accommodating the flexibility required by field operations. 

Ready to simplify your mobile tools? Contact us. 

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