PV Technology
PV Technology
PV Technology
Company Background
PV Technologies was founded in 1993 in San Francisco, California Was a global specialist in renewable energy
Were among the industry leaders in five product groups: Industrial Automation, Process Management, Network Power, Drive Technology & Climate Technologies
In 2010, it served the electric power industry and large-scale solar project developers in more than 25 countries giving them revenue of $30 Billion By October 2011, global revenue from the PV Inverter division, a unit within the Industrial Automation Group had reached $1.24 billion (4.1% of the total revenue) It earned this market share & revenue growth primarily because of its R&D and reputation for product reliability and efficiency
Case Intro
People Involved: Nathan Rubenstein (PVTs Director of Sales and Marketing) Jim Salvatori (PVTs Salesperson) Greg Morgan (Solenergys Chief Electrical Engineer) Solenergy Development LLC (one of the largest customer of PVT) was a major developer of energy generation systems. Solenergy was brought by Jim Salvatori
Solenergy got an offer from City of Barstow, California, to construct a PV solar energy power plant and was seeking a supplier of utility scale central inverters.
Solenergy conducted periodic confidential evaluations of the select group of companies it invited to bid on its major projects which was directed by Greg Morgan
Case Intro
In late July, PVT received Request for Proposal (RFP) from Solenergy. The closing date for the response to RFP was October 31,2011 In late November, Salvatori came to know from his sources that PVT was trailing the other competitors- SOMA Energy & BJ Solar Salvatoris sources were vague; they believed the evaluation was based largely on price but werent certain this was the only factor Morgans updated evaluation would drive the purchase decision ultimately Rubenstein & Salvatori were concerned with this, as their companys reputation & position in the marketplace were at stake
PVT Website
Product features and benefits Inform target audience about current developments Demonstration through videos Provide point of initial contact
Note:
Effective Power output = Nominal ac output power * efficiency rate Expected lifetime power output = effective power output * expected service life
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Different alternatives
4. Initiate a DIALOGUE with Morgan to find out the real output of the evaluation
CONCLUSION