List of Oracle Utilities Network Management Customers
Austin, 78741, TX,
United States
Since 2010, our global team of researchers has been studying Oracle Utilities Network Management customers around the world, aggregating massive amounts of data points that form the basis of our forecast assumptions and perhaps the rise and fall of certain vendors and their products on a quarterly basis.
Each quarter our research team identifies companies that have purchased Oracle Utilities Network Management for Outage Management from public (Press Releases, Customer References, Testimonials, Case Studies and Success Stories) and proprietary sources, including the customer size, industry, location, implementation status, partner involvement, LOB Key Stakeholders and related IT decision-makers contact details.
Companies using Oracle Utilities Network Management for Outage Management include: Dominion Energy, a United States based Utilities organisation with 14700 employees and revenues of $14.46 billion, Portland General Electric, a United States based Utilities organisation with 2842 employees and revenues of $2.92 billion, Toronto Hydro, a Canada based Utilities organisation with 1400 employees and revenues of $2.70 billion and many others.
Contact us if you need a completed and verified list of companies using Oracle Utilities Network Management, including the breakdown by industry (21 Verticals), Geography (Region, Country, State, City), Company Size (Revenue, Employees, Asset) and related IT Decision Makers, Key Stakeholders, business and technology executives responsible for the software purchases.
The Oracle Utilities Network Management customer wins are being incorporated in our Enterprise Applications Buyer Insight and Technographics Customer Database which has over 100 data fields that detail company usage of software systems and their digital transformation initiatives. Apps Run The World wants to become your No. 1 technographic data source!
Apply Filters For Customers
| Logo | Customer | Industry | Empl. | Revenue | Country | Vendor | Application | Category | When | SI | Insight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
Dominion Energy | Utilities | 14700 | $14.5B | United States | Oracle | Oracle Utilities Network Management | Outage Management | 2023 | n/a |
In 2023 Dominion Energy Virginia upgraded to Oracle Utilities Network Management in the Outage Management category to enhance outage detection and restoration capabilities. The deployment leverages Oracle advanced distribution management system ADMS and Oracle Utilities Outage Management System OMS to improve network visibility reliability and outage management response. Dominion Energy has used Oracle Utilities NMS for over a decade to plan and execute key switching activities and chose to add Fault Location Isolation and Service Restoration FLISR for automated self healing support.
The implementation includes Oracle Utilities Network Management modules such as FLISR FlexOps and Power Flow alongside the Oracle Utilities Outage Management System to centralize outage workflows. Mobile applications were configured to support field crew workstreams and to provide real time command center visibility during emergency response. The solution is provisioned as a unified platform to enable advanced grid applications and automated sectionalization of outage impacts.
Operational scope focuses on Dominion Energy Virginia and its 2.7 million served homes and businesses, with architectures tuned to ingest and manage increased data from distributed energy resources DER. The unified OMS and NMS architecture is described as scalable and is positioned to help the utility meet regulatory requirements and priority KPIs including reduced service interruption minutes. The project is positioned in phases with continued expansion of OMS capabilities for faster restoration on a single platform.
Workflows were restructured to support automated fault isolation and service restoration logic and to route restoration tasks through mobile enabled crew dispatch and command center orchestration. Governance changes emphasize operational procedures for ADMS driven switching and automated sectionalization aligning operations centers and emergency preparedness teams with the new grid applications. Training and workshop assessments informed configuration choices to ensure operational alignment with regulatory and safety protocols.
Stated outcomes include reduced service interruptions improved service reliability and faster restoration times through automated sectionalization and unified outage management operations. The deployment is intended to deliver efficiencies across business operations while enabling more confident management of DER impacts.
|
|
|
Portland General Electric | Utilities | 2842 | $2.9B | United States | Oracle | Oracle Utilities Network Management | Outage Management | 2012 | n/a |
In 2012, Portland General Electric implemented Oracle Utilities Network Management as a core element of its 2020 Vision program to standardize systems across generation, transmission and distribution operations. The deployment targeted the Outage Management category to consolidate outage detection, status reporting and service restoration workflows across a 4,000-square-mile service area serving roughly 840,000 customers.
The implementation delivered an Oracle Utilities Network Management solution built on Websphere, providing a dashboard for customer service representatives to manage outages, track probable causes, and estimate restoration times. Functional capabilities included automated ingestion of AMI meter pings and customer calls for outage creation, outage status updates, estimated time of restoration calculations, and feeds to field crew work order views.
Integrations were explicit and tightly coupled to operational systems, with a stabilized GIS providing the spatial foundation, centralized CIS inputs for customer context, and Maximo handling work and asset management orchestration. Automatic Vehicle Location integration surfaced crews and truck locations on the NMS map to improve dispatching decisions, Asset & Resource Management workflows routed design and service work through Websphere to downstream systems, and Oracle Utilities Analytics was used to monitor dispatch and operations via analytics and operational reporting.
Governance and rollout were organized under PGE’s Next Wave program with Accenture providing integration and delivery support, and PGE embedding its business and technical teams into the project team. The program ran at peak resourcing of roughly 40 to 50 full-time equivalents and carried strict timelines tied to the Northwest storm season, with a targeted OMS cutover date in August 2015, extensive business process design and testing phases, and concentrated field training activities that required about one month to achieve initial operational familiarity.
Operational constraints and pragmatic controls were documented, including staged activation of AMI last gasp functionality to avoid false outage dispatches and use of AMI initially as a testbed. Success criteria emphasized Day 1 operability, stronger safety functionality, and sustained business side engagement, and the project was characterized by PGE and Accenture as a tightly integrated program that embedded operations, IT and vendor teams to support Day 2 operations.
|
|
|
Toronto Hydro | Utilities | 1400 | $2.7B | Canada | Oracle | Oracle Utilities Network Management | Outage Management | 2019 | n/a |
In 2019 Toronto Hydro implemented Oracle Utilities Network Management as its core application for network operations in the Outage Management category. The deployment targeted DEV, TST, and PROD environments and emphasized clustered application server architecture to support high availability and integration needs.
The implementation included build and configuration of clustered Oracle WebLogic environments hosting Oracle Utilities Network Management and Oracle Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition, with Oracle HTTP Server fronting application tiers. Middleware work included installation and configuration of WebSphere MQ and IBM Integration Bus, built in high availability configurations, and implementation of Web Services Security to secure service interfaces. The team conducted JVM tuning and performance analysis using IBM Heap and GC Analyzer, and performed crash dump analysis to restore services as needed.
Integrations and operational tooling were explicit parts of the rollout, with Oracle Utilities Network Management integrated with OBIEE for reporting and OHS for web traffic management, and message backbone integration via MQ and IIB for asynchronous interfacing. Monitoring and diagnostics were administered with Dynatrace across the middleware stack, and AIX and UNIX servers were managed as part of the platform footprint. Integration and testing activities were coordinated with business stakeholders and vendors to validate end to end flows.
Governance and operational control centered on day to day administration of MQ, IIB, WebLogic, and WebSphere Application Server across environments, collaboration with the security team on technologies and policies, and documentation of build procedures for Oracle Utilities Network Management, BI, and OHS. The implementation included inputs to performance and stress testing and established procedures for troubleshooting infrastructure incidents and restoring services.
|
Buyer Intent: Companies Evaluating Oracle Utilities Network Management
- NEC Corporation, a Japan based Professional Services organization with 105276 Employees
- Nexant, Inc, a United States based Professional Services company with 620 Employees
Discover Software Buyers actively Evaluating Enterprise Applications
| Logo | Company | Industry | Employees | Revenue | Country | Evaluated | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No data found | ||||||||