Texas leads the United States in both the number and total cost of billion-dollar weather disasters. Since 1980, the state has experienced 190 such events, resulting in approximately $402 billion in cumulative damages. In 2023 alone, Texas saw 16 severe weather events, including floods, derechos, droughts, and freezes. These incidents disrupted operations, stressed infrastructure, and created significant risks for utility field teams
Texas utility operations must contend with these rapid changes, as conditions can evolve within hours, rendering the original plan for the day obsolete. Field teams need to respond swiftly and confidently.
Most field operations still rely on rigid schedules and disconnected tools that falter during disruptions. Crews are dispatched without real-time information, and supervisors depend on delayed phone calls. Teams sometimes sacrifice safety to complete tasks as conditions change on the site. This leads to downtime, delays, and higher safety risks.
Traditional approaches often separate field activities from supply and weather data, resulting in crews arriving too early with materials. Work continues despite new hazards, and contractors lack visibility of plan updates. These issues increase costs and make operations more complex.
As infrastructure becomes increasingly complex and demand becomes more volatile, operational certainty requires a new approach. The right frontline intelligence platform can close these gaps.
On February 20, 2025, ERCOT recorded a winter demand peak of 80,525 megawatts.While the grid remained stable, this peak highlighted the level of coordination needed across field operations.
The 2024 Houston derecho exposed further stress points, over 900,000 customers lost power as high winds damaged infrastructure. Restoration crews faced blocked access routes and rapidly changing site conditions. The lack of real-time field tools resulted in delays in reassigning crews and verifying site readiness.
These incidents demonstrate that grid resilience depends on the field team's adaptability. Visibility and agility on the ground directly affect how fast utilities can respond and recover.
Utilities throughout Texas are transitioning to platforms that offer greater visibility and flexibility. Real-time field status updates are replacing static crew management methods. Predictive intelligence in the field identifies new risks earlier. Mobile workflows that work offline enable crews to operate in areas with poor signals. Weather alerts now initiate job reevaluation and adaptable compliance procedures.
FYLD facilitates this transformation by integrating field teams, supply chains, and weather data into a single system. Tasks are updated in real-time, enabling supervisors to make decisions without needing to travel to the site. Contractors remain coordinated through shared access, allowing field teams to act quickly and safely with fewer dependencies.
These improvements do not require large structural changes. They depend on deploying smarter, connected tools that deliver clarity when and where it matters most. The right software for utilities can drive this level of coordination and adaptability.
Utilities using FYLD have reported strong, measurable improvements. Safety incidents fell by 50% when teams used adaptive workflows and received real-time prompts. More than 30% of jobs received proactive interventions, which helped prevent delays and reduce risk. Over 73,000 AI-powered site assessments were completed, giving managers deeper oversight and supporting accurate, first-time delivery.
These results demonstrate how adaptive field operations directly improve safety, reliability, and delivery performance.
Resilience isn't just an emergency response; it is an essential component of modern infrastructure management. Field teams require tools that can handle disruptions as a routine part of their work.
FYLD enables workflows that react to weather triggers, automatically enforce compliance, and instantly capture field data. Managers receive alerts if tasks lag or safety conditions change. The supply chain visibility feature links directly to field schedules, allowing delays in materials to be identified before they disrupt work.
Contractors also benefit from shared access to job data, which helps them better align with utility protocols. This minimizes confusion, speeds up resolution times, and enhances partner performance.
Utilities that incorporate adaptability into daily routines are enhancing their ability to operate safely and reliably. This change increases control, minimizes repeated work, and helps teams meet deadlines more consistently. Such predictability boosts customer trust and safeguards profit margins. Outage management becomes quicker, clearer, and more coordinated.
The upcoming storm, outage, or demand surge is not just theoretical; it is already on the weather radar or concealed within the supply chain. Utilities that keep operating without flexible field systems are exposing themselves to unnecessary risks.
Explore how adaptive field operations can help your team reduce risk and keep projects on track. Connect with us to see what it looks like in practice.