CxAlloy

Commissioning and Energy Management in Buildings and Facilities

Abstract:

One of the key energy management principles is tracking progress over time. Monitoring progress over time is essential for validating that actions taken are actually solving targeted problems or achieving goals. For the past year CxAlloy has been collecting and reviewing approaches to tracking and reporting on commissioning progress. In this session we’ll explore real-world examples of commissioning progress trackers. We’ll discuss trade offs to levels of detail, effective presentation options, and how to leverage progress tracking to validate that actions taken were effective.

Learning Objectives:

  • Explain best practices for visual presentation of commissioning progress.
  • Discuss pros and cons of different levels of granularity in tracking.
  • Provide a framework of key principles to use when developing a progress tracker.
  • Describe multiple approaches to keeping progress data up-to-date.

Sponsored by: CxAlloy

CxAlloy is a market leader in commissioning (Cx) management and facility maintenance software. CxAlloy TQ is the #1 cloud-based commissioning management platform, empowering Cx professionals to accelerate project completion while alleviating waste and rework. CxAlloy TQ brings real-time transparency to the entire project team through instant web access and field-optimized offline apps. Commissioning engineers work smarter and faster with CxAlloy allowing them to get in, get done, and get home.

https://www.cxalloy.com/

Date

Jul 09 2024

Time

2:00 pm

Speaker

  • Jacob Terry
    Jacob Terry
    Director of Product Development, CxAlloy

    Jacob Terry is based out of Atlanta, Georgia and has been working with the CxAlloy software since 2006. A self-taught programmer, he has a BA in Print Journalism, and an MBA from the Georgia Institute of Technology. He is CxAlloy’s Director of Product Development and is focused on deploying software features that empower customers. Jacob spends most of his free time wrangling his four children, and occasionally finds time to play Nintendo.