Wiltshire-based renewable electricity supplier Good Energy has made three senior appointments to its team as it forges ahead with a growth plan. The Chippenham-headquartered company has appointed Carl Hogg as services managing director, Ryan McShea as business development director of commercial solar, and Richard Fuell as head of business development.
The news follows two more acquisitions by the fast-growing energy supplier in October. The deals last month mean the Wiltshire company now has five services businesses in its portfolio.
Mr Hogg, who has more than 15 years' leadership experience, joins from Johnson Controls where he was group services director. He will head up operations across Good Energy's five acquired entities to manage integration and drive growth.
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Mr McShea is the founder of Empower Energy which was acquired by Good Energy in October. He will lead solar installation sales for the company in the commercial sector, targeting customers from small-to-medium enterprises to large corporations and local authorities.
Mr Fuell, meanwhile, has joined the company from Maxeon Solar Technologies, having previously spent eight years managing º£½ÇÊÓÆµ sales for SolarEdge.
Nigel Pocklington, chief executive of Good Energy, said: "Having rapidly expanded our clean energy services through acquisition, we are now bringing in the right leadership to oversee their operations and integration into the wider group and ensure organic growth. Carl's leadership experience in large, complex services businesses is well suited to this task and comes as we announce the bolstering of our technical sales capability in commercial solar installation - a sector expected to see growth into 2024 and beyond.
"Good Energy's strong brand and expert reputation with generators, leading export tariffs, and green supply products, now combined with our national coverage in commercial solar combined and technical sales expertise positions us perfectly to help businesses and public sector organisations who want to cut their carbon and energy costs."