Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Oklahoma City multi-basin oil & gas E&P (NYSE: DVN) ~$14B revenue; Permian Delaware Basin + Williston Bakken (Grayson Mill $5B acquisition), fixed+variable dividend pioneer, $1B FCF improvement plan competing with ConocoPhillips.
Devon Energy Corporation is an Oklahoma City, Oklahoma-based oil and natural gas exploration and production company — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: DVN) as an S&P 500 Energy component — operating primarily in the Permian Basin (Delaware Basin, Texas and New Mexico), Anadarko Basin (Oklahoma), Eagle Ford (South Texas), Powder River Basin (Wyoming), and Williston Basin (North Dakota), with approximately 1,700 employees producing approximately 750,000-800,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day. Devon announced a comprehensive business optimization plan targeting $1 billion in annual pre-tax free cash flow improvements by year-end 2026, focusing on improving margins and capital efficiency across operations — including well productivity optimization, overhead cost reduction, and marketing contract improvements. Devon acquired Grayson Mill Energy (a Williston Basin Bakken shale operator) in 2024 for approximately $5 billion in cash and stock, adding high-quality Williston Basin production that complements Devon's existing Permian Basin core position. Devon pioneered the "fixed plus variable dividend" model in the E&P sector — paying a base quarterly dividend plus a variable dividend linked to free cash flow generation each quarter — a capital return structure that has since been adopted by numerous E&P companies as a shareholder-friendly alternative to buybacks-only programs.
San Francisco Northern California utility (NYSE: PCG) ~$22.7B FY2024 revenue; post-2020 bankruptcy, 10K miles undergrounding program, Silicon Valley AI data center load, competing with SCE and SDG&E.
PG&E Corporation is a San Francisco, California-based regulated electric and gas utility holding company — publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: PCG) as an S&P 500 Utilities component — serving approximately 16 million Californians in a 70,000-square-mile service territory in Northern and Central California through its subsidiary Pacific Gas and Electric Company, providing electric and natural gas service through approximately 27,000 employees. PG&E emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy in July 2020 — the largest utility bankruptcy in US history, filed in January 2019 following liability exposure from the 2017 Wine Country fires ($13.5B) and the 2018 Camp Fire ($25.5B), which destroyed the town of Paradise, California, killing 85 people and representing the deadliest California wildfire in history — funding the $13.5 billion wildfire victim trust and implementing the most comprehensive electric utility wildfire safety program in the United States. In fiscal year 2024, PG&E reported revenues of approximately $22.7 billion, with CEO Patti Poppe executing the "Lean" operational transformation: applying manufacturing-industry lean continuous improvement principles to PG&E's grid operations (undergrounding power lines in high wildfire risk areas — targeting 10,000 miles of underground line conversion through 2026), vegetation management (automated trimming tracking and scheduling), and customer operations. The wildfire safety capital investment ($16B+ in the 2023-2026 capital plan for undergrounding, enhanced powerline safety settings, and weather station deployment) enables PG&E to request recovery through California Public Utilities Commission rate cases that translate capital investment into rate base and allowed return.
Monitor how your brand performs across ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, Claude, and Grok daily.