PodParley PodParley

Anne Mushow - Building a Utility Data Dragnet

An episode of the The Fundamental Molecule podcast, hosted by Burnt Island Ventures, titled "Anne Mushow - Building a Utility Data Dragnet" was published on June 18, 2025 and runs 46 minutes.

June 18, 2025 ·46m · The Fundamental Molecule

0:00 / 0:00

There is so much that is dumb in water, but easily one of the dumbest is that in the US - let alone the rest of the world - 60 percent of meters are offline and need to be read by hand in 2025. It is an insane state of affairs, and we have had our eyes out for teams to solve it for literally years. Anne Mushow is the driving force behind the solution to this problem at Subeca. Taking over from the exceptional Patrick Keaney, she is a superb leader: practical, experienced, thoughtful, and so determined to banish the schleppiest of schlep work that is meter reading to the past. She spent a lot of time in this market, both in water at Sensus and Xylem, as well as experiencing hypergrowth at Amazon. Please enjoy my conversation with Anne Mushow. Subscribe to The Fundamental Molecule here: https://www.burntislandventures.com/the-fundamental-molecule For the full show notes, transcript, and links to mentioned content, check out the episode page here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-fundamental-molecule/id1714287205 ----------- Anne Mushow highlights the slow adoption of advanced metering infrastructure (AMI) in the water utility sector, attributing it to factors like risk aversion and capital intensity. She emphasizes the importance of data-driven decision-making and customer-centricity, sharing insights from her experiences at Sensus, Xylem, and Amazon. Anne also delves into Subeca's innovative approach, focusing on low-barrier adoption and leveraging technologies like Amazon Sidewalk to empower utilities with efficient and cost-effective solutions. 00:00 - Why Most Water Meters Still Require Manual Reads   02:43 - The Real Barriers to AMI Adoption in Utilities   08:41 - How Cloud and Managed Services Are Changing Water Tech   11:01 - Subeca’s Low-Friction Approach to Smart Metering   16:04 - Eliminating Manual Labor with Plug-and-Play Devices   20:15 - Building a Strong ROI Case Without Infrastructure Costs   24:05 - How to Successfully Sell Into Utility Markets   31:52 - Applying Amazon’s Culture to Water Tech Innovation   36:17 - The Future of Water Data as a Service   39:55 - Leadership Lessons from Stepping Into the CEO Role   45:50 - Anne’s advice for current and future water entrepreneurs Links: Burnt Island Ventures: https://www.burntislandventures.com/ Anne Mushow: https://www.linkedin.com/in/anne-mushow-3108a65b/ Subeca: https://www.subeca.com/ SM Material Key Takeaways: "Water utilities are buyers, not builders. They need solutions, not just data." "In the US, 60% of meters are offline and need manual reading in 2025. It's an insane state of affairs." "Utilities are risk-averse. They need to see proof of concept before making big investments." "Amazon Sidewalk's connectivity in challenging terrains is astonishing. It works where others fail." "Focus on solving real customer problems. Product-market fit will follow." "The market for water utilities is diverse. Tailor your approach to their unique needs." "Documentation and working backwards are key. They transform ideas into actionable plans." "Survive and advance. Find what's working and ride it to bring in revenue for innovation." "The sky's the limit for networks. Managed services will drive utility transformation." "Gut is the instant amalgamation of all your experience. Trust it, but verify with data."

There is so much that is dumb in water, but easily one of the dumbest is that in the US - let alone the rest of the world - 60 percent of meters are offline and need to be read by hand in 2025. It is an insane state of affairs, and we have had our eyes out for teams to solve it for literally years. Anne Mushow is the driving force behind the solution to this problem at Subeca. Taking over from the exceptional Patrick Keaney, she is a superb leader: practical, experienced, thoughtful, and so determined to banish the schleppiest of schlep work that is meter reading to the past. She spent a lot of time in this market, both in water at Sensus and Xylem, as well as experiencing hypergrowth at Amazon. Please enjoy my conversation with Anne Mushow.

Subscribe to The Fundamental Molecule here: https://www.burntislandventures.com/the-fundamental-molecule

For the full show notes, transcript, and links to mentioned content, check out the episode page here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-fundamental-molecule/id1714287205

-----------

Anne Mushow highlights the slow adoption of advanced metering infrastructure (AMI) in the water utility sector, attributing it to factors like risk aversion and capital intensity. She emphasizes the importance of data-driven decision-making and customer-centricity, sharing insights from her experiences at Sensus, Xylem, and Amazon. Anne also delves into Subeca's innovative approach, focusing on low-barrier adoption and leveraging technologies like Amazon Sidewalk to empower utilities with efficient and cost-effective solutions.

00:00 - Why Most Water Meters Still Require Manual Reads  

02:43 - The Real Barriers to AMI Adoption in Utilities  

08:41 - How Cloud and Managed Services Are Changing Water Tech  

11:01 - Subeca’s Low-Friction Approach to Smart Metering  

16:04 - Eliminating Manual Labor with Plug-and-Play Devices  

20:15 - Building a Strong ROI Case Without Infrastructure Costs  

24:05 - How to Successfully Sell Into Utility Markets  

31:52 - Applying Amazon’s Culture to Water Tech Innovation  

36:17 - The Future of Water Data as a Service  

39:55 - Leadership Lessons from Stepping Into the CEO Role  

45:50 - Anne’s advice for current and future water entrepreneurs

Links:

Burnt Island Ventures: https://www.burntislandventures.com/

Anne Mushow: https://www.linkedin.com/in/anne-mushow-3108a65b/

Subeca: https://www.subeca.com/


SM Material


Key Takeaways:

"Water utilities are buyers, not builders. They need solutions, not just data."

"In the US, 60% of meters are offline and need manual reading in 2025. It's an insane state of affairs."

"Utilities are risk-averse. They need to see proof of concept before making big investments."

"Amazon Sidewalk's connectivity in challenging terrains is astonishing. It works where others fail."

"Focus on solving real customer problems. Product-market fit will follow."

"The market for water utilities is diverse. Tailor your approach to their unique needs."

"Documentation and working backwards are key. They transform ideas into actionable plans."

"Survive and advance. Find what's working and ride it to bring in revenue for innovation."

"The sky's the limit for networks. Managed services will drive utility transformation."

"Gut is the instant amalgamation of all your experience. Trust it, but verify with data."


On the Various Forces of Nature by Michael Faraday (1791 - 1867) LibriVox A non-mathematical survey of the fundamental forces of nature and some relationships among them. This is a series of lectures aimed at young people. He starts off with the most fundamental and familiar forces of all: Gravity and Heat. Then by a progression of examples and experiments goes on to describe atomic/molecular adhesion in solids, liquids and gases, which he groups under the rubric of "Chemical Affinity". And, no collection of Faraday's theories could omit his discoveries in Electricity and Magnetism. (Summary by William A Jones) Neuroscience Collins Rotimi Neuroscience is the scientific study of the nervous system. It is a multidisciplinary branch of biology that combines physiology, anatomy, molecular biology, developmental biology, cytology, mathematical modeling, and psychology to understand the fundamental and emergent properties of neurons and neural circuits. Chemistry for the Future: Incredible Machines Oxford University It was here in Oxford, in the 1600s, that great minds such as Hooke, Boyle, Willis and Wren laid the foundations of modern experimental science. Like their famous forebears, today’s Oxford scientists continue to undertake world-leading research: making fundamental new discoveries and applying cutting-edge knowledge to the major societal and technological challenges of the day. The research happening right now in the Department of Chemistry is uniquely poised to have a major impact on everything from our health to our energy sources – in other words, it is enabling our shared future. To read more about our research, please visit http://www.chem.ox.ac.uk/researchthemes.asp. Not all chemistry takes place in test tubes. This series focuses on the amazing machines, from hand-blown glass to ultracold molecular beams, used by Oxford chemists every single day. Chasing Reality Ryan Bissett After a PhD in molecular biology & five years in biotech I woke up one day and thought, I need an adventure! So I bought a campervan, checked out some organic farms with the wonderful WWOOF scheme, and took some time to train in Bhakti Yoga. Please join me on this adventure as I interview thinkers from different fields of enquiry about fundamental questions of consciousness and reality.
URL copied to clipboard!