Meaningful Conversations with Annyse

Annyse Balkwill

Meaningful Conversation is a heartfelt series of discussions led by Annyse Balkwill, featuring inspiring female leaders from the water industry and beyond.With warmth and compassion, Annyse and her guests explore the possibilities for a future shaped by equity and inclusion, envisioning a world we want our sons and daughters to thrive in. Together, they delve into what our homes, systems, and organizations could look like if they genuinely valued and embraced women of all backgrounds.By stepping into a space of imagination, these conversations allow us to pause, reflect, and uncover our true desires. In this creative state, we unlock the potential to envision—and ultimately create—a future that reflects the power of inclusion and possibility.

  1. 4D AGO

    We Are Custodians, Not Owners - Victoria Edwards on Endurance, AI, and Reimagining Water

    In this episode of Meaningful Conversations, Annyse speaks with Victoria Edwards - former concert pianist, founder of FIDO Tech, and CEO of K622 Tech. Victoria is using acoustics and AI to revolutionise how we detect and manage water loss, and she brings one of the freshest perspectives in the global water conversation. Victoria drew the Endurance card and what unfolded was a powerful discussion about what it truly means to be a custodian of water, why real collaboration needs a commercial backbone, and how the sector must urgently reposition itself as the most compelling career destination on the planet. In this episode we cover: Why "custodian" is a more powerful framing than "owner" and what it demands of all of usHow FIDO built catalytic communities around stressed watersheds, including the Colorado River BasinWhy commercial constructs are not a compromise — they are the engine of lasting impactAI in water: the difference between a precision tool and "Wikipedia on steroids"The talent crisis in water and the seatbelt law analogy that reframes how we solve itWhy everyone knows the price of oil but almost nobody can tell you the cost of waterAbout Victoria Edwards: Victoria Edwards is the Founder Emeritus of FIDO Tech and CEO of K622 Tech. A winner of the Earth 05 Prize and member of the UK's Future Fifty, she specialises in innovative models for accelerating technical responses to the water crisis and building cross-sector catalytic communities at scale. Mentions  Fido Tech - FIDO AI: Advanced water leak detection and managementColorado River Basin / FIDO initiative - Meta launches AI water program in Farmington, NM Water neutral - What Is Water Neutrality?Water positive - Definition –Slow water movement - Erica Gies – Slow Water — by Erica GiesMaya civilisation and water  - Technology, Rainwater, and Survival of the MayaDigital Twins - What Is a Digital Twin? | IBMAI Hallucinations - What Are AI Hallucinations? | IBM Quantum AI - Quantum AI: What it is and why it matters | SAS IrelandBluey cartoon character - Bluey Characters | Learn More About Your Favourites!| Bluey Official Website

    46 min
  2. APR 8

    Wisdom, water & the courage to ask why — with Cindy Wallis-Lage

    What does it mean to be truly wise about water? In this episode, host Annyse speaks with Cindy Wallis-Lage, a long-career water sector leader, about indigenous knowledge, the danger of solving the wrong problem, and why water needs to become a want — not just a need. Cindy chose the Wisdom card and from that single image of waves and flowing water, an expansive conversation unfolded. Drawing on her experience as a former president at Black & Veatch Water and decades working across the sector, Cindy challenges some of the water industry's most embedded assumptions: about how we solve problems, who we invite to the table, and what relationship we want to have with water at all. From the One Water movement and tribal community knowledge to the importance of vulnerability in leadership, this episode weaves together systems thinking, indigenous wisdom, and a powerful reframe - what if we stopped treating water as an entitlement and started treating it as something worth truly desiring? Show Notes  US Water Alliance – Vision for a One Water Future - US Water AllianceTrue root cause analysis - What is Root Cause Analysis (RCA)? | ASQ5 Whys - 5 Whys - What is it? | Lean Enterprise Institute Cindy L. Wallis-Lage, Retired C-Suite Executive Cindy Wallis-Lage has served in the water industry for over 39 years through a combination of her work at Black & Veatch and service to public, private and non-profit industry organizations. Throughout her career, her focus has been on helping public and private entities successfully develop, enhance and manage their water, wastewater and stormwater infrastructure via a variety of solutions and delivery methods. Prior to her retirement, she served as Executive Director, Sustainability and Resilience for Black & Veatch to accelerate an enterprise-wide focus on sustainability and resilience solutions to support clients in the water, energy and telecommunications markets. Previously Wallis-Lage served as the President of the company’s global water business between 2012 and 2021 where she was responsible for the leadership and management of the company’s global water business. She also served on Black & Veatch’s Executive Committee and Board of Directors from 2012 until her retirement. Currently Ms. Wallis-Lage continues to engage in the water industry by serving as a board member for several companies and co-leading ReSoLve, a non-profit focused on empowering and retaining women in the water industry. Using her position, passion and knowledge, she is a champion of the Sustainable Development Goals and seeks to educate how holistic systems thinking can provide the needed long term human infrastructure to achieve social, economic and environmental sustainability goals.

    44 min
  3. MAR 23

    Nicole Brown — Water is Life, and It's Time We Act Like It

    About this episode What happens when a sector becomes so good at its job that it makes itself invisible? In this episode, Annyse sits down with Nicole Brown, a nationally recognised water leader, equity champion, and founding Vice President of the Black Water Professionals Alliance, for a conversation that is equal parts practical and profound. Nicole brings 27 years of experience in the water sector to a question that goes far deeper than infrastructure: how do we build a new story for water - one rooted in abundance, reverence, and belonging - and who gets to be part of telling it? What we explore in this conversation Why Nicole chose curiosity as her word for right now and what it means to choose forward motion over steady stateThe water sector's "invisibility problem" — how decades of operational excellence have disconnected the public from the value, the wonder, and the careers behind their tapThe scarcity mindset that runs through water conversations and why Nicole is intentionally refusing itRobin Wall Kimmerer's The Serviceberry and what an economy of gratitude, reciprocity, and community could look like in the water spaceWhat it means to be a steward of water and why abundance and reverence are more connected than we thinkThe Black Water Professionals Alliance, the Fairmount Water Works, and the power of exposure in building the next generation of water professionalsWhy constructs don't need to be destroyed - they can be dissolved, and something better built in their placeA moment that stayed with us "The water sector has done a great job at being invisible. We've been so good at what we do that we've made water seem like magic - and when something seems like magic, people stop asking how it works." About Nicole Brown Nicole Brown is the Area Growth Lead for the Water Sector at GFT, where she helps utilities align innovation with meaningful public engagement. She is the founding Vice President of the Black Water Professionals Alliance, a non-profit dedicated to workforce equity and community connection in the water industry. In 2024, she received the WEF Mentorship Award for her dedication to growing the next generation of water professionals.   Show notes  The Serviceberry – Robin Wall Kimmerer - Robin Wall KimmererBlack Water Professional Alliance Philadelphia - Black Water Professionals Alliance - Home PagePhiladelphia Fairmount Water Works - Fairmount Water Works – Discover. Connect. Act.Epigenetics - Epigenetic Inheritance of Trauma Across Generations: A Review of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, Epigenetic Mechanisms, Challenges and Implications for Today’s World | OxJournal

    51 min
  4. MAR 11

    What if the most important decision you make today won't be fully understood for 50 years?

    Guest: Kristen Atha | Director of Columbus Water & Power, City of Columbus About This Episode In this episode, Annyse sits down with Kristen Atha, Director of Columbus Water & Power for the City of Columbus, a leader who thinks in generations, leads with her whole self and is quietly doing some of the most important infrastructure work in America right now. Appointed by Mayor Andrew Ginther in May 2022, Kristen leads an organisation of over 1,400 employees and provides essential water, power and water reclamation services to more than 1.5 million customers across Central Ohio and 26 suburban partners. She brings 25 years of engineering consulting expertise to a public sector role at one of the most pivotal moments in her region's history. This is a conversation about legacy, leadership, humanity and what it truly means to build for people you will never meet. We also learn what being a mother of triplets has taught Kristen about leadership and it is one of the most beautiful stories we have ever heard on this podcast. We think you will leave this episode wishing Kristen was your boss — or maybe even your mum! The Big Idea What if the most important decision you make today won't be fully understood for 50 years? That is the question at the heart of this conversation. Kristen and her team think about legacy every single day, not as an abstract concept, but as a living, breathing responsibility that shapes every infrastructure decision, every partnership and every dollar invested in Central Ohio's water future. What We Cover In This Episode The Clarity Card: Kristen chose the Clarity card and saw in it a stream flowing through a field, a watershed with muddy edges. It sparked a powerful reflection on what clarity means in her work: clarity about water sources, about responsibility, about the legacy her team is creating right now for future generations. Building for People You'll Never Meet: Columbus is growing at extraordinary speed. Semiconductor investment, data centres, AI and population growth are transforming the region. Kristen takes us inside what it means to plan a $1.6 billion water treatment plant while keeping legacy and humanity at the centre of every decision. Slowing Down to Speed Up: When Kristen arrived as Director, the organization was in a difficult place post-Covid. Rather than racing forward, she slowed down, grounding her team in the history, care and incredible DNA of the organisation. It was counterintuitive. And it was exactly right. The Triplets Story: Kristen is the mother of triplets. When her son struggled to breathe after birth, placing him between his two sisters was all it took. She carried that story into her leadership, because we all need each other's presence to feel safe, to function and sometimes literally to breathe. Everything Happens Through People: A profound exploration of what it means to build cohesion in a team, stitch the past to the present and knit both to the future, consciously and intentionally. The Circular Water Economy: Kristen's team is exploring how recycled wastewater can serve incoming industries, protecting the drinking water supply for residents while enabling economic growth. In the Midwest, this conversation was unimaginable just a few years ago. Writing a Playbook That Doesn't Exist Yet: There is no template for how cities handle the water demands of AI and data centres. Kristen and her team are projecting into the future and making educated decisions that will become the new normal for growing cities around the world. Widening the Responsibility Circle: How Kristen has broadened decision making beyond the utility, inviting in partners, developers and community organisations to share responsibility for stormwater, infrastructure and affordability. Why it is

    38 min
  5. FEB 23

    Be Bold. Regenerate. Leave It Better Than You Found It.

    In this episode of Meaningful Conversations, Annyse sits down with Dr Angela MacOscar, Head of Innovation at Northumbrian Water — a visionary leader with a PhD in physical chemistry and a passion for building cultures where innovation can truly thrive. Angela chose the Bold card, and from that simple starting point, a rich conversation unfolded around regeneration, roots, diversity, and what it really takes to create lasting change in the water sector. What We Explore in This Episode Regeneration as a Leadership Philosophy For Angela, regeneration is about strong roots and solid foundations. Without purpose and diversity, nothing sustainable grows. It’s about planting the right seeds now for a future we may not immediately see. The Northumbrian Water Innovation Festival Now approaching its 10th year, the festival has grown from six design sprints and 900 attendees to: 53 sprints3,000+ participants39 countries45 sectorsOne early sprint led to the creation of the UK’s National Underground Asset Register, now a government-run platform improving safety and saving billions. Proof that bold ideas, nurtured well, create real impact. Innovation Is a Contact Sport Angela shares why innovation must be done with people, not to people. From engaging senior leaders to empowering frontline teams, culture is everything. With a central team of nine, they’ve built a network of over 200 Innovation Ambassadors across the organisation. Today, innovation is a core pillar at Northumbrian Water, with a measurable goal: 40% of employees actively involved. Creating the Conditions for Innovation Compassionate leadershipFamily-first valuesA four-day working weekSpace for thinking and reflectionUsing AI to remove repetitive tasksPsychological safety to ask for helpAngela reminds us that tired, stressed humans struggle to innovate. Space and empathy are not soft extras — they are strategic necessities. A Wiggly Career Path From leaving school at 16 to earning a PhD, working at Procter & Gamble, launching a product still on shelves 26 years later, building a lifestyle business, and eventually finding her home in the water sector — Angela’s journey is a powerful reminder that careers don’t need to be linear to be impactful. Key Themes Regenerative leadershipDiversity as a driver of innovationDesigning environments where bold ideas can growStewardship of water and natural systemsLeaving organisations and people better than you found themShow notes  Northumbrian Water - Northumbrian Water | Supplying water and Sewerage Services in the North East of EnglandNorthumbrian Water Innovation Festival - The FestivalOfwat funding – Water innovation competitions - OfwatDerek Siver, how to create a movement - Derek Sivers: How to start a movement | TED TalkNational Underground Asset Register (NUAR) - National Underground Asset Register (NUAR), Northumbrian Water Group and a Culture of Innovation – Geospatial Insights

    43 min
  6. JAN 28

    Meaningful Conversations — Growth, Innovation, and the Future of Water

    In this episode of Meaningful Conversations, we sit down with Kamakshi Sharma, Director of Marketing & Strategy at Aquatech, to explore what growth truly means for the future of the water industry. Kamakshi leads Aquatech’s global marketing and communications efforts and plays a central role in shaping market and business strategy across the organization. At a time when climate change, water scarcity, and rapid urbanisation are reshaping our world, water is no longer an afterthought—it’s at the centre of global, industrial, and municipal decision-making. Kamakshi shares why the industry is at a pivotal moment, with unprecedented opportunity to influence how we manage and protect this critical resource. From the rise of innovative membrane technologies and ZLD/MLD solutions to increased collaboration between industry partners, we discuss how technology, regulation, and co-development are accelerating change. Kamakshi also highlights a powerful cultural shift—greater diversity in the sector and more women entering the industry earlier than ever before. The conversation goes deeper into water reuse, closed-loop systems, and the growing focus on recovering value from water, not just treating it. Together, we tackle one of the most pressing questions of our time: can we overcome water scarcity in a way that leaves the planet with better water quality for future generations? This episode offers a hopeful, grounded perspective on where the biggest impact can be made—and why industrial and agricultural reuse will play a critical role in shaping a more sustainable water future. 🌊 A thoughtful and inspiring conversation about growth, responsibility, and what’s possible when water moves to the forefront.

    36 min
  7. An Audacious Conversation on Human Flourishing with Eleanor Allen

    JAN 12

    An Audacious Conversation on Human Flourishing with Eleanor Allen

    To open Season 2 of Meaningful Conversations, Annyse is joined by Eleanor Allen, CEO of the World Flourishing Organization and founder of Catapult for Change, for a powerful, reflective conversation on leadership, audacity, and what it truly means to flourish at work. Eleanor’s career spans Fortune 500 companies, nonprofits, and startups across more than 50 countries. She has held senior leadership roles at Arcadis, CH2M (now Jacobs), B Lab Global, and Water For People, and is a registered Professional Engineer and member of the National Academy of Engineering. Across every chapter of her work, a clear thread emerges: tackling big, complex, “wicked” problems through human-centred leadership. In this episode, Eleanor chooses the Audacious card - a word that deeply reflects her life and leadership. From applying for the Audacious Project while at Water For People, to imagining nationwide water services in Rwanda, to her passion for ultra-distance cycling, Eleanor shares how audacity is where life feels most alive, connected, and purposeful. Together, Annyse and Eleanor explore Eleanor’s current focus on human flourishing  and why it may be one of the most important frontiers for leadership today. Drawing on insights from the Global Flourishing Study (a five-year study of over 200,000 people across 23 countries), Eleanor shares the six core elements people need to flourish: happiness, financial stability, purpose and meaning, character and virtue, mental and physical health, and strong social relationships, all of which can, and should, be supported at work. The conversation also dives into: Why fear-based systems limit creativity, courage, and impactHow perfectionism shows up in engineering and leadership culturesThe importance of psychological safety, consistency, and intention in organizational transformationWhy the water sector is uniquely positioned to lead the way in human flourishingHow flourishing can spread — from individuals to teams to entire organizationsA central question we sit with throughout the episode: What becomes possible when work is designed for flourishing instead of fear? Because when people flourish, organizations do too. 🎧 Listen now and join us as we begin Season 2 with an audacious invitation to rethink leadership, work, and the future of the water sector. Mentions in podcast:  The Audacious Project - Housed at TED, The Audacious Project is a funding initiative that encourages the world’s greatest changemakers to dream bigger. We shape their ideas into viable multi-year plans and launch them to the world alongside visionary philanthropists.Water for People - Water For People exists to promote the development of high-quality drinking water and sanitation services, accessible to all, and sustained by strong communities, businesses, and governments.Ultra CyclingB-Lab - B Lab is the nonprofit network transforming the global economy to benefit all people, communities, and the planet.Global Flourishing Study - The Global Flourishing Study explores six domains valued across countries and cultures. The Secure Flourishing Index (SFI) measures these through targeted survey items, with the first five domains pursued for their own sake and financial stability providing the foundation. When financial stability is omitted, the measure becomes the Flourishing Index (FI), while contextual factors help understand environments where flourishing thrives.Gallup workplace study

    47 min

About

Meaningful Conversation is a heartfelt series of discussions led by Annyse Balkwill, featuring inspiring female leaders from the water industry and beyond.With warmth and compassion, Annyse and her guests explore the possibilities for a future shaped by equity and inclusion, envisioning a world we want our sons and daughters to thrive in. Together, they delve into what our homes, systems, and organizations could look like if they genuinely valued and embraced women of all backgrounds.By stepping into a space of imagination, these conversations allow us to pause, reflect, and uncover our true desires. In this creative state, we unlock the potential to envision—and ultimately create—a future that reflects the power of inclusion and possibility.