Utilities are a vital and often overlooked part of modern society’s infrastructure. Functional utility networks ensure that water comes from the faucet, gas runs to the stove or furnace, and electricity powers your lights. It should come as no surprise that utility infrastructure networks are massive and complex.
An efficient asset management strategy is essential for maintaining regulatory compliance. Increasingly, regulators are focused on customer service levels, maximum returns, and reducing operational expenses. Therefore, not only is it important to manage assets well for your utility, but it’s important to demonstrate this to regulators.
Inspecting and maintaining utility networks presents significant challenges. With EpochField, users can create configurable work order forms, document inspections, and streamline maintenance processes – increasing operational efficiency across the board.
Stay Compliant with EpochField: Asset Inspections
Regulatory agencies are increasingly focused on customer service levels, cost efficiency, and maximum returns. Utilities must not only manage their assets effectively but also demonstrate that management to regulators. A structured, well-documented inspection process is essential for meeting compliance requirements and avoiding costly penalties.
EpochField allows users to create configurable work order forms, document inspections in the field, and streamline maintenance processes across the enterprise. This keeps inspection records accurate, accessible, and audit-ready, supporting both day-to-day operations and regulatory reporting requirements.
Utility infrastructure networks can be massive, spanning electric, gas, and water systems that serve thousands of customers. Managing inspections, maintenance, and compliance documentation across that scale requires structured workflows and reliable data capture, both of which EpochField is designed to support.
Yes. By digitizing inspection workflows and centralizing maintenance documentation, EpochField reduces manual processes and administrative overhead. More efficient operations mean fewer delays, less rework, and better use of field crew time, all of which contribute to lower operational costs over time.


