Full-Time

Product Marketing Manager

Posted on 8/4/2025

EnergyHub

EnergyHub

201-500 employees

AI-powered DERMS managing grid-edge resources

Compensation Overview

$110k - $130k/yr

No H1B Sponsorship

Remote in USA

Remote

Category
Growth & Marketing (1)
Required Skills
Marketing
Excel/Numbers/Sheets
PowerPoint/Keynote/Slides
Requirements
  • 3+ years of experience in product marketing, preferably in the technology, energy, or utilities industry
  • Bachelor’s degree education or equivalent with a demonstrated understanding of product marketing principles, strategies, and tactics
  • Curiosity and the ability to iterate quickly on new ideas
  • Excellent written and verbal communication skills, with the ability to distill complex concepts into clear and compelling messaging using simple, everyday language
  • Demonstrated experience in developing impactful marketing collateral, including sales enablement materials, presentations, and web content
  • Proven ability to work cross-functionally and collaborate with teams such as product management, sales, client success, and engineering
  • Strong project management skills, with the ability to manage multiple projects simultaneously and meet deadlines
  • Demonstrated ability to identify and initiate new projects independently
  • Passion for sustainability, renewable energy, and driving positive environmental impact
  • Expertise in Microsoft Excel, PowerPoint
Responsibilities
  • Become an expert on our customers and the challenges they face around distributed energy resource (DER) adoption and how our solutions solve their grid needs
  • Disseminate and evangelize customer insights across the company
  • Craft compelling messaging and solution-level narratives that align with our company positioning to target utilities
  • Understand and support our Sales, Marketing, Product and Customer Success teams; train them on the problems we solve for our buyers and users of our solutions
  • Lead the creation of compelling and persuasive product marketing collateral, including sales enablement materials, product fact sheets, presentations, website content, and case studies highlighting our solutions.
  • Support the development and execution of go-to-market plans for new launches and features, including sales enablement and promotional activities.
  • Conduct competitive analysis to identify market trends, positioning strategies, and opportunities for differentiation. Utilize insights to inform marketing strategies and messaging.
  • Inform the content roadmap with audience insights. Work with Brand Marketing to ensure consistent messaging across channels and to develop content for events.
  • Collaborate with cross-functional teams to ensure the company deeply understands the full scope of our audiences’s challenges. Collaborate with Product, Sales, Client Success, Market Development and Marketing to gather product information, conduct market research, and refine messaging and positioning.
  • Measure and analyze the effectiveness of product marketing initiatives, track key performance indicators, and provide actionable insights and recommendations for continuous improvement.
  • Other duties as assigned

EnergyHub helps utilities manage distributed energy resources with a DERMS platform that uses artificial intelligence to optimize control of grid-edge resources like solar, EVs, and other DERs. A key feature is Managed Charging for EVs, which lets utilities coordinate EV charging to match renewable supply, shift load to off-peak times, and protect distribution networks. This approach reduces the need for costly infrastructure investments while improving grid reliability and customer satisfaction. EnergyHub differentiates itself through an extensive partner ecosystem (including EV manufacturers and smart-home providers) and its status as an independent subsidiary of Alarm.com, leveraging its parent company’s cloud and smart-home capabilities. The company’s goal is to help utilities operate cleaner, more distributed energy systems, meet grid objectives, ensure regulatory compliance, and enable a smoother transition to a DER-rich grid.

Company Size

201-500

Company Stage

Grant

Total Funding

$34.8M

Headquarters

New York City, New York

Founded

2007

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • Rivian partnership on February 24, 2026, expands managed charging nationwide.
  • GM Energy integration boosts EV and PowerBank enrollment in utility programs.
  • Ameren Illinois pilots enable residential and commercial EV load management.

What critics are saying

  • WeaveGrid secures exclusive Ford deals, eroding EnergyHub's utility contracts.
  • Chargescape aggregates Ford, BMW, Tesla, capturing share from EnergyHub partnerships.
  • Lack of data-sharing standards blocks EnergyHub's active charging scale-up.

What makes EnergyHub unique

  • EnergyHub's DERMS manages over 1 million DERs, delivering 1.35 GW flexibility.
  • EnergyHub partners with GM, Rivian, Toyota, and Tesla for managed charging.
  • EnergyHub acquired BTR on September 4, 2025, adding 500,000 EVs telematics.

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Benefits

Health Insurance

401(k) Retirement Plan

401(k) Company Match

Flexible Work Hours

Paid Parental Leave

Gym Membership

Tuition Reimbursement

Company News

Utility Dive
Apr 9th, 2026
As EV load grows, utilities use managed charging to harness flexibility, lower costs.

As EV load grows, utilities use managed charging to harness flexibility, lower costs. Active managed charging can delay costly system upgrades while saving customers money, utilities, automakers and aggregators say, but a lack of standardized data-sharing is slowing adoption. Published April 9, 2026 The 7.2 million electric vehicles in the United States are simultaneously driving the need for grid upgrades and providing utilities with a powerful tool to defer those expenses. U.S. utilities are working with third-party software providers and automakers to develop and scale managed charging programs that can spread out the EV charging load and avoid creating peaks that stress local systems, helping to defer infrastructure upgrades that drive up rates. Manufacturers including General Motors, Ford and Rivian also have seen value in these programs and are partnering with distributed resource service providers like EnergyHub, WeaveGrid and Chargescape to improve customer experience and access to these programs. Despite federal policy changes in 2025 that withdrew support for EVs, sales have so far remained more or less consistent. The battery electric vehicle share of U.S. car sales in March was estimated to be 5.2%, sustaining the 5% share that segment has averaged since November 2025, S&P Global reported. Even before the U.S.-Israeli war against Iran spiked gas prices, EV load was expected to grow significantly in the coming years. Managed charging - commonly referred to as V1G to indicate the one-way flow of energy from the grid to the vehicle - is already being used to shift load from peak demand hours. But exploiting its full potential for reliability and cost savings will require standardized data-sharing protocols that have so far proven elusive for the industry, stakeholders told Utility Dive. "There is still work to do," said Zach Woogen, executive director of the Vehicle-Grid Integration Council. But by "growing partnerships" among automakers, utilities and aggregators, utilities can learn how to use managed charging "to make their systems more reliable and address the affordability crisis," he said. Seth Frader-Thompson, president of EnergyHub, a leading aggregator that partners with GM, Rivian, Toyota and Tesla on managed charging programs, offered a similar perspective. "Grid-aware managed charging ensures EVs can serve as a resource to manage the load growth we are seeing across the country," he said. From passive to active managed charging. "The technology of managed charging, or smart charging, is quite mature, and there are no technological hurdles," said Dave McCreadie, director of EV-grid services at Ford. "Communications between utilities, automakers, aggregators and their vehicles has been demonstrated over and over across many utility programs and has worked well." In addition to avoiding demand peaks through managed charging, EVs can be integrated into the grid as bidirectional assets that not only store power for driving but also provide backup power to homes (which is called V2H, vehicle to home) and export energy to the distribution system (V2G, vehicle to grid) or any other external system (V2X, vehicle to everything). But the first step is moving from passive to active managed charging, industry sources said. In 2025, legislative or regulatory efforts in 32 states and Puerto Rico addressed improving residential access to managed charging, according to the North Carolina Clean Energy Technology Center's annual state electric vehicle policy review. Many utilities already offer "passive" managed charging programs that use time-of-use rates to encourage customers to charge during off-peak hours, but the utilities still rely on customers to manage their own charging schedules. As the technology has matured, utilities are increasingly turning to "active" managed charging, whereby the customer largely turns over charging capabilities to the utility or service provider, which can adjust the load in real time based on system conditions. Regulators approved nine new active managed charging programs last year, according to the state EV policy North Carolina Clean Energy Technology Center's review. "Utilities see the millions of EVs in their territories as flexible load that they can tap into just when data center demand is placing strain on their systems." Joseph Vallone CEO of Chargescape, which aggregates Ford, BMW, Honda, Nissan, Tesla, Stellantis and Rivian vehicles for over a dozen power utilities. Experts say active managed charging can avoid some of the unintended consequences that have plagued passive programs. For example, in California, passive managed charging has led to a secondary peak right after midnight, when the rate drops.

Latitude Media
Mar 10th, 2026
Frontier Forum: How VPPs earn grid-scale trust

Frontier Forum: how VPPs earn grid-scale trust. Listen to the episode on: Can a grid operator tell the difference between a virtual power plant and a traditional one? That's the idea behind the Huels Test, a framework developed by EnergyHub to answer a simple but consequential question: when does a distributed fleet of customer devices become reliable enough to function like a power plant? Passing the test means more than just aggregating thermostats or batteries. It means delivering predictable, repeatable performance that utility planners and operators trust enough to rely on during system peaks. And it's no longer theoretical. During a series of brutal winter cold snaps across the Southeast this year, Duke Energy leaned on tens of thousands of connected devices - smart thermostats, batteries, and water heaters - to help manage record-breaking winter peaks. Together, they formed a virtual power plant that the utility could dispatch when the grid was tight. In this Frontier Forum, Stephen Lacey talks with Stacy Phillips, Managing Director of Customer Load Management at Duke Energy, and Seth Frader-Thompson, president and co-founder of EnergyHub, about the spectrum of virtual power plants. They discuss how VPPs are evolving from traditional demand-response programs into operational grid resources, and what still needs to change before utilities treat them exactly like conventional power plants. This is partner content, brought to you by EnergyHub. This conversation was recorded live as part of Latitude Media's Frontier Forum with EnergyHub. Watch the full video here. EnergyHub works with more than 160 utilities across North America to build and scale virtual power plants using its Edge DERMS platform. Read EnergyHub's white paper outlining the VPP maturity model and discover what VPPs can do for your grid.

Yahoo Finance
Feb 25th, 2026
Rivian partners with EnergyHub to expand utility EV charging programmes across North America

Rivian has partnered with grid-edge solutions provider EnergyHub to expand North American Rivian drivers' access to utility-managed charging programmes. The collaboration combines Rivian's direct vehicle owner engagement with EnergyHub's managed charging technology, enabling Rivian vehicles to participate in utility EV initiatives. The arrangement helps drivers identify and enrol in programmes whilst supporting utilities in recruiting participants and scaling managed charging schemes. Rivian vehicles will qualify for both passive and active managed charging offerings through EnergyHub's Virtual Power Plant platform, which coordinates EV charging with local grid capacity constraints. The companies are working to roll out Rivian vehicles into utility EV programmes throughout North America. Separately, Rivian reported full-year consolidated gross profit of $144 million for 2025, reversing a $1.2 billion loss from the previous year.

Green Stock News
Feb 24th, 2026
EnergyHub and Rivian Partner to Bring the Benefits of EV Managed Charging to Drivers Nationwide

EnergyHub and Rivian partner to bring the benefits of EV managed charging to drivers nationwide. The collaboration combines Rivian's direct-to-driver engagement with EnergyHub's advanced managed charging capabilities to enhance the value of EV programs for customers and utilities. NEW YORK / Feb 24, 2026 / Business Wire / EnergyHub, a leading provider of grid-edge flexibility solutions, and Rivian, the American electric vehicle manufacturer, today announced a partnership to expand access to utility EV programs for Rivian drivers across North America. For Rivian drivers, this will enable new opportunities to discover and participate in utility EV programs. For utilities, the partnership will make it easier to recruit drivers and scale cost-effective managed charging programs that unlock electric vehicles as grid resources, driving a more reliable, affordable grid for everyone. As more drivers electrify, EV managed charging plays a critical role in supporting utilities by aligning charging behavior with local grid conditions. Through the partnership, Rivian vehicles will be eligible for both passive and active managed charging programs. "Partnering with EnergyHub allows us to provide even more drivers with the opportunity to simplify their daily routine through intuitive smart charging features built directly into the Rivian ecosystem," said Andrew Peterman, Director of Advanced Energy Solutions at Rivian. "By integrating managed charging programs, we're not only lowering costs for our drivers and elevating the ownership experience, but also ensuring that every Rivian on the road contributes to a more resilient and secure grid for everyone." EnergyHub's EV managed charging technology enables dynamic load shaping, coordinating EV charging to deliver the energy drivers need while conforming to capacity constraints across the distribution network. This grid-aware approach helps protect infrastructure from the power plant to the garage. As part of EnergyHub's broader Virtual Power Plant (VPP) platform, this enhanced EV capability integrates alongside connected thermostats, batteries, and other flexible devices. "Every new EV on the road is a win for drivers and the environment, and by managing charging effectively, we ensure this growth remains a benefit for the grid as well," said Seth Frader-Thompson, President of EnergyHub. "Rivian's software ecosystem and customer engagement make it easier for drivers to participate in utility programs, while grid-aware managed charging ensures EVs can serve as a resource to manage the load growth we are seeing across the country. Together, we're delivering real value for drivers and practical solutions for utilities." Rivian and EnergyHub are working to launch Rivian into utility EV programs across North America, making grid-aware managed charging more accessible for drivers and utilities alike. EnergyHub is a subsidiary of Alarm.com (NASDAQ: ALRM), the leading platform for the intelligently connected property. About EnergyHub EnergyHub is a leading provider of clean energy software and services that unlock the full potential of distributed energy resources (DERs) for utilities, markets, and customers. With the EnergyHub Edge DERMS platform, utilities can enroll and manage DERs like thermostats, EVs, and batteries to create virtual power plants (VPPs) that deliver grid flexibility and reliability. EnergyHub helps 170+ utilities manage over 2.5M DERs and more than 3.5 GW of flexible capacity with customer-centric programs and cross-DER optimization. To learn more, visit energyhub.com. Follow EnergyHub on LinkedIn. About Rivian Rivian (NASDAQ: RIVN) is an American automotive manufacturer that develops and builds category-defining electric vehicles and accessories. The company creates innovative and technologically advanced products that are designed to excel at work and play with the goal of accelerating the global transition to zero-emission transportation and energy. Rivian vehicles are manufactured in the United States and are sold directly to consumer and commercial customers. The company provides a full suite of services that address the entire lifecycle of the vehicle and stay true to its mission to keep the world adventurous forever. Whether taking families on new adventures or electrifying fleets at scale, Rivian vehicles all share a common goal - preserving the natural world for generations to come. Learn more about the company, products and careers at www.rivian.com. Plug into more green stock news. Tap into the pulse of emerging green sectors every morning. Top daily headlines from clean energy, cleantech, cannabis, and sustainable transport stocks:

POWER Magazine
Sep 4th, 2025
EnergyHub Acquiring Major Player in EV Telematics-Based Solutions

EnergyHub, a leading provider of grid-edge flexibility solutions, on September 4 announced the acquisition of Bridge to Renewables (BTR), a strategic investment that will accelerate utility electric vehicle (EV) program growth.

INACTIVE