星期四, 21 11 月, 2024
Home PV News North America In underserved communities, solar referrals work best

In underserved communities, solar referrals work best

Research from national labs shows word-of-mouth referrals led to among the highest adoption rates in low-income communities.

Source:pv magazine

Customer acquisition costs have been rising in the residential solar industry, as the customer profile shifts from early adopters, technophiles, and pragmatists to a larger inclusion of the general population. Take GRID Alternatives of California, for example, which spends about $1,200 per install on customer acquisition alone.

One area that solar adoption has lagged is in low- to moderate-income (LMI) families, or those that are defined as earning less than 80% of the median family income for the area. Program disqualification due to a complex set of eligibility requirements is one of the main causes of these families losing interest in looking into solar, said the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL). However, NREL discovered that many qualified customers are losing interest, as well.

NREL, along with the Department of Energy (DOE) Solar Energy Technologies Office (SETO), partnered with California’s GRID Alternatives to break down what happens to how solar leads get “lost.”

With an aggregation of multiple datasets of solar the solar lead lifecycle in California through 2018, NREL was able to analyze the outcome of different marketing strategies.

It found that referrals are pivotal to adoption. Not only was a referred customer more likely to install solar, they were also more likely to refer more connections in their own networks.

Based on the results, NREL recommended that state solar programs be designed with referral mechanisms, saving time and resources on converting prospective solar adopters. It also recommended a loosening of qualification requirements so that more households may be eligible.

NREL plans to discuss strategies from scaling up solar in LMI communities in a webinar on December 22nd.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisment -

Most Popular

China CORNEX signed cooperation agreement with the Italian Cestari Group

On November 13, CORNEX signed a strategic cooperation agreement with the Italian company Cestari Group in Wuhan, Hubei Province, China. According to the agreement,...

Solar Leader Enphase Energy Cutting 500 Jobs

California-based Enphase Energy, a company known for its solar power and electric vehicle (EV) charging technology, announced it is laying off about 500 workers....

Cincinnati’s solar array powers city operations, tens of thousands of homes

A sprawling solar array in Highland County now powers 20% of Cincinnati's operations and tens of thousands of homes. Cincinnati’s 900-acre solar farm was completed...

1.2-GW solar panel assembly facility to open in Puerto Rico

A contract solar panel assembly facility will soon open in Aguadilla, Puerto Rico, that will supply the utility-scale market on the island and hopefully...