By Joe Harris, founder of Grid Freedom*
Solar leads are a tool just like any other. If the wrong tool is used
for the job, the job becomes difficult, frustrating, and unlikely to be
done properly, if at all. We speak with solar installers day in and day out
and the general consensus of small, medium, and large installers alike
is just that — frustration when it comes to buying solar leads. It’s
unfortunate because many installers that could and would have great
success with the right leads are buying the wrong leads for their
business initially, having a bad experience, and writing off the
lead-buying process completely. Closing the door on what could be the
biggest part of their businesses growth.
While
lead quality is definitely an issue in the solar lead space (we’ll get
to that next time), what’s just as important is a company’s ability to
identify which leads are going to work for their sales process. Each
company has different contact, follow-up, and sales processes. And just
like these processes are different, the leads that will work in each
process are different. If the leads don’t match the process, there’s
guaranteed frustration and lost investment.
For example, let’s say company A is a small installer with 3 sales
people. They love walking into a home that has had a previous on-site
visit with company B (a very large installer with huge budgets and most
definitely a call center) because company A’s main financing product
looks really good when compared to company B’s. But they have to be
invited for the visit first.
Company A is doing home shows, canvassing, and some advertising, but
it wants to get into more homes, so it makes the phone call to a lead
generation company. It is offered shared leads and told that leads
delivered to the company will also go out to 3 other companies. Company A
is okay with this because it feels like it can go up against anyone and
win most business as long as it gets in front of the homeowner. Plus,
it is pretty sure company B is using the same lead source, so it is even
a bit excited. It makes an investment.
What it doesn’t know is that two of the other three installers
(company B included) are getting their leads delivered to call centers.
That same data that’s getting delivered by email or text to company A is
also being posted in real time to the autodialer of two companies where
it is being dialed within seconds. On top of that, another contractor
similar in size to Company A gets the lead.
So, a lead goes out… The homeowner gets a call in what seems to be an
instant after hitting the submit button on the internet form she or he
(let’s go with “she”) just filled out. She has a conversation with
Company B, which is the first to dial, and schedules an on-site visit. A
few seconds after hanging up the phone with Company B, the phone rings
again. It’s the other installer similar in size to company A (the lead
just so happened to be delivered while he had his phone in his hand).
The homeowner has another conversation and schedules another on-site
visit. 5 minutes after hanging up the phone, it rings again. The caller
ID shows company A but the homeowner has been on the phone for 30
minutes and doesn’t want to answer the phone again, so she doesn’t. 10
minutes later, the phone rings again. It’s the other large company whose
dialer proceeds to dial the number 2 more times throughout the day. The
homeowner is completely turned off by all the phone calls and never
answers the phone from another installer.
Company A might have the best financing and the best shot at closing
the deal, but the shared leads it is buying are putting the company up
against two autodialers that are each going to call the lead within
seconds, and most likely multiple times throughout the day. And don’t
forget the other small contractor. Because of this, many of the leads
Company A calls never even answer. Company A goes through this process
for a month, loses the majority of its investment, and swears off buying
leads for good.
This is just one scenario of very many but definitely a
common one. And while this one ends badly for company A, they don’t all
end badly. After all, Company B got in the door, right? Mainly because
they are buying leads that fit their contact, follow-up, and sales
processes. There are solar leads that will work for almost every
installer and their processes. Once the proper fit is identified, leads
can be an outstanding investment, cutting job acquisition costs, and
raising a company’s bottom line significantly.
The number one way to ensure an installer gets the most out of their
investment, is this: Do not buy blindly. Know what your contact,
follow-up, and sales processes are. Once you know those things, have a
conversation with several lead providers to determine the best fit.
Unfortunately, all lead providers are NOT created equal. You’ll most
likely be able to spot the not so good ones fairly quickly by comparing
several conversations. It’s a given that all lead providers want to
sell an installer leads. The question is, which ones really care about
being a part of an installer’s growth?
http://cleantechnica.com/2015/04/04/the-challenge-with-solar-leads-how-to-approach-them-more-effectively/
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