Solar installation is unlike any other trade. The sales cycle is 4-8 weeks, every job involves permits and inspections, and the average ticket is $15,000-35,000. Generic contractor CRMs handle invoicing and scheduling fine, but they miss the nuances that make or break a solar business.
Here’s what to look for.
Multi-phase project tracking
A solar install isn’t one appointment. It’s 6-8 phases:
- Initial consultation — site assessment, roof evaluation
- Proposal and design — system sizing, savings projections
- Contract signing — digital signatures, financing approval
- Permitting — city/county applications, HOA approval
- Installation day 1 — racking, panels
- Installation day 2 — electrical, inverter, monitoring
- Inspection — city inspector sign-off
- Interconnection — utility approval, PTO (permission to operate)
Your CRM needs to track each phase independently, assign different crew members to different phases, and keep the customer informed at every step. A CRM that only thinks in single appointments will bury you in manual tracking.
Proposal automation that closes
Solar proposals need to show:
- System size (kW) and panel count
- Estimated annual production (kWh)
- 25-year savings projection
- Monthly payment with financing
- Federal tax credit (30% ITC)
- Before/after utility bill comparison
Good-Better-Best tiered proposals let you present 3 system sizes. The customer sees the ROI on each option and almost always picks the middle tier.
Your CRM should generate branded, multi-page proposals with your logo, colors, and terms — then let the customer sign digitally from their phone. The faster the proposal reaches the customer, the higher your close rate.
Financing integration
Nobody writes a $25,000 check for solar. Every serious solar CRM needs financing built into the sales flow:
- Customer sees monthly payment estimate on the proposal
- Clicks “Apply for financing” without leaving the page
- Gets approved in 2-5 minutes
- You get paid upfront from the financing company
- Customer pays the lender over 12-25 years
If your CRM doesn’t integrate financing into the proposal, you’re adding friction at the exact moment the customer is ready to say yes.
Automated follow-up for long sales cycles
Solar leads go cold fast. A homeowner who was excited about solar on Tuesday has forgotten by Friday. Automated follow-up keeps you top of mind:
- Day 1: “Great meeting you! Here’s the proposal we discussed: [link]”
- Day 3: “Any questions about the system options? Happy to walk through the savings numbers.”
- Day 7: “The 30% federal tax credit makes this year an ideal time to go solar. Let me know if you’d like to move forward.”
- Day 14: “Just checking in — your custom proposal is still available. Availability is filling up for next month.”
These texts send automatically. If the customer signs the contract, the sequence stops.
Review collection matters more for solar
Solar is a trust purchase. Homeowners are letting you drill into their roof and wire into their electrical panel. They’re spending $15-35K on something they don’t fully understand.
Reviews are your #1 trust signal. A solar company with 50+ five-star reviews will outsell one with 5 reviews — even if the pricing is 10% higher.
Automate review requests after every completed installation. Route happy customers to Google. Respond to every review publicly. This compounds over time.
The bottom line
Generic contractor CRMs handle 70% of what solar installers need. The other 30% — multi-phase projects, financing integration, long-cycle follow-ups, and detailed proposals — is where deals are won or lost.
Choose a CRM that understands the solar sales cycle, not one you have to fight against.