2. About Joe Boyce President of Gaia Worldwide and Solar Visionaries (Cambridge MA) Lifetime Sales Person – Pragmatic, non-academic Knowledge of Solar, Finance, Tech, Marketing, Recruiting, Org Dev. Some experience in residential construction and remodeling – 1 roof Started in Solar in 2005 at Prometheus Institute Launched Greentech Media with co-founders in 2007 Here to help you get started on the right foot – reach goals
15. Grid parity will create explosive demand and economic growth
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17. Surprising Growth in 2009 Beat Everyone’s Forecasts “The global solar photovoltaic electricity (PV) market counted an additional increase in installed capacity of about 7.2 GW in 2009, reaching a total capacity of over 22 GW world-wide.” - EPIA 2009 New Global Capacity: 7.2 GW = approx. 1.5 Million US Homes Cumulative Global Capacity: 22 GW = approx. 4.6 Million US Homes Almost 1/3 of existing PV capacity was installed in 2009 – In spite of the Global Financial Crises and recession “This has been the most important annual capacity increase ever and is particularly impressive in light of the difficult financial and economical circumstances during the past year.” - EPIA
21. “Widespread Adoption” Government Stepping Up FY10 $225M Recovery act $117.6M FY2009 – $175M The administration and Congress have demonstrated interest and support in solar over the past several years
36. Positive: Coal remains the United States’ #1 source of energy with over 50% market share
37. Positive: Coal remains the United States’ #1 source of energy with over 50% market share Negative: Tragic mine collapse kills 25 injures dozens more. Massey Energy being investigated for safety violations.
38. Positive: Coal remains the United States’ #1 source of energy with over 50% market share Negative: Tragic mine collapse kills 25 injures dozens more. Massey Energy being investigated for safety violations. Average Coal Miner Wage: (10 years experience – Kansas City MO) $23.83 per hour
39. Positive: Coal remains the United States’ #1 source of energy with over 50% market share Negative: Tragic mine collapse kills 25 injures dozens more. Massey Energy being investigated for safety violations. Average Coal Miner Wage: (10 years experience – Kansas City MO) $23.83 per hour Average life expectancy: 59 years
40. Are These Really The Jobs Of The Future? Can We Really Build A New, More Competitive America This Way?
42. Solar Economics 101 U.S. Electricity prices increase 4% a year on average PV Prices have declined an average of 5-7% a year for the last 20 years Last year ASP of solar modules declined between 30 and 40% Polysilicon, the main raw material used in well over 80% of all solar panels manufactured globally is derived from the most abundant material on earth – sand PV O&M costs are the lowest of any major energy source As demand grows for PV manufacturing and logistics costs are reduced There are tens of billions of dollars invested in R&D aimed directly at reducing cost the U.S. alone All of the solar deployed in the U.S. to date produces less than 0.5% of our annual energy demand
43. GRID PARITY The point at which renewable electricity is equal to or cheaper than grid power.
44. 2009 NREL study of 1000 largest utilities across the US servicing over 95% of grid electricity consumption. Major population centers are already at or near grid-parity
45. 20151% annual increase in grid electricity prices 2/3 of the U.S. is at or below grid costs 95% of the U.S. is within 5 cents a kwh
77. No tax benefits or rebates or Renewable Energy Credits (RECs)
78. Usually includes option to buy at the end for a set residual price
79. Require good/excellent credit rating depending on the program
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81. Gaia Worldwide Survey of Small and Mid-Size Solar Integrators/ Installers – November 2009 ConclusionsEveryone who got in recently expects great thingsFew are prepared to handle business opportunitiesMost are misrepresenting / mismanaging qualified opportunitiesDo not or are not accurately measuring results
83. The Big Question for the startup…Where Are the leads? Professionally Oriented Social Network Over 20 Million Users Background Info, Location, Work Experience 821 “Solar” Groups Fastest Growing Social Network Over 300 Million Users #1 website on the web – Bigger than Google Thousands of “Solar” Pages “Real Time” Social Networking Very good way to evaluate market potential Can grow to thousands of followers very fast
84. If You Don’t Believe…Consider These Facts… Facebook now gets more traffic than Google 1 out of 8 American Married couples met via social media If Facebook were a country it would be the world’s 3rd largest 100+ hours of video are uploaded to YouTube every 5 minutes 74% of people trust peer recommendations, 14% trust advertisements
85. 817 Members 904 Members www.meetup.com Groups that share a common affinity organize live events online FREE 94 Members 33 Members
86. Establishing Validity Even if everything goes great, you are just a stranger until you are validated Know as much as possible beforehand Avoid “low value” questions Offer industry expertise Answer only the questions they ask Add “dimensions” to the interaction
87. What Gives You Validity? Thought Leadership Get Recognized as the Industry Expert Share Market Knowledge with the community Meet and educate groups Get active in the community Partner with local businesses to reach customers Present at their facilities Local media interviews, topical discussions Keep your message clear and consistent across all communication
88. How you know you’re building a brand People start looking to you for general industry information Invited to speak at industry, government, or community events Web traffic increases – time on site increases Leads come in more complete Someone says “I’ve heard of you guys” Employees bring in friends / family as new customers Media starts calling you
Let me start with a question, just to get to know who’s in the room…. How many here have already installed at least one solar system for a customer?How many of you have over 10 employees, over 20, over 30? Would someone want to volunteer why they decided to get into the solar business?
Just a little bit of my background. . . Key things to know are that I won’t be presenting from the same tack as many othersI am a lifetime sales person, so I am very focused on growth and revenue
One thing you’ll hear a lot in this presentation is GROWTH. I’m going to spend some time illustrating and explaining the growth industry, then move into the ways that you can best participate in it and manage it profitably.
How the market is setting up… Over the past couple of years we’ve seen some important things happen on a global level…
Let’s walk through some of these, some you’re aware of, but others maybe not. It’s important because these benefits are the basis for why we have government incentives around the world that are sustaining these incredible growth rates. .. .
Now, this slide is a little more fun to look at. Here’s how we got to that 13.9 Gigs Look at the growth curves. Country by country we’ve gone to hockey-stick growth.Japan was the first country to start providing incentives for PV, and it created a steady climb in growth in the earliest years of the technology. In recent years, they’ve actually begun to roll-back the incentives they had in place and continue to see a steady growth curve. How about Germany, when do you think they put their Federal Feed-In Tariff in place? - right, 2003. How about Spain?Now look at the U.S. Line. As you may all know, we have no national standard for PV production, we do however have some attractive incentives which we’ll discuss later.
. . . So what’s driving this growth?
Here are the things that are making the U.S. start to get serious about solar
What’s most important is that renewable energy in general, and solar more specifically have strong support from all power centers. Heads of global corporations, Government at all levels, small businesses such as many of yours, and entrepreneurs universally support and work to help grow the solar business. Moreover, business and government have aligned in many ways with environmental groups and consumers, who also support solar.
What’s most important is that renewable energy in general, and solar more specifically have strong support from all power centers. Heads of global corporations, Government at all levels, small businesses such as many of yours, and entrepreneurs universally support and work to help grow the solar business. Moreover, business and government have aligned in many ways with environmental groups and consumers, who also support solar.
So, with the support we get from the end users, business, and government, here’s what we’ve been able to accomplish. We have grown over 12x from 2000 to 2008. I’d put the same chart up here for our economy in general, but it’s too depressing. But what about last year when we had all of the bank failures and other issues around the globe… It was our first year installing over 1GW of capacity. Major milestone.But what about 2009, when the financial crisis hit. . .
Well, pretty good news there too. We added a total of almost 470MW more than we did even in 2008 when the financial markets were completely different. This is probably the best indicator of things to come. We got hit the hardest by the recession and banking crisis. Yet in spite of having an economy on life-support from the Federal Government we were able to grow by over 1/3 in solar. This year, we’re looking to double from 2009. - And we still don’t even have a Federal production incentive!
As you can see, the policies initiated in 2009 brought about a rise in solar installations at both the residential level as well as Utility-Scale. Many believe that within the next few years we will see an equal distribution of market share for each of the Utility Scale, Commercial, and Residential markets.
So, long story short we’re doing very well and the train doesn’t seem to be slowing down anytime soon. . . But….
Here are the recent developments in coal. Well the good news is right here…
Well, here’s some other recent news…
Not bad! But here’s another stat that kind of tempered the excitement…
That’s a full 14 years lower than the national average. So we have to ask ourselves something.
Maybe we should start to diversify our energy infrastructure a little more.
Economics. PV technology has very unique properties that make it more attractive with every passing year.. . .
Economics are about the move to this…
Here’s what the cost of solar looks like across the country vs. standard utility rates. As you can see, we’re already at par with the grid in some major markets. Mostly those with high utility rates and good sun. Red – at or below parOrange – within 5% of the grid priceYellow – between 5-10% of the grid priceWhite – not even close.
Now, it’s important to point out that this map only assumes a 1% annual increase in utility rates, but we already know that the national average is somewhere around 5% with some high-use metro areas increasing at double-digits every year. With this much of the market at or below grid-parity, there will be No More Need for government incentives. At least not on the Federal Level. That’s only five years away.
But it’s not just the pricing situation that makes a difference to you. When supply is abundant, the buyers get control in a number of ways.
Still, we have to be smart to succeed for the long-term and maximize our profits. With new capacity available and financing on the mend, end Users are the biggest issue. We also need to watch for changes, expiration, or tapped out incentives. Competition will get better, still fragmented and unpredictable, and prices can fluctuate so we need to be prepared.
30% credit for any new installation at the residential or commercial level. Now, it’s important to delineate this vs a production incentive. This is an investment incentive meaning that it stimulates the construction of new projects, but does not offer an incentive for the amount of production. So, if you spend $35k on a 5kw system, you’ll get 30% back, but if the system only produces 2/3 of what it’s meant to, it’s not a factor. This could potentially affect quality and design.
This is the best resource for following all of the reams of information you’ll need. Bookmark it and refer to it regularly.
DSIRE will give you all the updated incentive information you need. It’s a very robust resource, and for single-source research it’s the one to go with. . . Here’s an example of one of the maps on their site. You just pick your state and it will take you to everything you need to know and in most cases quite a bit more.
One thing we can say is that if state and local incentives drive installations, these would be the top ten states based on recent capacity expansion and total MW installed.
This is the new hot topic in solar. It’s a way of financing solar so that residents make a positive cash-flow from day one of the install.
PPA’s are different, they allow the owner of the building to buy electricity from a PPA provider at a fixed price. These are great for non-profits and government facilities where they’re not qualified for any tax incentives. By buying the power from a 3rd party for-profit company, they allow that company to use the incentives giving them the ability to offer a better price for the power.
And then there’s one of my favorites. LeasingNo money down… gets ‘em every time. Like a PPA, the company actualy owns the equipment, but rather than selling power, they essentially “rent” it to the owner for a fixed price. Usually the offset from the electricity bill is more than the lease payment. So even with $0 down the owner can have a positive cash-flow from day one. You want to know how SolarCity got so big so fast, this is how.
This is where a lot of companies lose their edge, they concern themselves with things like material costs and labor rather than the overhead and other costs that really waste time and money. By focusing on the best customers and dominating in a specific niche, you can take a major chunk out of that 20-29% in overhead and permitting. That’s money straight to the bottom line. Once you learn the process you’ll get better and better rather than having to re-learn each time you need to pull a permit. and money.
This is a cool site called Meetup.com. It’s for people who actually like to communicate face-to-face. I pulled groups interested in “solar” in the state of Arizona, and here’s what I found… Affinity, yes! Low tech, absolutely! Listen, you don’t have to become a high-tech company… All it takes is the ability to know what tools are available and to know how to use them. = You should spend less than 20 minutes a day online looking at this stuff. = If you think it’s expensive, you’re in for a pleasant surprise… websites are cheap, and the major components of a brand are extremely cheap. They’re so valuable I would really recommend that all of you find a resource.
Do your research, sales isn’t dependent on charm anymore, tools are available.Get the basics and fill in the form in advance, they will appreciate it – it’s a “give”Diff between market knowledge and product knowledgeListening to the questions they ask more imp than giving them all possible info.Group settings make you valid, use tools to create an affinity group – do NOT abuse access if granted. “Friend” and do not do anything else – use media. Offer group education, a webinar, or something of value without a pitch!
Market Knowledge – Much more important that product or service knowledge
The process of self-qualifying is fun! Customers love it and pass on to others. Media gets a kick out of it and features them all the time.