Quotrr for solar contractors
A solar bid is kilowatts, panel count, the main panel question and a battery decision, and the homeowner is usually holding three other quotes from a lead site before you ring the bell. The installer who gets a clean itemized proposal out first, and stays in the inbox while the homeowner compares finance terms, is the one who closes.
From site visit to quote
You come off the roof, you check the main panel, and you talk the system into your phone before you leave the driveway. Quinn drafts the proposal. Here is what that sounds like on a residential install with battery.
"Just left the Nguyen place on Marisol Way. South-facing comp roof, good sun, no shading to speak of. Call it an 8.8 kW system, 22 panels at 400 watts, two strings. Main panel is an old 100 amp, that has to go, so add a 200 amp panel upgrade. They want backup for the fridge, the freezer and the garage, so price one battery, call it 13 kilowatt hours, and put a second battery on as an option. Standard rail and flashing kit, two-story on the back. Include permits and the interconnection paperwork. Three options: panels only, panels plus one battery, panels plus two."
Drafted as good-better-best from panels only to panels plus two batteries, with an EV charger circuit as a live add-on. Numbers above are example placeholders. You set your own pricing and approve every line before it goes out.
What eats your evenings
Aggregator sites sell the same homeowner to everyone in the county. The decision drags for weeks while they compare finance terms, and the installer still showing up in the inbox when the fatigue sets in is the one who wins.
KILLED BY: SEVEN-TOUCH FOLLOW-UP THAT RUNS ITSELF AND PINGS YOU ON EVERY OPEN.You quote panels to keep the number friendly, the homeowner asks about backup two weeks later, and that second conversation never gets a written price. The storage margin walks away.
KILLED BY: LIVE ADD-ONS THE HOMEOWNER TOGGLES ON THE PROPOSAL THEMSELVES.Years of high-pressure pitches mean homeowners assume every solar quote hides something. The careful operator pays for it with longer, more suspicious sales cycles.
KILLED BY: VERIFIED REVIEWS FROM REAL JOBS AND THE QUOTRR SCORE WITH A PUBLISHED FORMULA.The same engine under every trade
- Quinn turns a voice note into a draft proposal, English or Spanish.
- Interactive proposals with good-better-best tiers and live add-ons.
- Seven-touch follow-up in your voice, with open alerts.
- E-sign and deposit on the same page the customer reads.
- Verified reviews from real jobs only, and a Quotrr Score with a published formula.
What it costs
Free to run the work: leads, proposals, jobs, basic invoicing. Pro is $12.99 a week, $39 a month, or $299 a year when you want Quinn unlimited and the follow-up automation. Full pricing.