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Breakdown cover by third-party company or installer team
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<blockquote data-quote="CambridgeRenewables" data-source="post: 536492" data-attributes="member: 35850"><p>Thank you all for the feedback! I really appreciate your candidness.</p><p></p><p>[USER=490]@binky[/USER] If installers are up to their eyeballs in work, they are stretched and may not want to / be able to serve their post-installation clients quickly enough. I think that they don't make profits but losses from inspections or repairs while the workmanship warranty is still valid.</p><p></p><p>I am willing to offer £50k salary + company van for each experienced electrician I hire (initially ten). I am not sure if this would be attractive enough but the person won't need to rush from installation to installation and can work from home if the client's problem can be solved remotely.</p><p></p><p>[USER=28452]@Geoff1946[/USER] Yes, this would be similar to an insurance type of business. Most of the early investments would go to marketing (to whoever has solar/battery). The lower failure rates and more people signing up would make the business viable.</p><p></p><p>[USER=23472]@Richard-the-ninth[/USER] I am thinking £5 to £8 per month. To whoever now spending £12-20k on solar installation, this is a minimal investment. Instead of looking for new electricians, the customer would have us in the back of their minds if they need work.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CambridgeRenewables, post: 536492, member: 35850"] Thank you all for the feedback! I really appreciate your candidness. [USER=490]@binky[/USER] If installers are up to their eyeballs in work, they are stretched and may not want to / be able to serve their post-installation clients quickly enough. I think that they don't make profits but losses from inspections or repairs while the workmanship warranty is still valid. I am willing to offer £50k salary + company van for each experienced electrician I hire (initially ten). I am not sure if this would be attractive enough but the person won't need to rush from installation to installation and can work from home if the client's problem can be solved remotely. [USER=28452]@Geoff1946[/USER] Yes, this would be similar to an insurance type of business. Most of the early investments would go to marketing (to whoever has solar/battery). The lower failure rates and more people signing up would make the business viable. [USER=23472]@Richard-the-ninth[/USER] I am thinking £5 to £8 per month. To whoever now spending £12-20k on solar installation, this is a minimal investment. Instead of looking for new electricians, the customer would have us in the back of their minds if they need work. [/QUOTE]
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