Segment 04 · of 04

Title 24 made solar on every new home in California mandatory.

California Title 24 requires solar on most new single-family and low-rise multifamily construction. Arizona, Massachusetts, and other states are following. New-construction solar is operationally distinct, the builder is your buyer, the homeowner is the end user, the utility interconnection timeline drives occupancy.

Who the AI talks to.

Builder ops coordinators. Not homeowners. The AI recognizes when the inbound caller is a construction superintendent asking about a 40-home tract install, and routes accordingly, longer cycles, bulk pricing, permit-synchronized scheduling.

Permit clerks. New-construction solar moves at the speed of the permit office. The AI tracks inspection dates, AHJ backlog estimates, and utility interconnection queues so the builder can adjust their close-out schedule.

Homeowners, after move-in. Once the home is occupied, the AI handles the warranty activation call, the monitoring app setup, and the eventual battery retrofit conversation.

What builders actually want.

Builder need 01

Predictable timing

Solar installs must not slip the certificate-of-occupancy schedule. The AI tracks permit and interconnection timing and flags risks 45+ days out.

Builder need 02

Bulk pricing clarity

40-home tract pricing differs from one-off residential. The AI handles inbound from builder procurement with tract-aware pricing logic.

Builder need 03

Zero-friction handoff

Builder hands off to homeowner. AI runs monitoring activation, warranty paperwork, and first-bill review without any builder involvement.

If a builder is calling about a 40-home tract, can you pick up?

The prototype handles builder-side inbound and homeowner-side post-move-in inbound as two distinct flows. Tested on your geography, your AHJ, your utility territory.

Live in 12 hours No card required Tested on your calls