XeroHome Getting Great Traction

XeroHome Getting Great Traction

In April 2022, we wrote that we believed Rocklin-based XeroHome had a bright future. In the last nine months, XeroHome has been seeing that very future unfold.

XeroHomeXeroHome provides a software app that can give individual homeowners insights on how best to save money and avoid GHG emissions based on scraping a massive amount of information from databases and applying their analytics engine. It takes only a few seconds to generate a report using public data and their proprietary AI. The homeowner doesn’t need to do a thing. It is a “push” application. By answering a few supplemental questions, the homeowner can get even more refined answers. This app replaces the tedious and expensive door-to-door home energy audit process, not to mention the sales process of trying to get homeowners engaged. It has been validated repeatedly as providing information as good as or better than the audits. XeroHome has a great 2 minute video explaining the product and one that talks about a recent project with EPRI that left the client very satisfied.

According to CEO Mudit Saxena, they have now 4 big projects and have been promoted widely by the Electric Power Research Institute to its utility members. There are projects in St. Louis, Atlanta, Petaluma, and San Luis Obispo. Most significantly, the City of Sacramento and SMUD are engaging XeroHome to model all 120,000 homes in the city, the largest application of the software yet attempted. More projects are in the pipeline in Seattle, San Diego, and Birmingham.

XeroHome

Clients have been thrilled with the outcomes. One said they had never seen such an efficient application before, even though they were skeptical at first. XeroHome is now in the enviable position of out-performing client expectations. That has a way of snowballing sales. One measure of this success is the rate at which customers, after receiving the report, actually respond and take steps to decide how to act on the recommendations. Utility programs have struggled to reach 1% to 2% engagement while XeroHome have now repeatedly shown over 10% engagement rates in their deployments. Compared to the old process, this can result in much quicker improvements in homes.

Now XeroHome needs to cope with the challenges of success: Building out a top team and creating a cash reserve to underwrite the growing level of activity in the face of expected lags in invoice payments. They are looking to have revenue in excess of $1 million in 2023 (up 35% over 2022), and they see a need to raise funds to propel their growth.

The signs are good so far.

Thomas Hall

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Gary Simon is the Chair of CleanStart’s Board. A seasoned energy executive and entrepreneur with 45 years of experience in business, government, and non-profits.

CleanStart Sponsors

Weintraub | TobinBlueTech Valley, Revrnt, River City Bank

Moss AdamsPowerSoft.biz, Greenberg Traurig, California Mobility Center

Ascent OS: One Year Later

Ascent OS: One Year Later

We recently caught up with John Meissner, CEO of software company Ascent OS, to chat about how things were going since their spin-out from Infinity Energy. So far, the news is pretty good. They added a half-dozen people, they are spreading out to serve customers in Southern California, Missouri, Baltimore and Boston in addition to their base around Sacramento, and have a solid MVP. On the other hand they discovered they needed to do more work to upgrade the product and progress to customer revenue is slower than expected. Now they are focused on raising more money to extend their runway. In other words, they are in a pretty typical situation for a startup.

Ascent OSWe wrote about Ascent before just as it was being spun-out in November 2021. We noted that they had a good kickstart with taking over legacy customers and with having a functioning product. Their proposition was aimed at mid-sized solar installers who did not have the chance to gain the economies of scale of the big vertically integrated players. Their solution was some clever software that could mimic the big players’ scale economies by providing an end-to-end service of lead generation, paperwork administration, efficient dispatch of crews, supplier logistics, and receivables/payables management plus getting better supplier pricing.

Ascent sees their market as the 13,000 small independent solar installers that are looking to compete with the ten biggest. They have spent their time honing their value proposition to these customers in terms they understand. It apparently is working since they have a long list now of testimonials from existing and potential customers raving about the product they describe. A big lesson from this exercise is putting the value proposition in detailed metrics the potential customer find compelling – doubling the sales conversion rate, improving the productivity of operations, reducing installation cost, eliminating rework, and lowering the cost of lead generation. This kind of detail gives potential customers confidence that the claimed overall, hence the need for more runway. There are several directions Ascent could take this product to open even more markets and give their customers more of an edge—storage installations, and dual-use heat pump installations, for example—all of which are pretty similar to solar rooftop installation in terms of the processes Ascent’s software could improve.  Ascent OS is looking to close up to $4 million in its round in 2023, with a first closing in January if all goes well.

Thomas Hall

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Gary Simon is the Chair of CleanStart’s Board. A seasoned energy executive and entrepreneur with 45 years of experience in business, government, and non-profits.

CleanStart Sponsors

Weintraub | TobinBlueTech Valley, Revrnt, River City Bank

Moss AdamsPowerSoft.biz, Greenberg Traurig, California Mobility Center