Built for the long solar sale.
You close high-value installs. Rivyn captures every high-intent lead, keeps them warm through a long consideration cycle, and earns the reviews that compound your local ranking.
Texas solar is growing fast. The winner is whoever nurtures best.
Long sales cycles die without follow-up.
High-intent solar leads take weeks or months to close. Most installers do not have a system to stay present across that window. When the lead is finally ready to sign, they call whoever stayed in touch.
“I get plenty of inquiries. I just can't keep up with follow-up across a 3-month cycle.”
Solar installer, DFW“Leads go cold because I'm busy doing installs. By the time I follow up, they've signed with someone else.”
Owner-operator, solar“I know reviews matter but I never have a process for asking at the right moment.”
Solar sales repCapture the lead. Convert the install. Compound the ranking.
- Voice AI answers and qualifies after hours
- Website chatbot captures inquiries in seconds
- Found in local and AI search
- Branded CRM tracks every lead to install
- Automated nurture sequences across weeks
- Hot leads escalated to your phone
- Automated review requests after every install
- Higher Google ranking over time
- Referrals compound the pipeline
From a website form to a signed install.
We understand the high-ticket sales cycle.
- Built for long-cycle salesRivyn's nurture system is designed around the 3-6 month solar window, not a 24-hour retail mindset.
- One vertical, deep focusWe build for DFW solar, trades, and insurance. Not a generic agency learning your business on your dime.
- Your customer data, handled with careCustomer contact information is encrypted and routed to your own inbox. You own the relationship.
- No long-term contractMonth to month, backed by a 90-day performance guarantee. Stay because it works.
“Solar leads are expensive to generate and easy to lose. The installers who win in DFW are the ones whose system stays present across the entire consideration cycle, not just the first week.”