You turned on the ads. Leads started coming in. And then... nothing happened.
Well, not nothing. Leads came in. Your team called some of them. A few picked up. Fewer showed up. Even fewer signed a contract. And at the end of the month, you stared at your ad spend report and thought: "I paid €5,000 for this?"
Sound familiar? You're not alone. This is the single most common problem in solar marketing right now. And the fix isn't better ads.
The ads-only trap
Here's what most solar companies do. They hire an agency — or try it themselves — to run Facebook or Instagram ads. The ads look decent. They target homeowners. They get clicks. Leads come in.
Then the agency sends you a report: "You got 130 leads this month at €38 each. Great performance!"
And you're sitting there thinking: "Where are the installations?"
Because leads aren't installations. A lead is a name and a phone number. That's it. What turns a lead into a signed contract is everything that happens between the click and the close. And most solar companies have nothing in that gap.
No instant follow-up. No qualification process. No nurture sequence. No tracking from first click to signed contract. Just a spreadsheet, a sales guy who calls when he gets around to it, and a prayer.
Ads are the front door. But if there's no house behind the door, people walk right back out.
What an acquisition system actually looks like
At Independence Media, we don't sell ads. We build acquisition systems. There's a massive difference.
An ad gets someone to raise their hand. An acquisition system takes that hand-raise and turns it into a paying customer — automatically, predictably, and trackably.
Here's what's in the system:
1. The ads (the front door) Meta Ads targeting homeowners in your service area. Not renters. Not apartment dwellers. Not people who clicked out of curiosity. Homeowners with income signals, property ownership indicators, and behaviour that suggests they're actually considering solar.
2. The landing page (the first impression) Not your homepage. Not your "About Us" page. A dedicated landing page built for one purpose: getting qualified homeowners to request a quote. One message. One offer. One action. No distractions.
3. Instant response (the speed weapon) Within seconds — not minutes, not hours — the lead gets an automated SMS and email confirming their request. This does two things: it keeps you top of mind, and it tells the homeowner "these people are professional and responsive." We've seen this single step increase contact rates by 35-40%.
4. The qualification filter Not every lead is worth your sales team's time. A proper system asks qualifying questions upfront: homeowner status, roof condition, electricity bill, timeline. By the time your team picks up the phone, they already know this person is worth talking to.
5. The follow-up machine Lead doesn't pick up the first call? Most solar companies try once more the next day and give up. A real system follows up for 14 days across multiple channels — calls, texts, emails — with different messaging at each stage. Because timing matters. The homeowner who isn't ready Monday might be ready Thursday.
6. The CRM pipeline (full visibility) Every lead tracked from first click to signed contract. You can see exactly where leads are dropping off. Is it the first call? The site visit? The proposal stage? You can't fix what you can't measure.
7. Attribution (the honest mirror) For every euro you spend on ads, how many euros come back in signed contracts? Not "leads generated." Not "impressions." Actual revenue generated per ad dollar spent. This is the number that matters, and it's the number most agencies can't — or won't — give you.
The PCOA protocol: why sequence matters
There's a reason we don't just jump straight to running ads for clients. We follow what I call the PCOA protocol: Product, Client, Offer, Acquisition.
In that order. Always.
Product — Is your installation service actually good? Do you deliver on time? Is your warranty solid? If the product is broken, ads will only accelerate your problems.
Client — Who exactly are you trying to reach? "Homeowners" isn't enough. What's their income? What motivates them — savings, environmental values, energy independence? The more specific, the better your targeting.
Offer — What's the compelling reason to choose you over the five other solar companies in their feed? Free site assessment? Guaranteed production numbers? Financing options? Your offer is the bridge between "interested" and "let's do this."
Acquisition — NOW we turn on the ads. But only after the first three pieces are locked in. Because running ads without a solid product, clear client profile, and compelling offer is like pouring fuel on wet wood. Nothing catches.
Most agencies skip straight to acquisition. They turn on the ads, send you a lead report, and cash your monthly retainer. The results? Mediocre at best.
"We build the car. You put in the fuel."
This is how I explain what we do to every client.
The car is the acquisition system — the ads, the landing page, the instant response, the follow-up, the CRM, the tracking. All of it. Built, tested, and optimised.
The fuel is your ad budget.
You fund the ads, and the system handles everything from click to contract. No leads falling through cracks. No "I forgot to call them back." No mystery about what's working and what isn't.
We launched a full acquisition system for a solar client and had leads coming in within a week. Not a month of strategy decks and brand workshops. A week. Because the system was already engineered — we just plugged in their offer and turned it on.
The result: 125 leads in the first month. CPL around €12. ROI of 6x.
Six euros back for every euro spent on ads. Not because the ads were magic. Because the system behind them converted at a rate that made the math work.
Why your agency probably isn't doing this
Most marketing agencies for solar companies do one of two things:
Option A: They just run ads. They set up your Meta campaigns, optimise for leads, and send you a report. What happens to those leads? Not their problem. Their job is to generate the leads. Yours is to close them.
Option B: They sell you leads from a pool. Even worse. They run ads under their own brand, collect leads, and sell them to you — and three other solar companies. You're paying for leads that five people are calling simultaneously. We wrote about this in detail: shared leads are killing your solar business.
Neither of these approaches works long-term. Because neither of them gives you a system. You're renting results, not building infrastructure.
The solar companies that dominate their markets in 2026 aren't the ones with the biggest ad budgets. They're the ones with the tightest systems. The ones where a lead comes in at 2:17 PM and gets a text at 2:17 PM, a call at 2:19 PM, and if they don't answer, an email at 2:20 PM and another call at 2:22 PM. And then a sequence of follow-ups for the next two weeks.
That's not "good marketing." That's an acquisition machine. And it's the difference between hoping for installations and engineering them.
The numbers behind system vs. no system
Let me make this concrete.
Solar company A (ads only):
- €5,000/month ad spend
- 130 leads at €38 each
- Team calls leads within 4-6 hours
- No automated follow-up
- 4% conversion to site visit
- 2 installations/month
- Revenue: €24,000
- ROI: 4.8x (looks ok, but margins are thin)
Solar company B (full acquisition system):
- €5,000/month ad spend
- 130 leads at €38 each
- Instant automated response + team calls within 5 minutes
- 14-day multi-channel follow-up
- Qualification filter removes 30% of unqualified leads upfront
- 12% conversion to site visit
- 7 installations/month
- Revenue: €84,000
- ROI: 16.8x
Same ad spend. Same number of leads. Triple the installations. The only difference is what happens after someone clicks the ad.
What to do right now
If you're spending money on solar ads and not seeing the installations to match, here are the three things to check immediately:
1. Time your response. Have someone fill out your lead form right now. How long until they get contacted? If it's more than 5 minutes, that's your biggest leak.
2. Map your follow-up. What happens after the first call attempt fails? If the answer is "we try again tomorrow," you're losing 60%+ of your leads to competitors who follow up harder.
3. Ask the revenue question. Not "how many leads did we get?" but "how much revenue did those leads generate?" If your agency can't answer that — or won't — you're spending blind.
The ads aren't the problem. They never were. The system is.
And if you don't have one, let's build it. We'll look at your current setup, find the leaks, and show you exactly what a full acquisition system would look like for your market. No pitch deck. Just an honest diagnosis.