Most solar forms are broken before the customer even submits them.
They ask for a name, phone number, address, system size, and maybe a brand preference. Then the customer is pushed into a sales conversation where the real questions start later. What is the load? Is the meter single phase or three phase? Is this fresh solar or an upgrade? Is the customer trying to survive load shedding, reduce export waste under net-billing, run an office during outages, or power a tube well? Does the customer need lithium backup, commercial ESS, or only a standard on-grid system?
Skipping these questions is not harmless. It creates bad expectations. It creates weak quotations. It creates unnecessary price comparisons. It also encourages customers to compare inverter brands, panel wattage, or battery names without understanding what problem the system is supposed to solve.
A proper solar inquiry journey should not begin with equipment. It should begin with purpose.
That is the foundation of the improved Zorays Solar customer journey. The form is designed to qualify a customer before a quotation is prepared. It does not treat every inquiry as the same “price bata dain” lead. It separates residential, commercial, corporate, industrial, and agricultural requirements. It also separates on-grid customers, hybrid upgrade customers, battery-backup customers, net-billing-conscious customers, and commercial continuity customers.
This matters because Pakistan’s solar market has changed. The old solar conversation was mostly about panels and inverters. The new conversation is about self-consumption, lithium storage, hybrid conversion, backup comfort, export control, protection, and long-term system planning.
Selling panels without planning is wrong. Selling batteries without asking backup expectation is wrong. Selling a hybrid inverter without checking phase, load, existing system, battery compatibility, DB condition, and protection requirement is wrong.
A serious solar journey starts with the customer’s need, not the seller’s inventory.
