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Don't Miss The Great Solar Debate: Where Does the Global Solar Industry Stand? Click Here to Register! ×

Should Solar Marketers Focus on Preaching to the Choir or to the Skeptics?

Tor 'Solar Fred' Valenza
September 06, 2012  |  10 Comments

Yesterday, I received a message on Twitter from Tom Kimbis over at SEIA. He Tweeted, “WSJ wants to know what you think about promoting #solar. VOTE HERE!! @SEIA @SolarFred http://ow.ly/dv9o9."

When I clicked on the link, it took me to a Wall Street Journal blog post where the author asked readers if solar and wind subsidies should be eliminated, increased, decreased, or remain the same.

At the time, about 8:30 AM Pacific, solar was being hammered in the voting by regular Wall Street Journal readers. A 500-vote margin suggested that solar and wind subsidies should be eliminated. That’s not so surprising. The blog was preaching to its conservative oil and gas investor choir, and while the More Solar Subsidies vote had received just a little less than half the votes, for solar PR and advocacy reasons, I strongly believed that solar needed to win this non-scientific but very public poll.

So, thanks to Tom’s heads up, green social media marketers and activists on Twitter reached beyond WSJ’s normal oil and gas choir. By the afternoon, support for increasing solar subsidies had gained the majority of votes. As of this writing Wednesday night, the vote now stands at over 4006 votes (47.7%) for increasing subsides versus 3374 votes (40.2%) for eliminating solar and wind subsidies.

Update September 7, 2012: Fossil fuel advocates are catching up again! Click on the above link and cast your vote for solar and wind.

On the surface, the solar and wind industry won this public PR battle. The Wall Street Journal is a notoriously conservative news organization, and perhaps this “win” will inspire some conservative readers to think again about America’s support for solar and wind…but probably not.

If you take a look at the comments below the post, you’ll see typical yada, yada, myths and misunderstandings about solar and wind subsidies. Solar and wind advocates attempted to set the record straight, but were the other conservative commenters really listening? Or were they just seeking confirmation of their predisposed views. (One could ask the same of solar and wind advocates.)

Here’s the thing: As solar marketers, we are already short-staffed, underfunded, and hard-pressed for time and resources. So, we have to ask ourselves whether it’s worth our time to preach outside our choir in this type of conservative venue in order to generate leads from predisposed skeptics.

In truth, no matter how many facts we have, it’s extremely difficult to change people’s minds once they believe something, even when economic and scientific facts contradict those beliefs. To change these minds, you need time, repetition, creativity, and especially “Trust Agents” (a great book).

By “Trust Agents,” I mean personal, local, or national conservative thought leaders. If they change their minds first about solar and preach about the change, it breaks down ideological barriers, and many eventually follow.

For example, if Bill O’Reilly ever did finally go solar and preached about its money-saving attributes on his radio and cable shows, that would be a huge coup for solar energy. Many of his millions of listeners and viewers would rethink (UnThink?) getting a solar quote for themselves. Similarly, if your conservative best friend who follows “energy” changes his or her mind about solar, it may persuade you to reconsider your solar subsidy position too.

So, is it worth our time to get the troops to vote up solar on these types of conservative forums? Shall we find and market to conservative Trust Agents and try to make our case to them in the hopes that they’ll spread the word to others?

My answer is yes…but in moderation. This Wall Street Journal example was an easy win. It took me a few minutes to get the word out on my own personal and business social networks, while SEIA and other solar social media people were doing the same. Good and urgent causes spread quickly.

However, if this were purely a solar marketing call-to-action to buy a solar widget or service, I doubt this mini-campaign would have had the same response or PR effect.

The fact is that our very own solar choir is still very uneducated about solar technology and its economic benefits. Progressive, open minded, and  “green” individuals, businesses, and politicians may already support solar, yet they still don’t understand that solar can be financed with leases and PPAs or PACE, and that it doesn’t need batteries — or even a roof in some cases.

So, unfortunately, we’re still in the early adopter stage of solar. While I would love to go to Mississippi and Alabama and try to get legislators to pass state-wide net metering and to preach to the non-solar choir and sell oodles of solar…. we are probably going to be more successful and profitable marketing to progressives, independents, and moderate Republicans who are already favorable to solar, but uneducated and/or unmotivated.

That’s not to say that solar marketers are giving up on selling solar to conservatives. By solar being successful with the low-hanging progressive fruit, eventually the information and the financial sense will spread through personal peers, colleagues, and Trust Agents.

Meanwhile, it’s still worth it to take a few minutes to correct solar myths on blogs and news articles, and it’s always worth it…. to UnThink Solar. 

Tor Valenza a.k.a. “Solar Fred” advises solar companies on marketing, communications, and branding. Want more solar marketing info? Sign up for the Solar Fred Marketing Newsletter, or contact Solar Fred through UnThink Solar. You can also follow @SolarFred on Twitter.

The information and views expressed in this blog post are solely those of the author and not necessarily those of RenewableEnergyWorld.com or the companies that advertise on this Web site and other publications. This blog was posted directly by the author and was not reviewed for accuracy, spelling or grammar.

10 Comments

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Melinda Rice
Melinda Rice
October 2, 2012
howe-richard-342353, you and I seem to be on the same page, sir. While I grew up in wind-country in a town that survives almost solely on the wind industry and my livelihood has been dependent upon wind -- and therefore the PTC -- for over 11-years (and my mom's before me), and now on the entire renewables industry, I have always had to be a reluctant supporter of the PTC.

However, my true belief is that all energy (and other) subsidies should be done away with in order to create an even playing-field upon which all can fairly compete. While I respect the opinions of my friends and colleagues, it is my belief that in the end subsidies benefit no one at all. They simply enslave us all to our government and create the boom and bust cycle that causes instability in the industry.

That being said, given the gross amount of power that Oil & Gas in particular has in this country (not to mention the complex international political issues involved), I cannot foresee energy subsidies going away anytime soon... Well, not all of them, anyhow. It remains to be seen whether the PTC is again passed, and I'm quite sure I'm not alone here in my thinking that we will not likely see anything happen until after the elections in November. Well, besides most of the rest of our friends and colleagues be laid-off, as well as some of ourselves perhaps.

And so, since all energy subsidies won't be getting the axe this time around, I will be (and have been) hoping with the vast majority of the rest of you that she will yet again be passed.

Luck be on our side, friends and colleagues!
-MCR
Jim Jenal
Jim Jenal
September 18, 2012
Steve - I have to disagree with your comments in the strongest way. I don't know about what you see in Colorado, but here in SoCal I've seen way too many shoddy installs foisted on homeowners who had no way to know what they would be getting for their hard-earned dollars.
NABCEP isn't perfect - no such regime is - but it gives consumers a way to determine in advance whether someone's claims about knowing how to do the job right is backed by an independent third party, or is just the puffing of some salesperson.
We were able to get all three of our owners - including myself - certified with a minimal amount of hassle. We had the background (although each of us qualified in a different manner), we had done the work, and we managed to ace the exam the first time out.
What will set the industry back is having sub-standard, slap-dash installs done that end up damaging property or injuring people. Having NABCEP certified installers on the job goes a long way toward avoiding those potential setbacks.

Regards...

Jim Jenal, NABCEP Certified Solar PV Installer
Steve Shepard
Steve Shepard
September 10, 2012
The solar industry did itself more injury than it can possibly know when it caved to utility pressure and adopted NABCEP certification requirements. The basic message to existing practitioners and potential employees was your degree, present certifications and licenses are not sufficient to harvest sunshine. NABCEP has set the industry back, discouraged investors, discouraged consumers, and contributed to the unemployment in the solar industry and the country at large. NABCEP needs to fired ASAP and all the test administrators should be sued for the damage they have done to solar dealers and consumers alike.
Rematog - The Original
Rematog - The Original
September 10, 2012
Travis,

I don't understand your post. Are you saying that solar only makes sense to someone who is concerned about conservation as a "Cause"?

If a project makes finanical sense based on the reduction in the person's electric bill, it shouldn't matter how much power they are using, or how they are using it.

It seems to me that you're just morally offended by someone who doesn't share your beliefs and I'd guess you come off as condescending to someone your talking to who isn't a "member of the choirs".
TRAVIS SAGERT
TRAVIS SAGERT
September 10, 2012
I'm in the middle. If I am involved in ANOTHER solar project with the homeowner still using a 20 year old water heater, electric stove and heat, no insulation in the house, single-pane glass, 100 watt bulbs in everything lighting up the house like christmas, I refuse to either explain to him where his savings are going, and also will refuse to accept solar as a "viable" and "cheap" resource, especially in Milwaukee with 4.4 usable solar hours per day.

Solar makes no sense if the APPLICATION doesnt, either. As long as people are stupid, solar will be stupid.
RICHARD HOWE
RICHARD HOWE
September 8, 2012
If we are discussing ending subsidies for renewable energy, then what about ending subsidies for other existing energy sources and farm/crop subsidies? The issue of subsidies for renewable energy is a concern to me as well as to most people, so I have begun to research this topic in more detail. Although the message we generally hear is that renewable energy sources are receiving too much in subsidies, what I have found in various studies is that when taken in the context of a longer period of history, all energy sources have benefited from significant and long-term subsidies. So, if we think we must phase out subsidies on renewable energy sources any time soon, then shouldn't we first make sure that other more mature energy source subsidies are phased out first?
See http://www.dblinvestors.com/documents/What-Would-Jefferson-Do-Final-Version.pdf
Alfred Shaw
Alfred Shaw
September 8, 2012
I have a solar system & it saves me about 50% of my electric costs. More important it takes a load off grid in peak usage. More attention should be made of this fact when promoting solar. It is too bad in Pennsylvania there is no effort to promote solar and require the utility companies to promote more clean energy. The subsidies I received are small potatoes compared to what is spent to create jobs which may or may not be good paying.
Tor 'Solar Fred' Valenza
Tor 'Solar Fred' Valenza
September 7, 2012
Thanks the thoughts and support, Jim. FYI, we're back to being up by only 300 votes again, so hope readers will keep voting!
Jim Jenal
Jim Jenal
September 6, 2012
First, thanks for spreading the word about this "poll" - as of now 2:30 PDT on Thursday) we are leading by nearly 1,000 votes: 5,300 to 4,363. Oddly, the "remain the same" and "they should decline" options are way smaller vote totals: 772 vs 488 respectively. Polarized voting yet again!

I absolutely agree that we need to preach to our opponents if for no other reason than to keep ourselves grounded and our arguments constantly vetted. Moreover, the people we most need to convince never visit the venues where our choir mostly hangs out - they are the "swing voter" who may lean against supporting solar or renewables generally, but they don't have a lot of information. We could be the only pro-solar voices they hear.

And remember, those people vote and elections have consequences. Will they vote for someone who mocked the threat of climate change or someone who embraces policies to combat it? We might just make a difference by adding our reasoned arguments to the mix.

But of course we don't need to choose just one or the other. We can put out our own information, in our own fora. that presents the facts as clearly as possible and in a way that welcomes skeptics as well as supporters. Surely you do that in your posts regularly.

Jim
Comly Wilson
Comly Wilson
September 6, 2012
Solar Energy is a highly potential industry and it is worth more attention.

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UnThink Solar is a strategic solar marketing and communications company. Clients include Panasonic, One Block Off the Grid, Free Hot Water and other solar PV and Thermal companies who desire to stand out in an increasing competitive solar...
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