Pearl Edison

Pearl Edison

互联网市场平台

Detroit,Michigan 303 位关注者

Electrification and energy efficiency, made easy

关于我们

To achieve net-zero emissions, hundreds of millions of systems that consume natural gas in our homes need to go electric. Whether or not these systems electrify will depend on individual “kitchen table” decisions made by millions of families, weighing comfort and convenience, costs (up front and over time), and climate impact. But making these decisions is difficult. Evaluating what to buy, what’s reasonable to pay, and who to trust to install it involves navigating a ton of bad information and complexity. Pearl exists to make home electrification easy for customers and profitable for contractors - starting with home heating and cooling. Pearl is a home electrification “concierge” - our purpose-built software platform allows homeowners to instantly generate a value-engineered system design, get a fixed-price quote, and connect with a vetted, qualified contractor to complete the install. Pearl also saves contractors time and money. Today, they do lots of work - a home assessment, system design, bid preparation, customer education, and more - at risk, before a contract, on a low win rate. Pearl takes care of this, so that contractors spend more time on revenue-generating installs and less time on sales and back-office. Our goal is a win-win-win - for customers, for contractors, and for the climate.

网站
www.pearledison.com
所属行业
互联网市场平台
规模
2-10 人
总部
Detroit,Michigan
类型
私人持股
创立
2023

地点

Pearl Edison员工

动态

  • Pearl Edison转发了

    查看Evan Anderson的档案,图片

    Co-Founder - Pearl Edison

    It was special to be a part of Michigan Central OPEN earlier this month. As a Detroiter, reopening the Station meant so much - it's been a symbol of Detroit's challenges for my entire life, but it was once a symbol of Detroit's prosperity, and now it will be a symbol of our prosperity again. (We can also check "opening for Eminem" off the bucket list.) We were also glad to share our work with Debra in partnership with Brynn Cooksey and his team. Debra was cold in her home and burdened by high utility bills from her inefficient HVAC system, and Pearl Edison was able to help. (Brynn shared a few details in this post.) We look forward to telling more of these stories - ultimately, Debra's home is just one home, and there are tens of millions of homes just like hers that need investment if we're going to make a dent in energy burden and climate footprint from home heating and cooling. Our mission is to help. This weekend, Jake and I decided to give away a whole-home heat pump retrofit, like we performed for Debra - $15K max value. This is our way of saying "thank you" to the community we founded Pearl Edison in, and our way of honoring the grand reopening of the Station. The rules are simple - you need to be based in Southeast Michigan, you need to go to our website for an instant estimate to kick off the process, and we need to be confident that your project will result in savings of at least $500 per year. (We take the last one deadly seriously!) Sharing / resharing are much appreciated! You can learn more at the link below. We also did a deeper writeup on our work with Debra, which is linked in the comments. https://lnkd.in/gnxctcma Thanks, Detroit, for your support.

    查看Brynn Cooksey Sr, CEM, CMS的档案,图片

    Principal Owner @ HVAC U | HVACR, Electrical, Building Science

    Shout out to Pearl Edison's Jake Yurek and Evan Anderson. The work we do is super important. Thank you for allowing me to tag along for the ride. This clip recognizes the life-changing work that Pearl Edison is doing. I had the pleasure of designing Ms Anderson's HVAC system. She was experiencing $700 - 800 dollars per month in utility bills. She recently acknowledged that our monthly bills have dropped to $200 for comparable climate and usage. Proper design can have compounding effects. For example: If we can save a customer $1000 per year by doing it by the book... If that customer invests their energy savings into an interest-bearing account, the investment would be worth $51,000 in 18 years, the lifespan of some residential HVAC equipment. This is a testament to the significant financial impact of our work, and this could be life-changing for some families.

  • Pearl Edison转发了

    查看Evan Anderson的档案,图片

    Co-Founder - Pearl Edison

    ~2 weeks ago, we (Pearl Edison) shared takeaways from the Detroit-based Home Energy Rebate pilot program. Since then, Jake Yurek and I have had the privilege of connecting state and city leaders from all over the country. The most common theme from these discussions has been how to define a "qualified contractor" - and really, how to balance "going fast" (because the climate crisis demands urgency) and "getting it right" (to avoid increasing energy burden, in particular for low-income homeowners). This is a false choice long-term, but a very real tradeoff short-term. We wrote up our thoughts on the role that states and cities can play in: (1) Growing the qualified contractor base, via targeted training / upskilling (2) Giving qualified contractors leverage to increase “throughput” (completed jobs per technician), by reducing soft cost / waste-work (3) Reducing qualified contractor “churn” / failure rate, by sending enough work to qualified contractors to keep them profitable You can find the full writeup at the link in the comments. If you are thinking this through, reach out! We're supporting utilities, state energy offices, cities, lenders, community organizations and more.

    • 该图片无替代文字
  • Pearl Edison转发了

    查看Jake Yurek的档案,图片

    Co-Founder at Pearl Edison

    Qualified contractors are often the difference between good and bad experiences for homeowners. Pearl Edison wants to elevate qualified contractors by making it easier to run a profitable business. For those concerned about climate impact, we'll go much faster over the next ten years if we focus on "getting it right" during the next 18 months.

    查看Evan Anderson的档案,图片

    Co-Founder - Pearl Edison

    ~2 weeks ago, we (Pearl Edison) shared takeaways from the Detroit-based Home Energy Rebate pilot program. Since then, Jake Yurek and I have had the privilege of connecting state and city leaders from all over the country. The most common theme from these discussions has been how to define a "qualified contractor" - and really, how to balance "going fast" (because the climate crisis demands urgency) and "getting it right" (to avoid increasing energy burden, in particular for low-income homeowners). This is a false choice long-term, but a very real tradeoff short-term. We wrote up our thoughts on the role that states and cities can play in: (1) Growing the qualified contractor base, via targeted training / upskilling (2) Giving qualified contractors leverage to increase “throughput” (completed jobs per technician), by reducing soft cost / waste-work (3) Reducing qualified contractor “churn” / failure rate, by sending enough work to qualified contractors to keep them profitable You can find the full writeup at the link in the comments. If you are thinking this through, reach out! We're supporting utilities, state energy offices, cities, lenders, community organizations and more.

    • 该图片无替代文字

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