Why you get contacted (and who’s doing the contacting)
When you fill a lead form, your information usually goes straight into a company’s sales system. That can trigger phone calls, texts, and emails from the installer, from financing partners, or from marketing teams that bought the lead. Large national firms and local installers both do follow-ups — companies such as Sunrun or Blue Raven Solar appear in searches and reviews often, but follow-up practices vary by company and local sales teams. Some contacts are legitimate attempts to move a quote forward; others are aggressive marketing or third-party outreach. Expect a mix unless you set preferences in the form.
What to verify before you ask for a quote
Check a few things up front so you don’t sign anything you’ll regret. Read the contact form for any boxes about marketing or data sharing and choose only the contacts you want. Look for the company’s privacy policy or a brief note explaining who will see your information. Before signing a contract later, confirm who will install the system, who owns any financing agreement, who handles permits, and what cancellation rights you have. Ask for written details on the scope of work, total out‑the‑door price, timeline, and which warranties apply — and remember that price and availability depend on your roof, utility use, financing, and installer quality.
How to limit unwanted contact while still getting solid quotes
Use a dedicated email and tell the company how you prefer to be reached. Uncheck any boxes for marketing or third‑party sharing on the form. If you start getting texts or calls you don’t want, reply with a short request to stop and ask that your information not be shared. You can also call the company’s customer service line and ask to be removed from marketing lists. If a third party bought your lead, ask the installer who originally received your information and request they stop sharing it. Finally, ask each company how many times they plan to follow up and by which channels before you give them full contact details.
Red flags to watch for before signing anything
Watch for high‑pressure timelines, vague scope of work, or contracts that shift key responsibilities onto you. Beware of unclear financing paperwork, promises of guaranteed savings, or refusals to name the actual installer and equipment brands in writing. Also check whether the company will handle permits and inspections, who is responsible for roof repairs, and whether anything requires you to give up your home’s equity without clear terms. If a salesperson refuses to put answers in writing or pushes you to sign immediately, walk away until you get clear documentation and time to compare other quotes.