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SolarCity

Acquired by Tesla

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SolarCity reviews

3.5

61% would recommend to a friend

(2,336 total reviews)
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Lyndon Rive

84% approve of CEO

56% positive business outlook

SolarCity has an employee rating of 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 2,336 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The SolarCity employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Energy, Mining & Utilities industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

2K reviews
1.0
Feb 14, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Seems like a cooperative, innovative, friendly place at first...but that's only an illusory first impression! Not many pros once you actually get past the first week.

Cons

Ambivalent management that throws staff under the bus to protect their own skins, pressure to make unrealistic quota/pipeline numbers, absolutely no support from managment, failure to adhere to company's own stated values. Low pay.

1.0
Mar 2, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Large publicly traded company. Helping environment and giving people energy options. Elon Musk and Tesla connection makes you want to be part of this company. The idea of making an impact helping the environment is appealing.

Cons

Once the Elon Musk magic had worn off, I realized that this company is not everything I had hoped for. SolarCity is unorganized and the company is growing way too fast. Everyone is a new hire. The majority of sales consultants have no prior solar experience. The consultants I met and work with were previously in realty sales, gym membership sales, car sales, travel sales, time share sales, paper sales, mobile phone sales or coming from retail customer service. No solar experience and there is no real “consulting” as the job title states. Profanity, smoking, tobacco dipping, and non-professionalism is norm. It is a good ole boy type of position as there is about a 5 to 1 ratio of men to women in sales. This is a hard close sales type of position. You are expected to hard close a customer into signing a 20 year contract at the first meeting in their home. If you don’t hard close and get them to sign a contract at the first meeting, it is almost impossible to get them to move forward at a later date because of the company’s online Yelp reviews and SolarCity’s installation reputation. Common training practice is not to leave the home until the customer signs. If you are not comfortable hard closing a family into signing a 20 year contract within an hour meeting, then you will not be successful at this job. Period. Again, everyone is a new hire. The company has been around for over eight years but I am still hard pressed to find a single sales consultant that has been with the company for more than two years. I was called an experienced solar sales “veteran” by my manager to a new team hire only after my fifth month. One day my manager was too busy to train/babysit the new guy so I was assigned to have him shadow me. I was still learning so it was like the blind leading the blind. The consultants that I have found with just over a year experience with SolarCity, all have one foot ready out the door. Most are disgruntled and not happy with the direction of the company and management. I believe that a high employee turnover rate is part of SolarCity’s success. Sales consultants are expected to sell to all their friends and family as soon as they start their job. This was recommended during training. This is a quick way for SolarCity to capture customers and contacts into their Salesforce database. Continue to sell to these people regardless if the original employee is still with the company or not. As far as management, most have little to no experience managing a sales team. Managers are spread very thin and are learning as they go like everyone else. Many questions and concerns go unanswered or ignored. Most managers are under pressure with their own quota and metric to fulfill that they do and say anything just to keep their sales teams in line. Expect to work everyday. Yes, including evenings and every weekend. Most deals happen during those times. Reason: Most people work during the day and only can meet at night. Most people work during the week and only have the weekend to meet. Also expect most of your appointments to cancel or no show. This happens when a lead is generated from a SolarCity-Home Depot associate or called a FES "Field Energy Specialist". This lead is then transferred to you. Most of these leads are unqualified and only agree to an appointment out of politeness or under pressure from the SolarCity FES associate at Home Depot. Expect to show up on a Sunday for a consultation where the customer is not home, won't answer the door, or forgot about the appointment. Yet, it is mandatory for you to go on these sales calls if it is assigned to you or else you will not get assigned any more leads from the Home Depot. You are also expected to walk up and down the aisles at Home Depot to basically cold call/generate your own leads. Expect to be looked down upon as more of an annoyance than help to most people you encounter at Home Depot. Your intentions may be in the right place but most people associate solar sales people with a negative connotation similar to a used car salesman. Expect people to run away from you and reactions of disgust or fright when you mention the word "solar" to someone. The hardest part of this job is disappointing willing customers. Once you actually sell a job the downstream installation process with SolarCity is horrific. You would lose a majority of your deals to customer cancellations because the installation process is complete confusion at SolarCity. The handoff of sold jobs from the sales team to the install team is a logistic mess. Miscommunication between the sales team and the installation team leads to many apologies to the customer. It is very difficult as a sales rep to build a network of referrals when the downstream product, installation and customer experience is always subpar or average at best. I only recommend this job if you are working retail/minimum wage and are looking for your first sales job to get some experience. If you are an experienced solar consultant, I would look at other local solar companies for employment. If you are an experienced (non-solar) sales professional, I would stay away from SolarCity and the solar industry as a whole. The true culture and atmosphere as a sales rep in SolarCity is not positive, fun or inspiring as some other Glassdoor reviews have alluded to. Look elsewhere for long term stable income employment.

1.0
Sep 15, 2014

Turn and burn

Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

set your own schedule work in the field and out of home. health insurance, company car and gas card, nice computer. If you are single and live with your parents this is a perfect job for you.

Cons

very low base pay and commission. training is lacking and you are expected to figure it out. regular surprise changes that you will usually find out in the home. Very little room for growth since your quota goes up and pay goes down. It seems that the companies goal is turn and burn through employees. Have the new employee sign up all their friends and family. Since your new you will need to put in 60-70 hours to make quota and you'll do it for a while until you get burned out. You are expected to self generate 50% of your leads. You will need to stand in The Home Depot or best buy to generate leads. most of the leads you get are now totally unqualified. We used to at least ask 2 or 3 qualifying questions.

Viewing 22 - 24 of 2,336 Reviews

Glassdoor has 2,374 SolarCity reviews submitted anonymously by SolarCity employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if SolarCity is right for you.