OMPT Velocity

How it works

Real data. Honest economics. No proposal that makes every address look like a winner.

01

The proposal, built in under 30 seconds

Enter any commercial address. Within 30 seconds you get a fully branded PDF proposal built on real data from Google's Solar API — actual roof measurements, local solar irradiance figures, and EIA utility rates for that state. No templates, no generic estimates. Every proposal is specific to the building.

The PDF includes production estimates, cumulative savings projections with 3% annual rate escalation, AI-written savings analogies calibrated to the actual numbers, and three financing scenarios: cash purchase, solar lease, and PPA — all calculated from the real economics of that address.

02

Not every address is a strong candidate. That's the point.

Some commercial rooftops are excellent solar candidates. Some aren't — north-facing, heavily shaded, or simply too small to make the numbers work.

Every proposal reflects the real economics of that specific address. Addresses with a payback period under 25 years show full cash-purchase ROI — savings table, payback period, three financing options side by side. Addresses with a payback period over 25 years lead with lease and PPA financing, where no upfront capital is required and the ownership economics don't need to pencil out for the client to save money. The framing matches the property, not a template.

We don't inflate numbers to make every pitch look good. A proposal you can stand behind is more useful than one that closes fast and creates problems later.

03

If an address isn't a useful sales tool, you don't pay for it

If an address comes back with a payback period beyond 40 years, that proposal doesn't count against your monthly plan limit. And if an address has no viable solar panel configurations at all — structurally unsuitable roof, no placements returned by the data — no proposal is generated and nothing is counted. You're not paying for a run that produced nothing useful.

04

Where the numbers come from

Solar production estimates come from Google's Solar API, which uses satellite imagery and machine learning to model actual roof geometry and irradiance — not zip-code averages. Electricity rates are sourced from EIA (U.S. Energy Information Administration) commercial sector data, updated annually by state.

Proposals are estimates, not engineering reports. The PDF says so clearly in the footer, and we mean it: the numbers are as accurate as publicly available data allows, but a site survey from a licensed installer is the definitive step before any purchase decision.

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From $49/month. Cancel any time.

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