In January, Lerned Zint’s gas water heater croaked. It would have been an inconvenience for anyone. For Zint, a Spanish-speaking mother who runs Corazones Daycare out of her San Francisco home, it was an emergency.
Why it matters: Home businesses are the perfect high-margin lead: they need 100% uptime, they have daytime loads that match solar production, and they can't afford to wait for a gas boiler ban to act.
While SF is subsidizing heat pumps for toddlers, European installers should be smelling a massive, untapped margin opportunity. We often talk about 'residential' versus 'commercial,' but the 'C&I-lite' segment—the millions of home-based businesses like daycares, clinics, and workshops—is where the real money is hiding. In Germany alone, the Gebäudeenergiegesetz (GEG) is forcing a pivot away from gas, but for a business owner, a failing boiler isn't just a cold shower; it’s a revenue-killing shutdown.
The Reliability Upsell
If you’re still selling PV based on LCOE alone, you’re leaving meat on the bone. The San Francisco model proves that for these hybrid residential-business sites, the value proposition isn't 'save the planet'; it’s operational continuity. A standard air-to-water heat pump from the likes of Viessmann or Daikin combined with a modest 10kWh BESS (like a Huawei LUNA2000) transforms a home into a resilient micro-utility. When the grid flinches or gas prices spike, that daycare stays open. That is a premium service you can charge for.