Green Solar Energy Solutions had a narrow window. A government rebate reduction on 1 May created a closing market. AIIMS built the entire acquisition infrastructure from the ground up: landing page, creative, paid media, and call tracking. 2.5 months. One shot. Full execution.
The Australian solar battery market moves fast when policy moves faster. The federal government's rebate scheme had a confirmed reduction date: 1 May 2026. For Green Solar Energy Solutions, a Sydney-based solar and battery installer serving NSW homeowners, this represented the most commercially significant acquisition window in the company's recent history.
Green Solar Energy Solutions operates in the residential solar and battery storage segment, targeting homeowners looking to reduce energy costs, increase energy independence, and take advantage of government incentive schemes. The business had a quality product, credible installation capability, and a genuine market tailwind. What it lacked was an acquisition system capable of converting that tailwind into pipeline at scale.
With the rebate deadline creating urgency across the homeowner market, demand was high and attention was primed. But opportunity without infrastructure is just noise. The strategic mandate was clear: build a complete, high-converting acquisition system, activate it immediately, and extract maximum lead volume before the window closed. Not over a quarter. In 2.5 months.
The surface challenge was lead volume. But the real problem ran deeper. Every inefficiency in the acquisition system had a direct cost: wasted budget, diluted urgency, lower sales velocity. In a market with a hard deadline, every friction point was a commercial liability.
The brand was competing in a crowded solar market without a distinct market position. No clear narrative thread connecting the homeowner's fear of missing out with a specific reason to act now with Green Solar.
There was no dedicated landing page engineered for conversion. The existing web presence was built to explain the business, not to convert intent-driven traffic from paid media into booked consultations.
Without a purpose-built funnel, paid traffic had nowhere structured to land. Clicks were being generated but the path from click to call to consultation was undefined and friction-heavy.
Solar battery installations represent significant financial decisions. Homeowners carry objections: cost, installer credibility, rebate complexity, battery longevity. None of these were being addressed proactively in the messaging.
Without call tracking, there was no way to attribute inbound phone leads to specific campaigns, channels, or creatives. Optimisation was impossible. Budget decisions were being made blind.
The government rebate deadline was the single most powerful conversion lever available. It was not being used. The messaging did not communicate urgency, scarcity, or the cost of inaction in any structured or strategic way.
Australia's residential solar and battery market had genuine demand. Google search trends, Meta audience sizes, and the volume of government rebate searches all confirmed homeowner intent was active. The problem was a system architecture unable to capture it.
"The issue wasn't traffic volume. It was message-to-intent alignment. Homeowners were ready to act. The funnel wasn't ready to receive them."
Homeowners researching solar batteries in early 2026 were displaying high purchase intent signals. They were comparing quotes, researching rebate eligibility, and calculating payback periods. This is a customer who is already deep in the decision journey. The messaging needed to meet them at that stage, not educate them from scratch.
The diagnosis identified four conversion breakdown points: (1) misaligned ad creative failing to trigger urgency, (2) landing page copy weighted toward features rather than financial outcomes, (3) no structured objection handling within the page architecture, and (4) call-to-action sequencing that did not escalate commitment progressively.
The product itself was strong. The offer framing was not. Homeowners were not seeing a clear, time-sensitive value proposition. The rebate deadline needed to become the centrepiece of every touchpoint: ad headline, landing page hero, CTA language, and follow-up messaging. Time pressure, when framed ethically and accurately, is one of the most powerful conversion catalysts available.
The solar battery category in NSW was dominated by national installers running generic price-led advertising. The whitespace available to Green Solar was specificity: a local, responsive team with genuine expertise, able to act before the deadline. Local credibility plus urgency plus a clear outcome was the strategic foundation we built the entire acquisition system on.
The strategy was not a collection of tactics. It was a unified acquisition architecture where every component was designed to compound the others. Each pillar had a single job. Together they built a machine.
A purpose-built, conversion-engineered landing page designed specifically for the rebate window campaign. Not a brochure. A conversion instrument with a singular goal: turn paid traffic into a qualified phone call or form submission within 90 seconds of landing.
Every line of copy was engineered to address a specific psychological stage in the homeowner's decision journey. Headline engineering, benefit stacking, urgency framing, social proof placement, and objection neutralisation were all mapped against the customer's decision architecture.
Dual-channel paid media strategy across Google and Meta, each channel serving a distinct role. Google Search captured in-market, high-intent searchers actively looking for solar battery installers. Meta generated awareness, remarketing, and instant lead forms for homeowners who were considering but not yet actively searching.
Creative was not an afterthought. Ad creative was built around two axes: urgency (rebate deadline as the hero message) and credibility (local team, real installations, real outcomes). Every creative asset was designed to earn attention in less than two seconds and deliver a conversion-oriented message in the next five.
WildJar call tracking was deployed across all channels to give complete attribution visibility. Every inbound call was linked to the channel, campaign, and creative that generated it. This made budget allocation decisions data-driven rather than gut-driven, and enabled ongoing optimisation throughout the campaign period.
The 1 May rebate deadline was present in every touchpoint. Ad headlines. Landing page countdown context. CTA language. Email follow-ups. This was not manufactured scarcity. It was a real commercial event, communicated with precision. The entire system was calibrated to convert the market's existing urgency into Green Solar's pipeline.
Original video content was produced with on-screen talent to bring the Green Solar brand to life. Real faces, real stories, real installations. These weren't stock-footage ads. They were conversion-engineered creative assets distributed across Meta and YouTube, designed to build trust at scale and drive qualified homeowners deeper into the funnel.
The landing page was not designed. It was engineered. Every layout decision, every headline, every CTA placement had a specific conversion rationale. The philosophy was simple: reduce uncertainty at every step while increasing the perceived inevitability of taking action.
"A homeowner landing on this page after clicking a Google ad has already expressed intent. Our job was not to sell solar batteries. It was to eliminate every reason not to call."
The page was structured to mirror the homeowner's internal monologue: What is this? Why does it matter to me? Why now? Why this company? What do I do next? Each section answered one question precisely and moved the visitor to the next.
The hero headline led with the homeowner's outcome, not the product's feature. Financial savings, energy independence, and rebate eligibility were surfaced within the first 100 words. The subheadline delivered the deadline urgency without hyperbole.
Installer accreditations, past installation imagery, customer testimonials, and government scheme logos were positioned precisely at the decision friction points within the page. Trust was not concentrated at the bottom. It was distributed at every hesitation point.
CTAs appeared three times on the page, each with escalating commitment language. The first offered a free quote. The second introduced the deadline context. The third created direct urgency with a call-to-action that framed inaction as a financial cost. Mobile click-to-call was the primary conversion mechanism throughout.
The top five homeowner objections were identified: cost, process complexity, installation disruption, rebate eligibility uncertainty, and battery lifespan concern. Each was addressed in dedicated, scannable content blocks positioned before the visitor would naturally raise the objection in their own mind.
Over 85% of paid traffic arrived on mobile devices. The page was built mobile-first: thumb-reachable CTAs, tap-to-call buttons above the fold, compressed load time, and a visual hierarchy that communicated the core value proposition in a single scroll on a 375px screen.
Two channels. Two distinct roles. One unified acquisition goal. The campaign architecture was designed to capture existing intent on Google while manufacturing urgency-driven intent on Meta. Both fed the same landing page. Both fed the same call tracking system. Data flowed in both directions.
Google's Performance Max campaign was deployed to extend reach across Search, Display, YouTube, and Maps simultaneously, while the dedicated search campaign maintained keyword-level control for the highest-intent queries. The dual-campaign structure allowed budget to flow toward whichever configuration was delivering the lowest cost per qualified call in any given period.
Meta's instant lead form campaign delivered $89.91 CPL with a 3.9% CTR against a 110,656 impression count. The traffic campaign, running to the landing page, generated 12,867 landing page views at $0.77 per landing page view. Together, both Meta campaigns reached 249,733 unique homeowners across the 2.5-month period.
The engagement ran from mid-February to 1 May 2026. Every phase had a defined output and a defined transition trigger. Nothing moved forward until the preceding phase was production-ready.
Market audit, competitive landscape analysis, customer psychology mapping, and offer framing. The rebate deadline was identified as the central acquisition lever. Keyword research and audience segmentation completed. Campaign and landing page strategy locked before any creative production began.
Conversion-focused landing page designed and developed. All copy written to the conversion architecture: urgency-led hero section, benefit stacking, trust signals, objection handling blocks, and multi-stage CTA sequencing. WildJar call tracking integrated and tested across all traffic sources. Page QA completed on mobile and desktop.
On-screen talent was cast and briefed. Scripts were written to a conversion framework, not a brand awareness brief. Shoot days were completed efficiently, producing a library of short-form and long-form video assets. Each cut was edited for a specific placement: Meta feed, Meta Stories, and YouTube pre-roll. The urgency narrative was embedded in the talent's delivery, not added in post.
Google Ads campaigns launched: Performance Max and targeted search. Meta campaigns launched: lead generation and traffic. Initial creative set deployed. Conversion tracking verified across all channels. The first 7 days were treated as a calibration period, with active monitoring on impression share, click quality, and call attribution accuracy.
Data from call tracking fed back into campaign optimisation. Underperforming ad sets paused. Budget reallocated to highest-converting campaigns. Creative refreshed based on click-through and engagement data. Landing page CTA and headline variants tested. As the rebate deadline approached, urgency language was amplified across all touchpoints.
The final 3 weeks before 1 May were the highest-volume period. Urgency messaging was at maximum intensity. Budget was weighted toward the highest-performing campaigns. Call volumes peaked. The system delivered its highest daily lead counts in the final week of April, exactly when the market's buying intent was at its sharpest.
| Metric | Google Ads | Meta Ads | Call Tracking |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Spend | $42,300 | $21,382 | — |
| Impressions | 2,443,604 | 794,821 | — |
| Clicks / Calls | 22,361 | 19,690 | 333 |
| Conversions / Leads | 642 | 127 | 184 qualified |
| Avg. CTR / Answer Rate | 0.92% | 2.25% – 3.9% | 99.7% |
| Avg. CPC / CPL | $1.89 | $89.91 (leads) | — |
| Unique Reach | — | 249,733 | 276 first-time callers |
Every campaign teaches something. This one revealed several insights that extend well beyond the solar category. These are the strategic observations worth carrying forward.
The 1 May rebate window closed. The acquisition infrastructure AIIMS built did not. Green Solar Energy Solutions entered this engagement needing lead volume. They emerged with a precision-engineered, data-attributed, multi-channel acquisition machine that is ready to scale beyond the rebate cycle.
333 inbound calls. 127 form leads. 642 Google conversions. 99.7% answered. The results are a function of the system, not the season. That distinction is what separates a campaign from infrastructure.
Work with AIIMS