Technology

Reonic raises €13 million to help small installers of green tech like heat pumps and solar panels


European regulators are pushing hard for greener energy. The REPowerEU plan calls for 10 million additional heat pumps to be added by 2027, and solar panels are also on the rise.

But most installations are done by small businesses that could be more productive with better work processes.

This is where German startup Reonic comes in. “We give renewable installers the tools to be extremely efficient, and we do that mainly by providing them with planning and workflow software,” said co-founder Tristan Menzinger (sitting on the right in the picture above).

Menzinger, Lars-Manuel Schneider (sitting in the middle in the picture above), and their university mate and third co-founder Udo Sill all worked at a research institute exploring renewable energy deployment. It sparked their interest in starting Reonic, but they had to listen to real customers to bridge the gap between theory and knowledge. They concluded that installers needed end-to-end software, rather than separate tools.

Startups in other sectors have reached a similar conclusion, but it can be a tough sell when the target audience already has ingrained habits. Reonic’s promise is to make it worth it by helping installers sell faster, and sell more. “Being able to combine heat pumps, for example, with solar systems, doubles the volume that you’re selling,” Schneider said.

Unlike some competitors with narrower niches, such as solar, Reonic’s focus is renewable energy as a whole, whether that’s photovoltaics, energy storage systems, wallboxes, or heat pumps. Beyond a specific type of installation, the bigger goal they see is energy self-consumption for every household or business, Schneider said. “And this is something in the core of our product that always works the same, regardless where we are.”

The promise to accelerate renewable energy adoption seems to resonate with investors; in order to expand across Europe, Reonic just raised a €13 million Series A funding round led by Northzone, with participation from existing investors Point Nine and Puzzle Ventures. 

This matches the preference that VCs are showing for climate-focused startups that face market risk with their go-to-market strategy, as opposed to science risk from inventing a new technology.

Even then, market risk is still real. Aurora Solar, a U.S. company that provides software to help solar installers manage their sales, laid off 20% of its staff of about 500 people earlier this year after $523 million.

But with 21 team members so far and €16 million in funding to date, Reonic is more akin to smaller companies like Arch, Enerflo, Lun and Scoop Solar.

Reonic photovoltaics plan
Image Credits: Reonic

It’s also seeing growth typical of early-stage companies that have found some product-market fit, tripling its recurring revenue in the past six months alone, the company says. “Though we’ve had some real momentum since we started the business three years ago, in truth, we feel like we’re just getting started,” said Schneider.

While subsidies and other legal frameworks vary from country to country, Reonic’s internationalization is driven by its founders’ conviction that it can enter new markets without a lot of customization. After the DACH region, it went live in France and also did a soft launch in Italy, said Menzinger, who oversaw most of the process.

Augsburg, Bavaria is still their headquarters, but almost half their staff works in Berlin where they opened a second office earlier this year to recruit international talent more easily — another important piece for the expansion that its new round will help fund.



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