Why the customer profile matters
Two customers with the same battery can need completely different dispatch logic. A stable home with predictable overnight demand can tolerate tighter reserve settings, while a volatile household needs more conservative behaviour.
78%
predictability score
24%
recommended reserve buffer
8.4 kWh
dispatchable battery capacity
Adjust the example customer inputs
30 / 100
72 / 100
12 kWh
How we interpret the profile
- Higher volatility usually means a higher minimum reserve target.
- More stable solar output can improve confidence in afternoon charging plans.
- Dispatchable capacity is the battery energy available after protecting the reserve floor.
What changes with confidence
- High confidence allows tighter, more responsive scheduling.
- Low confidence means shorter windows, larger reserve buffers, and less aggressive export logic.
- The safety layer always wins over theoretical maximum savings.