Walkthrough: how a tenant goes from invite to audit
Pawston Cat Foods (tenant) · Pawston House · Pawston Estates (landlord)
These four screens are the live Tenant Energy Cashback flow under /engage/[token]/*. Every page below is a static walkthrough showing the same UI Pawston Cat Foods (the demo tenant) would see after their landlord sends a tokenised invite. No data leaves this page.
The four steps
Branded landing page. GDPR consent recorded.
Open mock →Supplier OAuth (3 UK utilities) or PDF upload.
Open mock →6-rule engine flags overcharges. PDF in 48 hours.
Open mock →Tenant saves £. Landlord's Cat 13 rung improves.
Open mock →What it adds up to
From three anomalies flagged by the rules engine — tariff, dual contract, kWh/invoice mismatch.
From bills shared to PDF delivered. QC by a Hemera analyst before release.
Suite 2B moves from benchmark-estimated to supplier-confirmed on the landlord's accuracy ladder.
The mechanism, in one paragraph
Building Engagement is the wedge into Scope 3 Category 13 — downstream leased assets, the largest single line of a CRE owner's footprint and the one they can least defend, because tenants don't share their bills. We open with a building-wide audit (the hook), then a one-touch tenant outreach offering a free bill audit in exchange for one-click data access. The tenant gets a £-saved report; the landlord gets a clean Cat 13 feed as a side-effect. The four screens below trace what Pawston Cat Foods sees, in order.
Legacy tenant view
The previous “Your space” persona is preserved as a static stub at Advice & engagement — it shows the post-audit tenant dashboard for a different, already-onboarded occupier (Maple & Finch Solicitors).