Power-out / no-power call
For emergency calls where the customer has partial or no power.
Electrical leads move fast, especially when a homeowner is scared about power, sparks, or a smell. Use these human-approved scripts to collect the right safety details, set clear expectations, and move the lead into an inspection or quote without unsafe DIY advice, code opinions, or auto-send mistakes. Nothing here replaces a licensed electrician doing the actual work.
For emergency calls where the customer has partial or no power.
For homeowners asking about a panel swap, service upgrade, or added capacity.
For Level 2 EV charger installs where scope depends on panel and run.
Keeps customers informed while the jurisdiction schedules inspection.
For customers who paused after hearing about code-required work.
For open electrical estimates that should not sit forever.
Every call, form, voicemail, SMS, address, panel/service info, EV/appliance context, permit status, and preferred callback window lands in one visible lead queue.
Tag emergency service call, panel/service upgrade, EV charger, generator/solar tie-in, remodel add, code compliance, permit wait, existing customer, or closeout.
AI drafts from approved copy only. It never invents code advice, panel/breaker sizes, permit outcomes, prices, license status, availability, or safety guidance beyond scripted safe language.
A licensed electrician or authorized operator approves customer-facing copy, scope language, safety wording, quote details, and any permit/insurance-sensitive statements.
Track response age, booked site visits, quote follow-up age, permit wait time, no-response leads, lost reasons, and owner-visible next action.
No income claim. No safety or code advice. Results depend on lead quality, service area, licensing, permitting, availability, pricing, reviews, response speed, and follow-through. A licensed electrician stays in the loop on all customer-facing safety and code language.
I’ll map where leads arrive, what safety and scope facts are missing, which replies can be standardized, what must stay licensed-electrician-approved, and the first automation that should be installed. DIY first? Use the $27 Quickstart.