Free Electrician Swipe Pack · Service Call Response

Six replies for electrical leads before they call the next licensed shop.

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.

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The electrician service call pack

Reply fast, capture safety facts, and never invent code advice.

01

Power-out / no-power call

For emergency calls where the customer has partial or no power.

Thanks for reaching out about a power issue at [address]. Before we route a licensed electrician: is any part of the home without power, are you smelling anything burning, and is anyone currently in the affected space? If you see smoke, sparks, or smell burning, please leave the area and call 911 first. Reply with the answers and we will confirm the next step.
02

Panel / service upgrade quote

For homeowners asking about a panel swap, service upgrade, or added capacity.

Thanks for asking about a panel/service upgrade at [address]. To route an accurate site visit, can you share: current panel brand and amp size if visible, why the upgrade is being considered (age, EV, addition, insurance, solar, generator), and whether the utility service point is overhead or underground? A licensed electrician will confirm scope on site.
03

EV charger install lead

For Level 2 EV charger installs where scope depends on panel and run.

Thanks for the EV charger install request at [address]. To point you at the right site visit, can you share: vehicle make/model, charger brand and amp rating if already purchased, garage/driveway location, and approximate distance from your electrical panel? A licensed electrician will confirm panel capacity, breaker size, and any required permits on site.
Common stalls
04

Permit / inspection waiting

Keeps customers informed while the jurisdiction schedules inspection.

Quick update on [job/address]: the permit is [submitted/approved/scheduled] with [jurisdiction] and inspection is expected in the [day/week] window. No action needed from you today — I will confirm the inspection window as soon as it is issued and coordinate access if needed.
05

Code / compliance follow-up

For customers who paused after hearing about code-required work.

Following up on the estimate for [address]. The items flagged for code compliance were [item 1], [item 2], and [item 3]. If cost was the concern, we can look at phasing the work by priority, or scope the minimum required for [permit/insurance/inspection] first. What would be the most useful next step?
06

Quiet estimate closeout

For open electrical estimates that should not sit forever.

Closing the loop on the electrical estimate for [address / scope summary]. Should we keep this active, revise the scope, schedule the work, or close it out for now? Any answer is fine — I just do not want a live estimate sitting in limbo, especially anything tied to permitting or insurance.
Automation map

Build a service-call queue a licensed operator can trust.

Capture

Every call, form, voicemail, SMS, address, panel/service info, EV/appliance context, permit status, and preferred callback window lands in one visible lead queue.

Classify

Tag emergency service call, panel/service upgrade, EV charger, generator/solar tie-in, remodel add, code compliance, permit wait, existing customer, or closeout.

Draft

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.

Approve

A licensed electrician or authorized operator approves customer-facing copy, scope language, safety wording, quote details, and any permit/insurance-sensitive statements.

Measure

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.

Want this mapped to your electrical shop?

The $499 audit turns service calls into a 7-day response system.

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.