> ## Documentation Index
> Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.aresdeploy.com/llms.txt
> Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

# What Is the Best Marketing for an Electrician?

> How electricians should split marketing between emergency service calls and higher-ticket installs, and where licensing, reviews, and speed actually move the needle.

<Note>
  **Key takeaway:** The best marketing for an electrician treats service calls and installs as two separate funnels, backs every ad with a visible license number, and answers the lead in seconds, not hours, since electrical work is a trust purchase before it's a price purchase.
</Note>

There is no single "best" channel for an electrician, because an electrician is really running two businesses at once: emergency and minor repair work, and planned installs like panel upgrades or EV chargers. The marketing that wins a same-day breaker call looks nothing like the marketing that wins a \$6,000 panel upgrade, and treating them as one funnel is the most common reason electrician marketing underperforms.

## What makes electrician marketing different from other trades?

Electrical work sits closer to plumbing emergencies than to painting or landscaping, but it carries a licensing and safety weight most trades don't. A homeowner searching "no power in half my house" wants someone now. One researching "200 amp panel upgrade cost" is comparing quotes over days and wants proof the electrician is licensed, insured, and will pull the permit. Marketing that only optimizes for one of those searchers loses the other.

Trust is defined as the buyer's confidence that the work will be done safely, legally, and by someone qualified, and for electricians it's earned through visible license numbers, insurance claims, and reviews, not ad creative alone. Response speed is defined as the time between a lead's first contact and a real reply, and for electricians it doubles as a trust signal: a fast reply implies competence before a word about qualifications is said.

## Service calls vs. installs: two different marketing problems

Service call leads come from urgent, symptom-based searches: "outlet not working," "breaker keeps tripping," "lights flickering," "no power after storm." These searchers are close to booking and comparing on availability first, price second. They convert best off Google Business Profile, a fast-loading local landing page, and a text-back within seconds of the call or form.

Install and upgrade leads come from higher-consideration, project-based searches: EV charger installation, whole-home generator hookups, 100-to-200-amp panel upgrades, smart home rewiring, solar interconnection work. These searchers are shopping across multiple electricians, want to see project photos and a rough price range, and often want financing language before they'll pick up the phone. A Google Ads campaign, a clear project gallery, and a licensed-and-insured badge do more work here than raw speed does.

Running both funnels through the same generic "contact us" form is the single biggest reason electricians overpay for leads that never book.

## Why do licensing and trust signals matter more for electricians?

Because the downside of an unlicensed job is a fire, a failed inspection, or a voided insurance claim, not just a bad paint job. States license electricians differently, but the pattern holds: apprentice, journeyman, and master tiers, with a master or licensed contractor typically required to pull permits. The National Electrical Code (NFPA 70) sets the safety standard inspectors check against, and homeowners increasingly know to ask about it.

Practically, that means:

* Your license number belongs on your Google Business Profile, your website footer, and your ad landing pages, not buried in a "licenses" tab.
* Insurance and bonding should be stated plainly ("licensed, bonded, and insured") rather than assumed.
* Reviews should be steered toward mentioning permits pulled, code compliance, and clean inspections, since that's what a comparison-shopping homeowner is actually screening for.

BrightLocal's consumer research consistently finds that most people check reviews before choosing a local business, and for a trade where the wrong hire can burn a house down, that review-reading behavior is even more deliberate than average.

## Which channels actually work for electricians?

Google Business Profile carries more weight for electricians than for almost any other home service, because Google reports that a significant share of all searches carry local intent, and "electrician near me" is about as local-intent as a query gets. A complete, review-rich, license-visible profile is close to a prerequisite, not an optional extra. Beyond that, the mix splits by funnel: organic local search and Google Business Profile for service calls, Google Ads on install-specific keywords ("EV charger installer," "panel upgrade near me") for projects, Meta lead ads for seasonal pushes like storm-season generator hookups, and SMS or email nurture for the higher-ticket leads who compare quotes before booking.

## Service calls vs. installs at a glance

|                   | Service calls (repairs, no power, trips)       | Installs & upgrades (panel, EV charger, generator)      |
| ----------------- | ---------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------- |
| Typical search    | "no power in house," "electrician near me now" | "EV charger installation cost," "200 amp panel upgrade" |
| Urgency           | Same-day, often within the hour                | Days to weeks, planned around budget                    |
| Typical ticket    | Often \$150-\$600                              | Often \$1,500-\$8,000+                                  |
| What wins the job | Speed of response, availability                | License/insurance proof, price range, photos            |
| Best-fit channel  | Google Business Profile, SMS follow-up         | Google Ads, project gallery, financing mention          |
| Sales cycle       | Minutes to hours                               | Multiple touches over days                              |

## How should you split your budget between service calls and installs?

Start from your own mix, not a rule of thumb. An electrician doing mostly reactive repair work should overweight Google Business Profile completeness, review generation, and instant lead response, since speed is the deciding factor there. One pushing EV charger and panel upgrade work should overweight Google Ads on project keywords and a landing page built around licensing proof and price transparency, since that buyer is comparing, not panicking. Most shops underfund whichever funnel the owner personally finds less interesting, and neither gap is free: a missed service call is a missed same-day job, and a slow reply on a panel upgrade quote is a lost project to whoever answered first.

## A hypothetical example: a two-truck residential electrician

This is an illustrative walkthrough, not a claimed Ares client outcome. Say a two-truck contractor gets roughly 60 percent of leads from service calls and 40 percent from panel upgrades and EV charger installs, split across a Google Business Profile that lists services but not a license number, and a Meta campaign built around one generic "contact us" form. Separating the two funnels, adding license and insurance language everywhere, and answering every lead by text within seconds instead of the next business day would be expected to lift service-call bookings first, since that segment is where the Harvard Business Review research on response time by Oldroyd and McElheran applies most directly. The install side would be expected to move more slowly, since project buyers take longer to decide regardless of response speed.

## How Ares fits into electrician marketing

Ares is an AI operator built to run this split without adding headcount. It runs on GoHighLevel as the CRM layer, manages Google Business Profile and review requests, and launches and monitors Meta lead-generation campaigns with owner approval before any spend goes out. When a service-call lead comes in, Ares answers by SMS, email, or chat within seconds, qualifies the job, and books it directly. On the install side, it keeps following up on quote requests that don't close same-call, since that's the segment where a second and third touch wins the job. Multi-location contractors get one fleet dashboard instead of a report per crew. Pricing is \$299 a month standard, or \$100 per seat for enterprise.

On the roadmap: call tracking, Google Local Services Ads management, and voice-based phone answering, planned but not live today. Ares is text-first and does not currently answer phone calls, which matters for a trade where some leads still come in by phone rather than form or text. An electrician whose business runs mostly on inbound calls and needs live voice answering today should look elsewhere until that ships. For everything downstream of first contact, though, read more on [follow-up sequencing](/leads/follow-up) and [booking automation](/leads/booking).

## Frequently asked questions

<AccordionGroup>
  <Accordion title="What is the best marketing channel for an electrician?">
    There isn't one best channel; it depends on the funnel. Google Business Profile and fast local response win service calls. Google Ads on project keywords, paired with visible licensing and project photos, win installs like panel upgrades and EV chargers.
  </Accordion>

  <Accordion title="How important are reviews for electrician marketing?">
    Very. BrightLocal's consumer research shows most people read reviews before choosing a local business, and for electrical work specifically, reviews that mention permits and clean inspections carry extra weight because the buyer is screening for competence, not just friendliness.
  </Accordion>

  <Accordion title="Should I run the same ads for repair calls and panel upgrades?">
    No. Repair-call searchers want speed and availability; install searchers want price ranges, licensing proof, and photos. Running both through one generic ad and landing page depresses conversion on whichever segment isn't being spoken to directly.
  </Accordion>

  <Accordion title="Does an AI operator like Ares answer emergency electrical calls?">
    Ares is text-first and responds by SMS, email, or chat within seconds; it does not currently answer phone calls. Voice answering is on the roadmap but not live, so electricians who rely heavily on inbound phone calls should factor that in.
  </Accordion>

  <Accordion title="How much should an electrician expect to pay for marketing?">
    Costs vary widely by market and channel. Ad spend and lead costs are typically presented as ranges rather than fixed numbers; an AI operator like Ares runs \$299 a month standard, or \$100 per seat for enterprise, on top of whatever media spend the electrician sets and approves.
  </Accordion>

  <Accordion title="Do I need a marketing agency, or can AI handle this alone?">
    It depends on how much strategic judgment your market needs versus straight execution. See the related guide on [agency vs. AI marketing tools](/guides/marketing-agency-vs-ai-marketing-tool) for how to draw that line.
  </Accordion>
</AccordionGroup>
