The $3,500 build, for electrical businesses

A Website Wired for Panel Upgrades and EV Chargers

One custom build: 40-plus pages spanning panel upgrades, EV charger installs, rewires, and the 'is this outlet dangerous' questions homeowners ask first, all wired to a live chat, an online estimate booker, a reviews engine, and instant callback. You pay $3,500 one time and the whole build is yours the way a finished panel belongs to the homeowner, the domain, the code, every charger and rewire page, and every login, with nothing to pay monthly after.

One-time payment · no subscription required · you own everything at launch

The Homework Homeowners Do Before They Trust a License

A homeowner who just bought an EV rarely calls the first electrician on a fridge magnet. They type EV charger installation cost into Google, ask ChatGPT whether their panel can handle a Level 2 charger, and read what comes back before dialing anyone. Nobody gets to buy those AI answers. The assistants summarize whatever pages they can read, and if your electrical company's site is a single page from 2010, or nothing at all, they have no panel answers or charger pricing of yours to pull from.

Now think about what runs through a homeowner's head before they call. What does a panel upgrade commonly cost. Is a warm outlet or a buzzing breaker actually dangerous. Do I need a permit for a subpanel, and are you licensed to pull it. Will a whole house surge protector stop the next storm from frying the electronics. A logo, a truck photo, and a phone number answer none of that, so a homeowner tends to keep scrolling to a site that does.

Electrical work turns on the license, because most homeowners have heard about the handyman wiring job that started a fire. The company whose pages explain when an old fuse box needs replacing, post honest panel-upgrade ranges, and show the license and the permits it pulls reads like the safe choice before the first call. It matters even more when a home inspection flags an ungrounded panel and the agent needs an electrician to recommend before the closing.

What your 40+ pages would be

01

A page for each service, not one long list

Panel and service upgrades, EV charger installation, whole-home rewires, outlet and switch repair, whole house surge protection, recessed lighting, ceiling fans, and dedicated circuits. Each service gets its own page written around what that customer types, so the EV charger page and the panel page can each draw their own searchers.

02

A page for every town you cover

You may work a whole metro, but homeowners search for an electrician alongside their own town's name. We build a dedicated page for each community you serve, so someone in one suburb looking for local wiring help can find a company that names their street back, not a shop thirty minutes across the county.

03

Cost and safety-question pages

Plain pages answering what customers ask before dialing: what a panel upgrade commonly costs, what EV charger installation runs, whether a warm outlet or a buzzing breaker is dangerous, and whether a whole house surge protector is worth it. These questions get typed into phones on the couch week after week in your area.

04

Trigger pages for the moment it goes wrong

Dedicated pages for the outlet that suddenly stopped working, the breaker that keeps tripping, the burning smell at the panel, and half the house losing power. Each one is written for someone worried on a phone: what is safe to check, what to shut off right now, and a callback button built to put you on the line fast.

05

License, permit, and proof pages

The reviews you have earned, gathered into pages homeowners actually read, photos of finished panels and tidy conduit runs, your state license number and the permits you pull, and the years your name has ridden on the trucks. Hiring an electrician is a safety decision, and these pages are the credential check before anyone calls.

Built for Both the Estimate and the Emergency

You are usually up a ladder or in a crawlspace when the phone rings, and a homeowner watching an outlet spark rarely leaves a voicemail. Most dial the next electrician on the list. That is why instant callback earns its keep here: it grabs the caller's number the instant they reach out, texts them you are ringing back now, and buys you the chance to hold that urgent job instead of watching it walk. Chat, meanwhile, fields the is-this-dangerous questions the second they land, day or night.

The planned work runs on a different rhythm. A panel upgrade or an EV charger install gets researched for weeks, so online booking lets a homeowner lock an estimate slot at 11pm without playing phone tag, while your workday stays clear. The reviews engine texts each customer a review request the day after the job, so a steady stream can keep building on Google, and since an electrician is a license-trust hire, that long trail of local reviews often tips a wavering homeowner your way.

The Math on a $3,500 Build

Run your own numbers. A service call commonly brings a few hundred dollars, a panel upgrade commonly runs about $2,500, and an EV charger install commonly lands in the four figures. If your typical panel upgrade is worth about $2,500, the entire $3,500 build is covered after two of the jobs it helps bring in. A steady run of EV charger installs or a commercial rewire pays it back many times over. That is the entire math, and you pay it just the once.

Compare that to ads. A dollar in Google ads tends to buy EV-charger clicks only while the budget lasts, and when it runs dry the phone commonly goes quiet again. Pages work differently: a page explaining what a panel upgrade costs in your area keeps earning its keep month after month with no meter spinning. One honest note on timing: fresh pages on panels and chargers generally need two to four months to work their way up the results, so this is the build you wire in before storm season, not in the middle of it.

Straight answers.

Why is this $3,500 when the agencies calling my shop want $12,000 or a monthly retainer?

Most agencies quote the same site two or three times higher, then attach a retainer so the invoices keep coming. We build from a page structure already proven on electrical work, which is how a custom 40-plus page site covering panel upgrades, EV chargers, and repairs comes in at $3,500 flat. No subscription rides along, and no hosting is held hostage: when it is finished, we hand you the logins, the files, and the domain. You wired the job, you hold the meter. Ongoing work from us is a separate choice, never a condition.

My domain and number are on the trucks, the yard signs, and every invoice. Do I lose them?

No, and you should not want to. A domain that has been on your invoices and van lettering since your first panel upgrades carries age and history that help you, and your number is the one repeat customers dial when a breaker starts tripping again. We rebuild on your existing domain, keep that number on every page the same way it sits on your panel stickers, and manage the switchover like a well-planned service change, so email and phone stay live while the old site comes down and the new one goes up. If you have no domain yet, we register one in your name, not ours, just like the name on your electrical license.

How soon will this actually do something for the business?

Straight answer: the site is usually live within a few weeks, but new electrical pages generally take two to four months to gain ground in search, longer in a crowded metro. Anyone promising an electrician a flood of calls in week one is selling something. What we can share is the pattern we see: the cost pages and town pages tend to draw steady visitors first, because very few electrical shops bother to explain what a panel upgrade or an EV charger install actually costs.

Do I need to keep paying you monthly for this to keep working?

No. Once the $3,500 build is handed over, it keeps working without a dime going to us: the pages, the live chat, the estimate scheduler, the instant callback, and the reviews engine all run on their own, and we walk you through the light upkeep, swapping in a photo from a recent panel swap or adding a town you just started serving. Plenty of electricians take the keys and run the site themselves between service calls. Our monthly service is there for owners who would rather be pulling wire than logging into a dashboard, and we will tell you straight when you do not need it.

One build. Yours forever.

Custom design for your electrical business, 40+ pages built for how your customers search, and the infrastructure to catch every call.

One-time payment · kickoff this week · launched in about four weeks