AI receptionist
for electrical contractors.
A customer calls about a panel that tripped and won't reset. It is 9 p.m. Your line goes to voicemail. They Google the next electrician, who picks up. Michelle picks up at 9 p.m. She captures the situation, flags the safety concern, and sends you a summary to approve. You make the call.
Michelle was first built to answer phones for a design and manufacturing company. In her first year she caught $24,000+ in opportunities they would have missed without her. An electrical business running on emergency and project calls catches more. This is our result, not a guarantee for yours.
She answers. She captures. You approve. Nothing moves without you.
Business hours, evenings, weekends. Michelle picks up every inbound call. She asks your configured intake questions: what is happening, the property address, residential or commercial, whether there is an immediate safety concern.
You get a structured summary: caller name, contact, address, what they described, urgency level, and a draft response ready for your approval. The customer has heard nothing yet.
Review the summary. Approve, edit, or decline. Only after your sign-off does anything reach the customer. Michelle will not commit a schedule slot, give a quote, or dispatch anyone without you.
Electrical contractors lose jobs every evening to the company that answered.
Partial power loss. Breaker won't reset. Customer thinks it might be the main panel. Calling at 8 p.m.
This is a diagnosis call before it becomes a repair call. You need the right information before you can decide if it is worth a same-day response. If the call goes to voicemail, the customer finds someone who can tell them something useful.
Half the outlets dead after a storm. Customer has already tripped every breaker and nothing worked.
These calls often lead to service upgrades or outdoor circuit repairs. They start as one call, and if that call goes well, you get the estimate appointment and the job. If it goes to voicemail, you never knew they called.
Homeowner adding an EV charger or upgrading their kitchen. They need a 200-amp panel quote.
Panel upgrades and EV charging installs are among the highest-ticket residential jobs available right now. These calls arrive during the day when you are already on-site. Your line goes to voicemail and the inquiry goes cold.
A general contractor or property manager calls to discuss a commercial build or retrofit. You are on a job site.
Commercial work requires the right conversation at the right time. A missed call means a missed bid opportunity. These callers move to the next electrical contractor on their list.
Call the live number. She answers on our front desk right now.
Michelle is live on AI Field Guide's own phone line. Call her, act like a homeowner with a panel problem or a power outage. She captures the intake and drafts a summary for owner approval. No account. No signup. One call is the whole demo.
Call right now. Michelle answers for AI Field Guide — live, on our own front desk. She asks intake questions, captures the job, and drafts a summary for the owner to approve. Nothing moves until the owner says yes. That is the approval-first model.
This is the real line, not a simulation. The same pattern runs on your number, configured with your job types, your intake questions, and your escalation logic.
Hire Michelle.
Same Michelle. Configured for electrical intake. Flat monthly rate. No per-call fees. No per-minute charges. Cancel any time.
Questions electrical contractors ask before hiring Michelle.
Does Michelle work for electrical contractors?
Yes. Michelle is configured around electrical job types: panel failures, tripped breakers, outlet issues, service upgrades, no-power situations, and commercial electrical inquiries. She asks the intake questions you set — location, what is happening, safety situation — captures the job, and sends you the summary to approve. Nothing books without your sign-off.
What happens when a customer calls about a panel failure or electrical emergency?
Michelle answers immediately, captures the situation — what circuits are affected, whether there are safety concerns, whether power is fully out or partial — and flags it as an emergency. She notifies you right away with the full summary. Nothing is confirmed to the customer until you review and approve. You decide whether to dispatch or set a timed callback.
How much does Michelle cost for an electrical business?
The hosted template option is $99 per month, flat. No per-call fees. No per-minute charges. If you bring your own API key, the plan drops to $79 per month. Custom configurations with electrical trade-specific intake flows are quoted separately.
Will Michelle provide any electrical safety advice to callers?
Michelle will not advise callers on electrical work. She is not configured to provide technical guidance. For situations with active safety concerns, she can advise callers to leave the area and contact emergency services, then immediately notify you as an emergency. Anything beyond that is your call.
Can Michelle handle commercial electrical inquiries and residential calls?
Yes. Michelle's intake configuration is set by you. If you serve both commercial and residential customers, her intake questions can branch accordingly — capturing project type, property type, scope, and contact information for each. The right questions go to the right caller based on what you configure.