Electrician AI Index › How to set up AI in an electrical business

How to set up AI in an electrical business: your first 30 days

Here's the rule that keeps this from wrecking your month: one problem, one tool, one step a week. Most electrical shops are bleeding jobs in exactly one spot. It's either the emergency call that rings out while you're on a roof, or the panel-upgrade quote that takes you two nights to write up. Fix that one spot first. Everything else waits. This plan runs 30 days and you'll barely feel it.

The short version

Common questions

Should I start with the phone or with quotes?

Go where the money's leaking. Losing the after-hours call to voicemail and never hearing back? Start with answering. Winning the call but blowing the upgrade because your quote crawls in two days late? Start with quoting. Whichever one costs you more, that's your week 1.

Do I have to be a tech person for this?

Nope. This software is aimed at shop owners, not IT departments. You open an account, forward your line or type in your prices, and walk through the setup. Comfortable with a smartphone and whatever you invoice with now? You're fine. Rather skip it entirely? A local AI pro handles the whole thing.

What's the starting budget look like?

Roughly $19 to $59 a month for a single tool. Quo sits at $19, QuoteIQ at $30, Housecall Pro from $59. Catch one job you'd have lost and month one's covered. Stack on more tools later, once the first is clearly earning.

And if it flops for my shop?

That's why you go month-to-month and start with just one. Run it hard for two or three weeks, then look at what changed. Not pulling its weight? Cancel, and either swap tools or aim at a different bottleneck. Small start, small risk.

Setting up AI in an electrical shop: a 30-day plan Week 1, find your biggest bottleneck. Week 2, set up one tool. Week 3, go live and test. Week 4, measure the result and add the next piece. Week 11Find yourbottleneckWeek 22Set upone toolWeek 33Go liveand testWeek 44Measure,add next
Four weeks, one move each: name the problem, stand up a tool, switch it on, then read the results before adding anything.

Week 1: name the leak, then buy for it

Skip the shopping for a second. One question settles what you buy: which is costing you more work right now, the calls you can't answer or the quotes you can't turn around fast? Your gut already knows. Whichever it is, that's the tool you buy this week, and you leave the rest on the shelf.

Week 2: get it standing and fed

Owners dread this week and then it turns out to be an afternoon with coffee. Open the account and hand the tool the handful of things it needs to do your job.

Week 3: switch it on and break it in

Flip it live and spend twenty minutes getting it to talk like your shop instead of a call center.

Week 4: read the numbers, then decide

You've got real-world weeks behind you now. Look at what moved.

The whole 30 days on one screen

  1. Name the leak. The missed emergency call or the slow upgrade quote. Fix that one first.
  2. Buy a single tool. Quo ($19/mo) for the phone, QuoteIQ ($30/mo) for estimates, Housecall Pro ($59/mo) for everything in one.
  3. Stand it up. Open the account, forward the line or load prices, set rules, connect the calendar.
  4. Go live and poke at it. Real calls or quotes, a couple of test runs, tighten the wording.
  5. Warn the regulars. A quick note on how calls or quotes work now.
  6. Check the result. Two or three weeks in, did you catch more calls or quote faster?
  7. Bolt on the next piece. A second tool, or a local AI pro to finish the build.

What's it run to get going?

Budget somewhere around $19 to $59 a month for one tool. Quo answers the phone at $19/mo, QuoteIQ writes estimates at $30/mo, and Housecall Pro rolls it all together from $59/mo. Nobody's asking you to run all three. Buy the one that plugs your leak and grow from there. The first job you'd otherwise have lost usually pays that first month back.

Prices are vendor-published and can change; confirm the current rate on each vendor's site before you sign up (checked 2026-07-05).

Do it yourself, or bring in a pro?

Honestly, most of this is an afternoon of your own time: open an account, forward the phone or type in prices, follow the wizard. But if you'd rather it just be done, the find-a-pro search below puts you in front of a local AI consultant who'll install it and tune it for electrical work. It's free to use, and whatever you pay them, we don't take a slice.

JM
Reviewed by James Mills, founder of The Agentic AI Index. We earn a commission if you sign up through our links — it doesn't change what we write or who we list.

Sources: vendor-published pricing and product pages for Quo, QuoteIQ, and Housecall Pro — checked 2026-07-05. Last reviewed: 2026-07-05.

Want it all set up for you?

Find a local AI consultant who installs and tunes these tools for electrical shops — by zip code.

Find a local AI pro →
Find a local pro

Get these tools set up for you

Enter your zip and we'll show local AI consultants who install scheduling, AI phones, and customer follow-up for electrical shops. Free to use, and we don't take a cut of what you pay them.