Los Angeles is one of the busiest — and most competitive — electrical markets in the country. Between century-old Craftsman and Spanish bungalows with original wiring, a wave of EV-charger and panel-upgrade demand, and traffic that keeps you in the van for hours, the hardest part of the job often isn’t the work. It’s picking up the phone.
Why LA electricians miss calls
- You’re on the freeway. A run from the Valley to the Westside can swallow an hour. You can’t safely answer, and the caller won’t wait.
- You’re in an old panel. So much of LA’s housing stock predates modern service — knob-and-tube, undersized panels, aluminum branch wiring. Those jobs need both hands.
- The calls come after hours. A tripped panel at 8pm in Pasadena doesn’t care that your front desk went home at five.
Every one of those missed calls is a booked job going to whoever picks up next.
What an AI voice agent does about it
An always-on receptionist answers your LA line in about two seconds, day or night. She greets the caller as your shop, runs the electrical intake — panel, breaker, GFCI, lighting, EV charger — and books routine work straight onto your calendar. If she hears the danger words (sparking, burning smell, smoke, no power), she rings your cell instead of booking, so a real emergency in Silver Lake or Glendale reaches you in seconds.
Then she texts you a clean summary — name, address, problem, urgency, booked time — before you’ve pulled off the 101.
Built for the way LA works
It’s flat monthly, cancels anytime, and it never sleeps through a Saturday call. For a solo operator covering half the county, catching even a few extra jobs a month more than pays for it.
See how Wirewoman works, or call the demo line and hear her book a job in 30 seconds.




