Electrical answering service · Flower Mound, TX

AI Answering Service for Electrical Contractors in Flower Mound

If you run an electrical shop in Flower Mound, you know calls come in two waves: emergency trips after a storm rolls off Lake Grapevine, and scheduled work—panel upgrades in Bridlewood, EV charger installs in Wellington, generator wiring across the FM 1171 corridor. Miss the emergency call at 9pm and the homeowner books someone else before you wake up. Miss the EV quote during the day and you lose a $3,000 job to a shop that picked up.

Narlo answers every missed call via SMS within 10 seconds. Replies sound like your dispatcher, not a chatbot. Qualifies the job, books it into Jobber or Housecall Pro. You pay $40 per booked appointment. Nothing if no booking. Turn missed calls into booked jobs.

Why Flower Mound electrical shops lose calls

FM 1171 service radius kills callback speed

You serve Flower Mound, Highland Village, Lewisville, and the Grapevine lakefront. A no-power call comes in from Old Flower Mound at 7pm while you're finishing a panel upgrade in Coppell. The homeowner calls two other shops and books the one who texted back in five minutes. Your truck could have been there in twenty minutes from Coppell to FM 1171, but you lost the call because you were on the jobsite. Narlo replies in ten seconds from anywhere in the FM 1171 to Highway 121 corridor. The customer in Wellington or Bridlewood books your next available slot before they scroll to the next Google result. You keep the service area from Lake Grapevine to FM 2499 without hiring a second phone person.

Post-freeze panel calls across Denton County surge

February 2021 taught every Flower Mound homeowner that a house built in 2005 has a panel that cannot handle space heaters on three circuits at once. Panel-upgrade calls spiked across Denton County that spring and never fully dropped. The calls come in during dinner, during the next job in Stone Creek, during the drive between Lakeside DFW and Wellington. A missed call is a $4,000 panel job that goes to the shop who picked up. Narlo answers the moment the call from FM 407 or Highway 121 rolls to voicemail. Qualifies whether it is a 200-amp upgrade or a subpanel for a workshop in Bridlewood. Books it into your CRM with the address, the panel location, and the homeowner's availability across Flower Mound and Highland Village. You see a booked job when you check your phone, not a voicemail you have to return in a market where two other Denton County shops already texted.

EV charger quotes during Tour 18-area builds

Every new-construction electrical job in Flower Mound now includes at least one homeowner asking about a Level 2 charger rough-in. The quote calls come in at 11am, 2pm, whenever the homeowner is standing in the garage in Wellington or near Tour 18 Golf Course picturing their Tesla plugged in. You are on a ladder in Bridlewood running circuits or in the truck between FM 2499 and FM 407. The call goes to voicemail. The homeowner in Stone Creek or Lakeside DFW texts three shops. The one who replies first with a ballpark number and a calendar link gets the job. Narlo qualifies the charger type, whether the panel has capacity, and whether they want the work done during rough-in or after close in these FM 1171 corridor builds. Books the quote appointment into Jobber for homes from Old Flower Mound to Coppell. The homeowner has a calendar hold before they finish their coffee.

After-hours breaker trips across Wellington master-plans

A breaker trips at 10pm in a Wellington home. The homeowner resets it twice. It trips again in the master-planned neighborhood near FM 1171. They search for an emergency electrician near Flower Mound. Your truck is fifteen minutes away from Wellington to Highway 121, but your phone is on the nightstand. Three shops covering Denton County get the same call. The one who texts back first with a dispatch ETA from Lake Grapevine to Lewisville gets the after-hours service rate. Narlo answers in ten seconds. Confirms the breaker panel location in Bridlewood or Stone Creek, asks if anything smells hot, and books the emergency slot into your CRM. You wake up to a booked $400 service call instead of a voicemail from a customer who hired someone else. The same system works for calls during spring hail season when every Oncor outage restoration from FM 2499 to Lake Lewisville creates a surge of partial-power calls across the FM 407 corridor and Tour 18-area homes.

Book a demo for your Flower Mound shop

We'll show you exactly how Narlo answers a missed call, qualifies the job, and books it into Jobber or Housecall Pro. $40 per booked appointment, nothing if no booking.

  • · Replies in 10 seconds, sounds like your dispatcher
  • · Books directly into your CRM
  • · No monthly fee, no per-text charge

Flower Mound Electrical owner FAQ

What does Narlo cost?+

You pay $40 for each appointment Narlo books into your calendar. If the lead does not book, you pay nothing. No monthly retainer, no per-call fee, nothing if no booking. A panel-upgrade call that books is $40. A no-power emergency call that books at 11pm is $40. A voicemail from someone price-shopping who does not commit to a time slot is $0. You pay only when a job lands in Jobber or Housecall Pro with a date, a time, and a customer who confirmed they want you to show up. The $40 is billed after the appointment books, not when the lead comes in.

Does Narlo work with my CRM?+

Narlo integrates with Jobber and Housecall Pro. When a call books, the appointment appears in your CRM with the customer name, phone number, address, job type, and any notes the customer gave—breaker location, panel age, EV charger model, generator brand. If you use Jobber, the job populates your dispatch board the moment the customer confirms a time slot. If you use Housecall Pro, the booking shows in your schedule with the service-address pin already dropped on the map. You do not re-key anything. Your dispatcher or lead tech sees a booked job the same way they see jobs you book yourself. Narlo does not replace your CRM, it fills your CRM while you are on other calls.

Will Flower Mound customers think Narlo is a real dispatcher?+

The SMS replies sound like your shop, not a chatbot. A homeowner in Stone Creek texts about a tripping breaker at 9pm. Narlo replies in ten seconds confirming your service area from FM 1171 to Highway 121, asking what circuit is affected, and offering your next emergency slot. The conversation reads like a dispatcher who has your calendar open. Customers across Bridlewood, Wellington, and the Lakeside DFW corridor book appointments without knowing they are texting an AI. A homeowner near Tour 18 Golf Course or Old Flower Mound gets the same experience. If they ask a question Narlo cannot answer—Oncor service-drop specs for a panel upgrade in Highland Village, permit requirements for generator wiring near FM 2499, whether you install whole-home surge protection after the Feb 2021 freeze—Narlo tells them you will call back during business hours. The homeowner in Lewisville or Coppell gets a real booking or a clear handoff. You keep the customer relationship across Denton County without losing the lead to a competitor who picked up.