Electrical answering service · Round Rock, TX

AI Answering Service for Electrical Contractors in Round Rock

Round Rock electrical shops cover a sprawl that runs from Old Town Round Rock up through Brushy Creek and out to Teravista, where new-construction panel upgrades and EV charger installs compete with emergency no-power calls from older Forest Creek homes. A missed call at 8pm on a Tuesday costs you the panel job or the generator wire-up that books the next morning with whoever picks up first.

Narlo answers your missed calls via SMS within 10 seconds. The reply sounds like your dispatcher, qualifies the job—panel arcing, breaker trip, EV charger quote—and books it straight into Jobber or Housecall Pro. You pay $40 per booked appointment, nothing if no booking.

Why Round Rock electrical shops lose calls

I-35 corridor no-power calls during evening rush

A no-power call from a La Frontera homeowner at 6pm puts you in a bind. Your truck is wrapping a recessed-lighting job in Cedar Park, I-35 southbound is stacked to SH-45, and the homeowner needs someone tonight or they book the next shop. By the time you pull off-site and return the call, two other Round Rock electricians already replied. Narlo sends the qualifying SMS in 10 seconds—transformer issue or breaker panel, inside or outside work, tonight or tomorrow morning—and books the emergency slot into Jobber while your truck is still on the first job. The homeowner sees a reply before they scroll to the next Google result, and you own the call.

Post-freeze panel-upgrade surge across Williamson County

February 2021 left older homes in Forest Creek and Stone Canyon with fried breaker panels and burned feeders. Panel-upgrade calls still spike every time Oncor sends a rate notice or a homeowner tries to add a mini-split. A missed call at 11am costs you the $3,200 200-amp upgrade because the homeowner moves down the list and books someone who picks up. Narlo replies within 10 seconds, asks whether it's a residential panel or subpanel, whether they need same-week or next-week scheduling, and whether the install requires a city permit. The job lands in Housecall Pro with enough detail that you can batch the Williamson County permit run and order the panel from your supplier the same afternoon.

EV charger installs from Toll 130 new-construction

Teravista and the new-construction tracts east of Toll 130 generate steady EV charger quotes—Tesla wall connectors, Ford Charge Station Pro for the F-150 Lightning, Siemens VersiCharge units. Homeowners from Hutto down to Pflugerville call three shops, and the first one to reply with a site-visit window books the job. A missed call at 2pm on a Wednesday from a Sonoma homeowner means you lose the $1,800 charger install plus the panel upgrade they didn't mention yet. Narlo sends the SMS while you're pulling wire at another Stone Canyon job site, asks whether they have a 200-amp panel, whether the charger location is garage or driveway, and whether they want the install this week or next. The job books into Jobber with a site-visit slot for the Highway 79 corridor, and you call back during the drive to confirm conduit routing and breaker sizing.

Brushy Creek service-area math during hail season

A shop based near Highway 79 and I-35 can cover Old Town Round Rock in twelve minutes, but a call from a Brushy Creek home near the Williamson County line adds twenty minutes if you route through SH-45. During Central Texas hail season—March through May—storm-damage calls flood in from Pflugerville, Hutto, and north Round Rock, and your dispatcher has to triage which zones you can hit before dark. A missed call from a Brushy Creek homeowner with a tripped GFCI after a flash flood gets returned two hours later, and they already booked a Cedar Park shop that replied faster. Narlo answers in 10 seconds, confirms the service address, asks whether it's inside or outside work, and books the callback into Housecall Pro with the geocoded location so you can batch the northern service zone and hit three Brushy Creek calls in one afternoon loop.

Book a demo for your Round Rock 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

Round Rock Electrical owner FAQ

How much does Narlo cost?+

You pay $40 per booked appointment. If Narlo qualifies a lead but the homeowner doesn't book—wrong service area, they want a quote you don't offer, they ghost after the first reply—you pay nothing if no booking. No monthly retainer, no per-message fees, no contract. A panel-upgrade call that books into Jobber costs you $40. A spam call or a homeowner who hangs up after the SMS costs you nothing. The price is the same whether the call comes in at noon on a Tuesday or 11pm on a Saturday during a Williamson County storm outage.

Does Narlo work with my CRM?+

Narlo books directly into Jobber or Housecall Pro. When a homeowner confirms the appointment via SMS, the job appears in your CRM with the service type, address, and requested time window. You see it the same way you'd see a job your dispatcher booked over the phone. No duplicate entry, no copy-paste from a separate inbox. If the homeowner needs a follow-up—wants to move the time, asks about permit requirements, has a question about breaker panel sizing—Narlo hands off to you with the conversation history attached so you pick up mid-thread.

Can Narlo handle after-hours calls for Round Rock electrical work?+

A no-power call from Old Town Round Rock at 10pm on a Sunday or a tripped breaker at a Stone Canyon home during a flash flood gets the same 10-second SMS reply as a daytime EV charger quote. Narlo qualifies whether it's an emergency—panel arcing, partial power loss, burning smell—or a next-day job, then books the appropriate slot into Jobber. For a shop covering I-35 from Georgetown down to Pflugerville, after-hours calls during Central Texas storm season decide whether you own the post-storm service surge or lose it to a competitor who answers faster. The SMS sounds like your dispatcher, not a chatbot, so the homeowner doesn't know it's 10pm and you're off the clock.