Electricians in Denver miss a third of their calls. Hank picks up.
You’re running a shop covering the Denver metro (303, 720area codes). Phone’s ringing, you’re on a job. Hank picks up, qualifies the work, and texts you back a clean job card. Inbound call volume varies seasonally — every missed call during your peak weeks is a competitor capture.
Local context · Denver, CO
The Front Range's legendary hailstorms regularly drop golf-ball stones across the entire metro at once — a single afternoon storm produces six months of roof inspection demand for any shop that picks up the phone.
● founder-led · onboarding the first 25 shops
The math, for a Denver-area shop
When the lights are off, the customer doesn't leave a voicemail.
35%
of calls to electrical shops go unanswered during the workday
$420
average value of a residential electrical service call lost when a customer hangs up
85%
of customers who can't reach you call the next licensed electrician on the list
He sounds like a person — one who knows the difference between a tripped breaker and a real outage.
Transcript · live
Hank
Cardinal Electric, this is Hank — what's going on?
Caller
Half my house lost power. Living room and kitchen are out, bedrooms are fine.
Hank
Okay — quick check first: have you tried resetting the breakers? Look in your panel for any switches that are halfway between on and off.
Caller
I checked, none of them tripped. They all look normal.
Hank
Got it — that's not a simple breaker, that's a panel issue or a feeder problem. We can get a licensed electrician out today, service call's $129. What's the address?
Caller
1820 Cherry Street.
Stop sending outages to voicemail.
Founder-led early access for Denver-area shops. Hand-walked setup with the first 25.