San Jose might be the best electrical market in America right now. EV adoption is the highest in the country, half the valley is adding an ADU or a heat pump, and the Eichler-era housing stock was never wired for any of it. The work is there — the hard part is answering the phone while you’re doing it.

Why San Jose electricians miss calls

  • EV chargers all day. Level 2 installs, panel upgrades to make room for them, load calcs — it’s high-value work that keeps you elbow-deep in a panel when the next customer calls.
  • Eichlers and aluminum wiring. Willow Glen and Cambrian are full of mid-century homes with flat roofs, radiant slabs, and 1960s wiring quirks. Those diagnostics don’t pause for a ringtone.
  • Everyone compares fast. Silicon Valley customers get three quotes before lunch. If you don’t answer, you’re not in the running — the job goes to whoever picked up.

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 San Jose 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 Almaden or Berryessa reaches you in seconds.

Then she texts you a clean summary — name, address, problem, urgency, booked time — before you’ve merged back onto the 280.

Built for the way San Jose works

It’s flat monthly, cancels anytime, and it keeps answering while you’re mid-install. In a market where one EV charger job covers months of the subscription, missing calls is the expensive option.

See how Wirewoman works, or call the demo line and hear her book a job in 30 seconds.