Dialzara is a minute-based AI answering service with a cheap-looking entry tier — $29/mo for 60 minutes. It’s a generalist tool built for small businesses across the board, and the pricing structure is worth doing the math on before you sign up.

How they compare

  • Minute caps and overage. Dialzara’s four tiers cap out at 60 to 1,000 minutes a month, with overage running $0.35–$0.48 a minute past the cap. A slow month looks cheap; a busy month — when you actually need every call answered — costs more per call, not less. Wirewoman is flat monthly with no per-minute meter running underneath it.
  • Vertical vs. generalist. Dialzara doesn’t run electrical-specific intake or emergency triage — it’s the same script whether the caller needs a haircut or a panel fixed. Wirewoman only does electricians: panel, breaker, GFCI, lighting, EV charger intake, built-in danger-word routing.
  • Add-on costs. Dialzara’s SMS and chatbot features are separate add-ons ($19–$39/mo each). Wirewoman texts you a clean job summary — name, address, problem, urgency, booked time — on every call, no add-on required.

Where Wirewoman fits

If your call volume is genuinely low and predictable, Dialzara’s entry tier might pencil out. For a working electrician whose volume swings with the weather, the season, and whatever job you’re on, a flat rate that doesn’t punish a busy month is the safer bet.

Flat $49/$99/$149 plans, cancel anytime, statewide California.

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