Emergency work is different.
It’s fast.
It’s urgent.
And people don’t shop around.
They choose the first electrician they trust.
What Happens in an Emergency
Power goes out.
Something trips.
Something smells like it shouldn’t.
What does the customer do?
They grab their phone.
They search.
And within seconds, they make a decision.
You’re Not Competing on Price
In emergency situations:
- Speed matters
- Trust matters
- Availability matters
Price is secondary.
So the real question becomes:
👉 Are you the electrician they see first?
What Makes Someone Choose You
It comes down to three things:
1. Visibility
If you don’t show up, you don’t get the call.
2. Trust
Reviews, ratings, and photos build instant confidence.
3. Clarity
Do you clearly state that you handle emergency work?
Where Most Electricians Miss It
They rely on:
- General listings
- Old profiles
- No mention of emergency services
Which means they miss high-value, high-urgency jobs.
How to Fix It
- Clearly list “Emergency Electrical Services”
- Keep reviews consistent and recent
- Upload real job photos
- Stay active on your Google profile
This isn’t complicated.
But it is intentional.
Emergency work isn’t won on skill alone.
It’s won on being visible and trusted in the moment it matters.
If you need help being visible, then please send us a message or reach out via 02 44 111 063. If not, thanks for reading, hoping you got some value from this post.
Warm Reagrds
Jason




I started my career in hospitality working all aspects of a restaurant from back of house cook to front of house server, bar and management. The last 15 years of my career have truly been a journey of discovery. I have worked for some of the major telecommunication brands in Australia as Sales both in store and B2B, Manager, Trainer and Marketing. I have worked in the Job Services industry which in my role I was exposed to many different businesses and curious as to how they operated. I also returned to Telco only to discover I had a passion for wanting to do my own thing. I am a keen learner and Social Media was not only fun but the biggest change to marketing since television.
My first experience of sales and marketing was when I was 18 and I interviewed for a job with an electrical/telecommunications retailer who tossed a blue BIC pen on the desk between us and said “Sell me this pen” my natural instinct was to start talking, and to anyone who has known me for a very long time, I didn’t stop for a number of years.