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Worknizer

Electricians

Quote the panel job, schedule the inspection, invoice when it passes

Price a rewire or a service upgrade on site, keep the permit and inspection dates straight, and send the bill the minute the work is signed off. All in the language of electrical work.

No credit card required

An electrician wiring a residential breaker panel with the cover removed
Panel upgrade — Quote sent Approved

Where the money leaks on a panel or rewire job

  • Quoting a service upgrade or a whole-house rewire means line items, load calcs, and permit costs — and a napkin number you scribbled loses you the margin.
  • The rough-in can't happen until the permit's pulled and the inspection can't slip past the drywall crew — and it all lives on sticky notes.
  • The job passed inspection Friday, but the invoice waits until you're back at the desk — so a $9,000 panel job sits unpaid over the weekend.

From the quote to payday, one job at a time

  1. 1
    Estimates & Quotes

    Build the quote at the panel — breakers, wire runs, permit fees, and labor as clear line items — and get the homeowner's signature before you pull a permit.

  2. 2
    Scheduling

    Book the rough-in, the inspection window, and the trim-out on one calendar, so the permit, the drywall crew, and the inspector never collide.

  3. 3
    Customer Management

    Pull up the home's panel size, circuit map, and last upgrade on your phone, do the work, and log what you added against that property for the next call.

  4. 4
    Invoicing & Payments

    The inspection passes and the invoice goes out the same hour — card or a pay link — so a big panel job is paid before the weekend, not after it.

  5. 5
    Team & Payroll

    Hourly and overtime for your electricians and apprentices total themselves, so a week split across three job sites still pays out right.

Everything an electrical business runs on

Worknizer estimate showing an itemized panel-upgrade quote with breakers, wire, permit fees, and labor
  • Scheduling

    Rough-in, inspection window, and trim-out on one calendar, so the permit, the drywall crew, and the inspector never step on each other.

  • Estimates & Quotes

    Build itemized quotes for panels, rewires, and EV chargers — breakers, wire, permit fees, and labor as clear line items the homeowner signs off before you start.

  • Invoicing & Payments

    Invoice the hour the inspection passes — card or a pay link — so a $9,000 panel job gets paid on completion instead of sitting on your desk all weekend.

Worknizer talks like an electrical shop

Worknizer sets up around the words your shop already uses — so the app reads like an electrical business, not generic 'job management' software.

  • Jobs → Service calls
  • Customers → Homeowners
  • Team → Crew

Electrician questions, answered

Yes. Break a quote into breakers, wire runs, permit fees, and labor as separate line items, present it clearly, and have the homeowner approve it before you pull a permit — so the price you quoted is the margin you keep.

Yes. Put the rough-in, the inspection window, and the final trim-out on one calendar, so the permit timing, the drywall crew, and the inspector's slot line up instead of colliding.

You can bill a job in stages — a deposit up front and the balance when the inspection passes — so a large panel or rewire doesn't tie up your cash while the work runs.

Every property keeps its own record — panel size, circuit map, past upgrades, and what you added last visit — so the next service call to that address starts with the wiring history, not a fresh look in the box.

Both. A quick outlet fix and a multi-day whole-house rewire live on the same calendar and customer record, so the small calls that keep the lights on don't get buried under the big projects.

Run your electrical business — not the paperwork

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