What's in This Guide
Your guys are driving 45 minutes to a job that got cancelled because nobody told them. Meanwhile, there's a panel upgrade two streets over from where they started the morning, but that call came in after they left and now it's sitting there waiting until tomorrow.
Sound familiar? If you run an electrical contracting business with more than a couple of trucks, you already know the scheduling problem. It creeps up on you. When it was just you and maybe one helper, you kept everything in your head. Then you hired a second crew, maybe a third, and suddenly the whiteboard isn't cutting it anymore.
This guide is a straight-up breakdown of electrician job scheduling apps. What works, what costs too much for what you get, and what to look for if you're tired of burning money on wasted windshield time and missed calls.
Where the Money Actually Goes
Before we get into software, let's talk about what bad scheduling actually costs you. Because most electrical contractors I talk to don't think of it as a "scheduling problem." They think of it as a bunch of separate headaches: callbacks that eat a whole afternoon, techs sitting idle because a permit inspection got moved, a service call that should've taken 30 minutes but took 2 hours because nobody told the customer they needed the panel accessible.
All of those come back to communication and coordination. That's what scheduling software fixes.
Here's the math that most shop owners don't run:
- Wasted drive time. If your electricians are averaging 35-40 minutes between jobs when it should be 15-20, you're losing 1-2 billable hours per tech per day. With a crew of 4, that's 4-8 hours of lost revenue daily. At $125/hour average for electrical work, you're bleeding $500-1,000 every single day.
- Cancelled jobs nobody heard about. Customer calls at 8am to cancel. Your office person is on another call. Message doesn't get passed along until 10am. Your guy already drove 30 minutes and is standing at the door. That's an hour of labor plus fuel plus a tech who's now annoyed.
- Slow invoicing. The job's done Tuesday. The invoice goes out Friday. The customer pays in 30 days if you're lucky. That's 5 weeks of float on money you already earned. On a $3,000 panel job, that's real cash flow pressure.
- Missed calls during busy season. Phone rings while your dispatcher is figuring out who to send where. Nobody picks up. That customer calls the next electrician on Google. You just lost a $500-2,000 job because you were busy being busy.
Add it up and a 4-truck electrical shop with bad scheduling is leaving $15,000-25,000 on the table every month. Not from bad work. Not from bad pricing. Just from poor coordination.
What Actually Matters in a Scheduling App
I've watched electrical contractors get sold on software with 200 features when they really need about 8 things done well. Here's what separates the apps that work from the ones that collect dust after two weeks.
The Non-Negotiables
- A dispatch board you can actually read. You need to see every tech, every job, and every open slot in one view. Drag a job from one tech to another in two seconds flat. If the software makes dispatch feel like solving a puzzle, your office person will go back to the whiteboard within a week.
- A mobile app your guys will use. Electricians aren't sitting at desks. They need to open the app, see their next job, get directions, check the job notes ("homeowner says panel is in the basement, side entrance"), and mark it done. If the app is slow, confusing, or drains the battery, forget it. Nobody's using it.
- Instant job updates. Dispatcher reschedules a 2pm to 11am? The tech's phone buzzes right away. Customer cancels? The whole schedule shifts and everyone sees it. No phone calls. No texts. No "I didn't get the message."
- Invoicing from the truck. Job's done, tech taps a few buttons, customer gets an invoice right there. Credit card payment on the spot. Money in your account in 1-2 days instead of 5 weeks.
- QuickBooks integration. Whatever you use for accounting, it needs to talk to the scheduling app. Double data entry is a waste of your office person's time and a source of errors.
Things That Are Worth Having
- Route optimization. Real route optimization looks at all your jobs for the day and figures out the best order based on where each tech is, where the jobs are, and what time windows the customer gave. Not just pins on a map.
- Customer portal. Homeowners can request service, check appointment status, and pay invoices online. That's less time your office person spends on the phone.
- E-signatures. Getting a customer's signature on a quote or change order, right on the iPad. No more "I never approved that" conversations.
- Automated reminders. A text to the customer the day before and an hour before. Cuts no-shows by about a third.
- Multilingual support. If you have Spanish-speaking crew members or customers, this goes from "nice to have" to "necessary."
What to Ignore
- Inventory management with 47 sub-categories. You're not running a warehouse. You need to know if the van has enough 200-amp breakers for tomorrow's jobs, not a barcode scanning system.
- "AI-powered" anything. Most of it's a marketing label slapped on basic sorting logic. Focus on whether the scheduling works well, not whether it has a buzzword attached.
- Annual contracts before you've tried it. Any company that won't let you test the software month-to-month is banking on you being too busy to cancel. Red flag.
Platforms Compared: Honest Breakdown
I've looked at these from the perspective of an electrical contractor running 2-12 trucks. Not a commercial outfit with 50 vans and a full IT department. A real shop.
ServiceTitan
The biggest name in the trades. ServiceTitan is purpose-built for HVAC, plumbing, and electrical. The dispatch board is one of the best in the business. Reporting is deep. If you want to know your average ticket by tech, by job type, by zip code, ServiceTitan can do that.
The downside: it starts around $299/month and climbs fast with add-ons. Onboarding is paid and takes weeks. The learning curve is steep. If you're running 15+ trucks and pulling over $2M a year, it's worth it. For a 3-8 truck shop, it's like buying a commercial truck to pick up groceries.
Housecall Pro
Popular with smaller service companies. Clean interface, decent mobile app. Scheduling and invoicing work fine. Starts at $69/month.
The weak spots: route optimization is barely there (it maps your jobs, but doesn't actually optimize the order), payment processing runs 3.2% per transaction which is above average, and the customization is limited. You'll feel the ceiling once you get past 5-6 trucks.
Jobber
Solid all-arounder at $49/month to start. Reliable scheduling, good integrations, been around long enough that it's stable. Jobber does a lot of things adequately.
But route optimization is an add-on ($49/month extra), the interface is starting to look dated, and it doesn't have electrical-specific features. It's a generalist tool. If you need great integrations with other software, Jobber's worth considering. Otherwise, there's better value.
FieldEdge
Built for the trades. FieldEdge has good dispatch, strong QuickBooks integration, and a flat-rate pricing feature that some contractors love.
They don't publish pricing, which usually means it's not cheap. Users report $100-200 per user per month. For a 5-person crew, you're looking at $500-1,000/month. That's a big number for a small shop.
WeCazza
Newer to the field service space. WeCazza bundles scheduling, dispatch, route optimization, invoicing, customer portal, e-signatures, and trilingual support (English, Spanish, Portuguese) into plans that start at $33.97/month. The Pro plan at $97/month covers up to 10 users.
It also has a 15-day free trial where you get the full Premium tier to test everything. No credit card required to start, no contracts to sign.
WeCazza doesn't have the depth of ServiceTitan's reporting or FieldEdge's flat-rate pricing book. But for scheduling, dispatch, invoicing, and customer communication, which covers about 80% of what most electrical shops actually need day-to-day, it performs well at a fraction of the cost.
Pricing: The Real Math
Starter prices are marketing. What you pay with a real crew on a real plan is what matters. Here's the actual comparison for a 5-person electrical shop.
| Platform | Starting Price | Route Optimization | 5-Person Crew Cost | Contract |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ServiceTitan | $299/mo | Higher tiers only | $500-800/mo | Annual |
| Housecall Pro | $69/mo | Basic mapping only | $249/mo | Monthly |
| Jobber | $49/mo | +$49/mo add-on | $228/mo | Monthly |
| FieldEdge | ~$100/user | Included | $500+/mo | Annual |
| WeCazza | $33.97/mo | Included | $97/mo (Pro) | Monthly |
Look at the 5-person crew column. A small electrical outfit on ServiceTitan or FieldEdge is writing a check for $500-800 every month just for scheduling software. That same shop on a Pro plan elsewhere pays $97/month with 10 user seats included. The difference of $400-700 per month is $4,800-8,400 a year. That's a new set of tools, a van payment, or the margin that keeps you profitable during a slow quarter.
The best software for your shop is the one that pays for itself in the first week. If it saves you one missed appointment or one wasted hour of drive time, that $33.97 or $97/month just made you money.
Dispatch Done Right
Here's what good dispatch looks like for an electrical contractor:
Monday morning. Your dispatcher opens the board and sees 22 jobs scheduled across 4 electricians. Two of the morning jobs are in the same subdivision. Those get assigned to one tech. There's a commercial panel job downtown that's going to take most of the day, so your most experienced guy gets that one. The afternoon service calls are clustered on the east side of town, and the app routes your other two techs through them in order so nobody's backtracking.
At 10:15am, a customer calls to cancel their 1pm appointment. The dispatcher removes it, the open slot appears on the board, and a new service call that just came in fills the gap. The tech gets a buzz on his phone: "1pm job updated. New address: 442 Pine St." He doesn't have to call the office. The office doesn't have to call him.
At 2:30pm, a homeowner calls with a tripped breaker that won't reset. Your dispatcher sees that Tech 3 is finishing a job 10 minutes away and has a 45-minute gap before his next scheduled appointment. She drops the emergency call into the slot. Tech 3 gets directions. Customer gets a text: "Your electrician is on the way, arriving in approximately 15 minutes."
That's the difference between software that works and a whiteboard. It's not about doing anything complicated. It's about seeing everything at once and moving fast when things change, which in electrical work is about 5 times a day.
Invoicing and Getting Paid Same Day
Let me tell you the story I hear from every electrical contractor who switches to a scheduling app.
Before: tech finishes a panel upgrade. Writes up a handwritten invoice. Leaves it in the van. Maybe it gets to the office Thursday. Office person types it into QuickBooks on Friday. Invoice goes out by email the following Monday. Customer pays in 30 days. You're looking at 6 weeks from job completion to money in the bank.
After: tech finishes the panel upgrade. Opens the app. Taps "complete." The line items auto-fill based on the job type and materials. Customer gets an invoice by text and email within 60 seconds. They tap "pay" and put it on a card. Money hits your account in 1-2 business days.
On a $3,200 panel upgrade, that's the difference between having cash in hand Tuesday versus waiting until mid-next-month. Multiply by 15-20 jobs a week and you're talking about tens of thousands of dollars in improved cash flow.
What to check when comparing invoicing features:
- Automatic invoice generation from the completed job. If your tech has to build the invoice from scratch every time, they won't do it.
- On-site payment processing. Card reader or tap-to-pay on the phone. Collecting payment at the door instead of chasing it later.
- Processing fees. Standard is 2.9% + 30 cents. Some platforms charge 3.2% or more. On $50,000/month in card payments, that 0.3% difference is $150/month in extra fees.
- QuickBooks auto-sync. If invoices sync to your accounting software automatically, your bookkeeper saves hours every week. If they have to export and import, you'll still have the manual headache.
- E-signatures on change orders. Midway through a job, the customer wants to add two circuits. You write up the change order, customer signs on the tablet, and there's no dispute later about what was agreed to.
Keeping Your Crew in the Loop
The text message chain. Every electrical contractor knows it. You've got a group text with all your guys. Half the messages are job updates, half are questions about addresses, and the other half are memes. Important information gets buried between a GIF and a question about lunch.
A decent scheduling app replaces that chaos with structured communication:
- Job notes visible to the tech before they arrive. "Customer's dog is in the backyard, use front entrance." "Main panel is in the hallway closet, second floor." "Homeowner works nights, please don't ring the doorbell, text instead." These small details save 15 minutes of confusion per job.
- Automatic customer notifications. Appointment confirmation when the job is booked. Reminder the day before. "Your electrician is on the way" text when the tech starts driving. Follow-up after the job. That's 4 touches per job that happen without anyone doing anything.
- Photo documentation. Tech snaps a photo of the panel before and after. Photos attach to the job record automatically. If there's ever a question about what was done, you've got documentation. This also helps with warranty claims and inspection records.
- Schedule visibility. Each tech sees their own schedule for the day and the week. They know what's coming. No more "What's my next job?" calls to the office every 45 minutes.
For shops with multilingual crews, look for an app that supports Spanish or Portuguese. If half your crew is reading job notes in a language they're not comfortable with, the notes aren't doing their job.
Switching Without Losing Your Mind
I won't sugarcoat this: switching from your current system (even if that system is a notebook and a prayer) to a scheduling app takes effort. But it doesn't have to be a nightmare if you do it right.
The realistic timeline
- Week 1: Setup and data entry. Load your customer list, your regular jobs, your tech roster. Most platforms let you import a CSV. If you've got 200 customers in a spreadsheet, this takes an afternoon. If you've got 2,000, it takes a couple of days.
- Week 2: Parallel run. Use the new app alongside your old system. Dispatch through the app, but keep your backup. This is where your office person and your techs get comfortable. There will be questions. There will be mistakes. That's normal.
- Week 3: Go live. Cut over fully. The whiteboard comes off the wall. Everybody uses the app.
- Week 4 and beyond: Fine-tuning. Set up your automated reminders. Customize your invoice templates. Build out your most common job types so dispatching gets faster.
When to switch
Not during your busiest season. If summer is when your phone is ringing off the hook with AC circuit overloads and generator installs, do the switch in spring or fall. You want a relatively normal workload so your team can learn without the pressure of peak demand.
What slows people down
- Trying to customize everything on day one. Get the basics working first: schedule, dispatch, invoice. Worry about automated follow-ups and custom reports in month two.
- Not getting buy-in from the crew. If your electricians think this is just extra work for them, they'll fight it. Show them the benefit: fewer phone calls, clear job notes, less confusion about where they're going. Most techs actually prefer it once they get past the first week.
- Picking the wrong platform. This is why free trials matter. Use the 15-day trial. Actually dispatch real jobs through it. If it doesn't feel right after a week, cancel and try the next one. It's free, and it's a lot cheaper than committing to something that doesn't fit.
The Bottom Line
Here's who should use what, based on the size of your electrical business:
- Large operation (15+ trucks, $2M+ revenue): ServiceTitan. The cost is justified by the depth of reporting and operational tools at that scale.
- Mid-size shop (5-15 trucks) that wants trade-specific features: FieldEdge. The flat-rate pricing book and trade-focused dispatch are worth it if you're willing to pay per-user pricing.
- Small to mid-size shop (1-10 trucks) looking for the best value: WeCazza or Jobber. WeCazza gives you scheduling, route optimization, invoicing, customer portal, e-signatures, and trilingual support all included starting at $33.97/month. Jobber has more integrations but charges extra for route optimization.
- Solo electrician or two-person crew just getting started: Grab a free trial from any of the monthly-plan options. If it saves you one hour a day, it's worth it. If it doesn't, cancel.
The worst thing you can do is nothing. Every week you run your schedule off texts and memory is a week where jobs fall through the cracks, techs waste time on the road, and invoices sit in a pile getting stale.
Your electricians know how to do the work. Give them a system that makes sure they're in the right place at the right time, with the right information. That's not complicated. That's just running a tight ship.
Try a free trial this week. Run real jobs through it. See if the math works. It usually does.