ChatGPT for Electricians: 5 Prompts That Save You 3 Hours a Week
ChatGPT for Electricians:
5 Prompts That Save You 3 Hours a Week
You got into electrical work because you’re good with your hands, not because you enjoy writing quotes at 9pm or chasing reviews on Google. These five prompts handle the paperwork side of your business — quotes, emails, job ads, review requests — so you can stay on the tools where you actually make money.
A recent survey of over 400 tradespeople found something that might surprise you: electricians have the highest satisfaction rates of any trade when using AI.
Not the most tech-savvy. Not the most likely to try it. Just the most satisfied once they do. Because the admin load on a sole trader or small electrical business is relentless — and AI cuts straight through it.
Writing a proper quote takes 45 minutes if you’re being thorough. Customer emails pile up. Review requests feel awkward to send. Job ads for a decent apprentice or second pair of hands never quite sound right. These are not skilled tasks. They are writing tasks. And ChatGPT is very good at writing tasks.
The five prompts below are built on the CRAFT Method — a five-part structure that gives ChatGPT exactly the right information to produce something specific and professional rather than something generic and useless. Each one takes about 90 seconds to use. Most electricians who try them never go back to doing it manually.
Quote for the rewire — £1,400 all in. Includes materials. Let me know if you want to go ahead.
Cheers,
Mike
Thank you for asking me to quote for your full rewire at 14 Birch Lane. I have summarised the scope and pricing below so you have everything you need to make a confident decision.
Work included: Full consumer unit replacement (18-way Hager board), rewire of all circuits (lighting, power, cooker, immersion), installation of smoke detection to BS 5839-6, all wall plates and accessories in white metal finish.
Investment: £1,400 including all materials and labour. VAT is not applicable as I am not VAT registered.
Certification: All work will be certified under Part P Building Regulations. You will receive your electrical installation certificate on completion.
I am NICEIC registered (Cert No. XXXXXX) and fully insured.
Shall I pencil in a start date? I have availability from Monday 3 June.
Kind regards,
Mike Dawson Electrical
Before you start: what you need
Go to chat.openai.com and create a free account. It takes two minutes and costs nothing. You do not need ChatGPT Plus to use any of these prompts — the free version works perfectly for everything below.
Prompt 1 — The Professional Quote Generator
This is the one that pays for itself in the first hour. Most electricians write quotes that are either too brief to inspire confidence or take so long to write that they just do a rough number on a text message instead. Both approaches cost you jobs.
Give this prompt your job notes and it produces a structured, professional written quote that includes the scope of work, the price, your certification details, and a clear next step for the customer.
You are a professional electrician writing a formal job quote for a residential or commercial customer in [UK / USA]. My business: [Your name] Electrical, based in [your town/city]. I am [NICEIC / NAPIT / NECA] registered, number [your cert number]. I carry £[X]m public liability insurance. Customer: [Customer name], at [property address or brief description — e.g. "a 3-bed semi in Leeds"]. Work required: [Describe the job in your own words — e.g. "full rewire, new 18-way consumer unit, install 4 smoke alarms to BS 5839-6"]. My price: £[X] including materials and labour. [VAT registered / not VAT registered — delete as appropriate]. Timeframe: [How long the job will take and when I can start]. Write a professional, clearly structured quote email I can send directly to the customer. It should include: a summary of the work, what is and is not included, the price and payment terms (50% upfront, balance on completion), my certification and insurance, and a friendly but confident closing that invites them to confirm the booking. Tone: professional but approachable. Not corporate. Not salesy.
Prompt 2 — The Quote Follow-Up
You sent the quote four days ago. You’ve heard nothing. You don’t want to look desperate but you also can’t hold the slot open forever. Most electricians either send something too pushy (“Just checking if you got my quote?”) or nothing at all.
This prompt writes a follow-up that is professional, warm, and creates gentle urgency without being awkward.
You are a professional electrician following up on a job quote sent [X] days ago. Customer name: [Name] Job quoted: [Brief description — e.g. "consumer unit replacement and partial rewire"] Quote amount: £[X] I can start: [Your earliest availability — e.g. "week commencing 2 June"] Write a short, professional follow-up email (under 100 words) that: - Politely checks whether they received the quote and have any questions - Mentions that my diary is filling up and I want to give them the best chance of getting their preferred start date - Invites them to reply or call to confirm Tone: friendly, professional, no pressure. Do not be apologetic or desperate. One paragraph only.
Prompt 3 — The Customer No-Show Reply
You turned up. They didn’t answer. You’ve lost a morning’s work and you’re annoyed. The message you write in that moment is usually either too angry or too passive. Neither is good for your reputation or your diary.
This prompt writes a response that is firm, professional, and gives you the best chance of either rescheduling the job or, if they are a time-waster, extracting yourself cleanly.
You are a professional electrician writing a message to a customer who was not home for a confirmed appointment. Customer name: [Name] Appointment was: [Day, date, time — e.g. "Tuesday 20 May, 9am"] Job booked: [Brief description — e.g. "fault-finding and socket repair"] Did I charge a call-out fee upfront? [Yes / No] Write a professional, calm message (SMS or email — I will adapt it) that: - States clearly that I attended as agreed and they were not home - Asks them to contact me to rebook, with a note that I will need to prioritise other customers - If they did NOT pay a call-out fee, mentions that I will need a deposit to secure the next appointment - Does not sound aggressive, but is firm and professional Tone: calm, matter-of-fact, professional. Not passive-aggressive. Not apologetic either.
Prompt 4 — The 5-Star Review Request
You did a great job. The customer said “brilliant, thank you so much.” And then you never asked them for a review, because it felt awkward. Six weeks later you check your Google profile and you still have eleven reviews while the bloke down the road has 47.
Reviews are how new customers decide between you and everyone else. This prompt writes a request that is warm, specific, and easy for the customer to act on.
You are a professional electrician asking a happy customer to leave a Google review. My business name: [Your business name] (as it appears on Google Maps) Customer name: [First name] Job completed: [Brief description — e.g. "full consumer unit replacement at their home in Sheffield"] Anything specific they said about the work: [e.g. "said they were really impressed with how tidy I left the place" — or leave blank] Write a short, warm text message or email (under 80 words) asking them to leave a Google review. It should: - Thank them for choosing me - Mention the specific job so the message feels personal, not copy-pasted - Ask directly but warmly for a Google review - Include this instruction: "If you search [Your business name] on Google, you should see a 'Write a review' button" - End with my name Tone: genuine, warm, not pushy. Sound like a person, not a marketing email.
Prompt 5 — The Job Ad That Attracts Good People
You need a second pair of hands. Maybe an apprentice, maybe an experienced second. You post something on Indeed or Facebook that says “Electrician wanted, competitive rates, must be reliable” and you get three applications from people who are none of those things.
A job ad is a piece of marketing. It sells your business to the right candidate the same way a quote sells your services to the right customer. This prompt writes one that sounds like your business — not a recruitment agency.
You are a professional electrician writing a job advertisement to attract a qualified candidate. My business: [Your name] Electrical, based in [your town/city]. [Brief description of the business — e.g. "a busy sole trader specialising in domestic rewires and consumer unit upgrades across West Yorkshire, established 8 years"]. Role I need: [e.g. "experienced domestic electrician for regular subcontract work" OR "electrical apprentice (first or second year)" OR "labourer/mate for ongoing rewire projects"] What I can offer: [Pay — e.g. "£[X] per day / per hour / CIS sub"], [Van provided / own transport needed], [Type of work — e.g. "mainly domestic, no on-call"], [Start date / hours] What I need from them: [Key requirements — e.g. "18th edition, own tools, clean driving licence" OR "keen to learn, punctual, physically fit"] Write a job ad of around 150 words suitable for posting on Indeed, Facebook, or a trades forum. It should sound like a real person wrote it, explain what makes working with us good, be direct about what I need, and end with a clear instruction on how to apply (reply with CV or WhatsApp me on [number]).
Why these prompts work: the CRAFT Method
Most people get mediocre results from ChatGPT because they give it mediocre instructions. Type “write me a quote for an electrical job” and you will get something so generic it is useless. Every prompt above is built on the CRAFT Method — a five-part structure that tells ChatGPT exactly what it needs to produce something specific and professional.
Start with the quote prompt today
If you have never used ChatGPT before, the quote prompt is the best place to start. Open chat.openai.com, create your free account, paste in Prompt 1, fill in your details, and send it. Read what comes back. Adjust anything that doesn’t sound like you. Send it to your next customer.
Most electricians who do this are genuinely surprised by the quality of what they get. The common response is some version of: “I would have spent an hour writing something not as good as this.”
That hour is yours back. Every time.