When a summer storm knocks out half of Buckhead, your phone shouldn't go to voicemail
Callbook is the AI receptionist that answers every call to your Atlanta electrical business, 24/7, in English and Spanish. It asks the right questions, triages the panel that's sparking from the one that can wait, and books the job straight onto your calendar while you're still up a ladder. Flat $79/month, no contract, and you keep your existing number.
Why Atlanta electricians can't afford a missed call
Atlanta's electrical demand runs hot and unpredictable. Spring and summer bring severe thunderstorms and the occasional tornado warning that drop limbs on service lines and send surges through panels from Decatur to Marietta, and the calls all hit at once. The metro's older housing stock in places like Grant Park, Kirkwood, and East Atlanta still hides cloth wiring, undersized 100-amp panels, and recalled federal-brand breakers that need replacing. Meanwhile the explosive growth out in Alpharetta and along the northern suburbs means new-construction rough-ins, EV charger installs, and whole-home standby generators for homeowners who remember the last multi-day outage. When a Buckhead homeowner smells burning at an outlet at 9pm, they call the next electrician on the list if you don't pick up. Every storm-driven voicemail is a job, and often an emergency job, going to your competition.
If Callbook books just one extra job a month, it has already paid for itself several times over.
Most shops miss far more than one call a month.
How it works
It answers every call — 24/7
On a job, under a sink, or asleep at 2am, your AI picks up on the first ring and talks like a real receptionist.
It books the job
It collects the name, address, and problem, then drops the appointment straight into your calendar.
It texts you the details
You get an instant text with the job and the customer’s number — show up and get paid.
Live in about a day. Keep your current number. We set it up for your shop.
What your AI receptionist handles
Triages the real emergencies
A sparking panel, a burning smell, or a dead breaker box after a storm gets flagged as urgent. Callbook asks the safety questions, separates the 9pm emergency from the routine outlet swap, and texts you a summary so you know what's worth rolling on tonight.
Answers in English and Spanish
Callbook switches seamlessly between English and Spanish so every Atlanta caller, from a Buckhead homeowner to a Gwinnett GC, gets answered in their own language and books the job instead of hanging up.
Books straight onto your calendar
It checks your availability and drops the appointment onto your calendar in real time. Works with Google Calendar, Jobber, Housecall Pro, and ServiceTitan, so the job is on the schedule before you're off the ladder.
Answers 24/7, even mid-storm
Outages don't wait for business hours. Callbook picks up every call around the clock, so the homeowner who loses power at midnight reaches a real conversation instead of voicemail.
Here’s what a call sounds like
An example of the caller experience.
How it stacks up
| Voicemail | Answering service | Hire a receptionist | Callbook | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly cost | Free | $200–$1,500 | $3,000+ | $79 |
| Answers 24/7 | Sometimes | |||
| Actually books the job | Rarely | |||
| Knows your trade | ||||
| Texts you every lead | Sometimes | |||
| Never calls in sick |
Why Atlanta shops pick Callbook
Storm season floods your line all at once
When a line of thunderstorms rolls through metro Atlanta, outage and surge-damage calls spike in the same hour across Decatur, Sandy Springs, and the perimeter. Callbook answers all of them at once, triages the truly urgent ones, and books the rest so nothing slips while you're already on a call.
Older homes mean detailed intake
Bungalows in Grant Park and Cabbagetown often have aging panels, knob-and-tube remnants, or recalled breakers. Callbook asks the right questions up front, like panel age, amperage, and what's tripping, so you roll up to the job already knowing what you're walking into.
New construction and EV upgrades are booming
Growth in Alpharetta, Johns Creek, and the northern suburbs drives steady demand for service upgrades, EV charger circuits, and standby generators. Callbook captures these higher-ticket leads with the detail you need to quote instead of letting them ring out to voicemail.
A bilingual metro needs a bilingual line
Greater Atlanta has a large Spanish-speaking population across Gwinnett, Cobb, and the city itself. Callbook answers fluently in English and Spanish, so a homeowner or GC who'd rather speak Spanish books the job instead of hanging up.
Simple, flat pricing
Questions electricians ask
How much does Callbook cost?
Callbook is a flat $79 per month with no contract. That includes 250 minutes of answered calls; if you go over, it's just $0.40 per extra minute. There's no setup fee and no long-term commitment, so it's predictable whether you're a solo electrician in East Atlanta or running a few trucks across the metro.
Will it know how to handle electrical calls?
Yes. Callbook asks trade-specific questions, like panel age and amperage, what's tripping, whether there's a burning smell, and whether it's an outage after a storm. It triages true emergencies from routine work so you know what needs a truck tonight versus what can be scheduled.
Can I keep my current phone number?
Absolutely. You keep your existing number and Callbook answers behind it, so nothing changes for your customers or on your truck. Most Atlanta electricians are up and running in about a day.
Does it answer in Spanish?
Yes. Callbook answers 24/7 in both English and Spanish, which matters in a metro like Atlanta with a large Spanish-speaking population across Gwinnett, Cobb, and the city. Callers get handled in their language and the job gets booked, and you get a text summary either way.
Callbook for electricians in other cities
Serving more than Atlanta: Electrical answering service · all locations · all industries · pricing
Ready to stop missing calls?
Get Callbook set up for your shop and never send a Atlanta customer to voicemail again.
