Panel faultin the pole barn.Somebodypicked up.

Electrical work in Washington County means pole barns in Addison, light-industrial panels in Germantown, generator transfer switches in Generac's home region, and service upgrades on lake properties. AVA — built in Kewaskum, ten minutes north — answers while you are on the pole.

// Built in Kewaskum · answering for the county's licensed electricians

County electrical work rides on one line.

[01] An Addison farmer flips the breaker on the pole barn for the third time while a milking system needs power now. Farm electrical failures cost money by the hour and farmers keep exactly one electrician's number — yours, until the day it rings out and the neighbor recommends someone who answers.
[02] Half the lights die in a Barton duplex at 9 PM and the landlord smells warm plastic near the panel. That call is a safety escalation and tomorrow's service-change quote rolled into one. It lasted four rings. Whoever converted it now services the landlord's other six properties.
[03] This is Generac country — every third rural homeowner is pricing a standby generator and transfer switch. Those inquiries come in waves after every outage-making storm, and they convert with whichever licensed shop answers while the outage memory is fresh.

The storm sells
generators. The
phone closes them.

A standby generator install with transfer switch typically runs $8,000 to $12,000 installed, a farm or shop panel job $2,000 to $5,000, and a plain service call $250 to $400. The generator wave after each big storm is the county electrician's version of hail season.

One storm cycle producing eight generator inquiries, of which your shop answers five and closes one at $9,000, still leaves three unanswered inquiries on the table — statistically most of another close. Miss the wave twice a year and the phone quietly cost more than a truck payment.

Storm-wave math varies wildly by year, which is exactly why it belongs in the calculator with your inputs rather than on a billboard with ours.

// Generator install
$9K
// Farm panel job
$3.5K
// Service call
$300
// HEAR AVA FIELD AN ELECTRICAL CALL
(414) 240-8930
Live demo · Hear AVA now

For the county's licensed electricians.

[01]

How does AVA treat a hot-panel or burning-smell call?

As a hazard first and a lead second: your safety script runs — cut the main if you have scripted it, evacuate and call 911 language for anything active — and your on-call number gets the escalation immediately. The quote conversation happens after everyone is safe.

[02]

Can it qualify generator leads properly?

Yes: home square footage, well pump and sump loads, propane or natural gas supply, panel location, and timeline all get captured, so your site visit starts at sizing instead of discovery.

[03]

Do farm calls get special handling?

Farm and shop callers get an intake that respects the stakes — what equipment is down, what it costs per hour, single-phase or three-phase if they know it — and urgent routing when livestock systems are involved.

[04]

What does coverage cost for a shop my size?

Starter runs $497 a month plus a $500 setup. For a county shop, that is roughly one recovered service call and change — the full pricing sits on the homepage with no games.

Let's scope it.

Twenty minutes to script hazard escalation, generator intake, and farm-call priority. From a company ten minutes up 45.

// Call demo
(414) 240-8930

Live demo line. Hear AVA answer a real call flow.

// SYSTEM ONLINE ─ CALL LINE ACTIVE
// Scope my setup

Twenty minutes at book.aivoiceagency.ai. We map your call flow, handoff rules, and where AVA routes each request.

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