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Blessed Arc Media

WebDesignforElectricians

Someone's about to let you into their walls to work on live wires. Your website is the first thing that tells them it's safe to say yes.

5-star reviews from service businesses

Web design for an electrician means leading with trust. Your license and insurance sit above the fold, a tap-to-call number is there for the outage that can't wait, and a portfolio proves you've done the panel upgrade or EV-charger install before, not just generic "electrical work."

Two different people show up on an electrician's site, and they need two different things from it.

The power's out

This person isn't browsing. The breaker keeps tripping, an outlet's sparking, half the house is dark, and they need to know in seconds whether you're safe to let in the door. Your license sitting right there does that work for you, so the first thought is "good, call him," not "who is this guy."

The upgrade

This person isn't in a hurry, they're doing their homework. A panel upgrade, an EV charger, a rewire, new lighting, it's serious money, and it's going in the walls for the next twenty years. Get the wiring wrong and it's not just a worse-looking job, it's a safety problem behind drywall nobody sees until it fails. So they want proof you've done this exact work before, and a clear sense of what getting a quote looks like. Give them that, and you're the one they call back.

What goes into the site

Both of those visitors can land on the same homepage. The site just has to know which one it's talking to, fast.

A number they can tap without thinking

When the lights are flickering or a breaker won't reset, nobody's reading your About page. The call button has to be the first thing they see, not something they scroll to find. We put it at the top of every page, sized for a thumb, so the person standing in a dark hallway can reach you in one tap.

Your license isn't a footnote, it's the headline

With most trades, license and insurance live quietly on an about page. On an electrician's site, that's a mistake. Someone's deciding whether to let you touch the wiring behind their walls, and the difference between a licensed electrician and an unlicensed one isn't a technicality, it's fire risk. We put your license number and insurance right where they'll see it fast, usually above the fold, so trust is built before they even start reading.

Show them you've done this before

Panel upgrades, EV charger installs, rewiring, lighting work, these all look different, and the homeowner comparing electricians wants to see yours, not a stock photo of generic wiring. We build out a portfolio section with project photos so the person planning an EV charger install can see you've installed EV chargers, not just "electrical work."

Make it easy to say yes to a number

A panel upgrade or a full rewire isn't a small decision, it's hundreds or thousands of dollars, and homeowners know it. If your site is vague about what happens next, they'll close the tab and call two more electricians just to compare. You don't need exact prices posted. You need a clear, simple explanation of how an estimate works, what they can expect, and how fast they'll hear back, so they commit to calling you instead of starting over somewhere else.

Electricians we've already built for

Real electrical owners we built sites for, in their own words.

I took a chance on a young company, Blessed Arc Media, to build my website for my company and WOW. Jacob went over and beyond and helped me way more than just the website but also with a lot of small technology issues I had. The website looks great Jacob, keep up the good work!

Lyle Wagler

Owner, Midwest Electric & Plumbing

Washington, IN

Amazing help with all I needed done and definitely will be using their services again in the near future.

Austin Miller

Owner, Primeline Electrical & Plumbing

Odon, IN

Questions electricians ask us

Most of my work comes from referrals and repeat customers. Do I even need a website?
Referrals get you in the door, but most people still check you out before they let you touch their wiring. They'll search your name or your business, and if what comes up is nothing, or worse, outdated, that referral starts to feel shakier than it should. A site doesn't replace your reputation, it backs it up the moment someone goes looking.
I do both emergency calls and planned upgrade work. Can the site handle both?
Yes. The homepage is built to split fast between the two, so neither visitor has to dig.
Will my license and insurance actually show up on the site, not just buried somewhere?
Yes, right where they'll see it, not tucked away on an about page. That matters more for electricians than most trades, since the stakes are live wires and fire risk, not a leaky faucet.
Do you only build for electricians?
No, we build sites for a range of local service businesses. But this isn't a generic template with "electrician" swapped in. The urgent-versus-planned split and the licensing-up-front approach come from how people actually decide who to call for electrical work, somebody with a sparking outlet thinks differently than somebody planning an EV charger, and the site has to speak to both.
What does an electrician website cost?
Custom sites start at $499, and you own it outright. Full pricing breakdown is on the pricing page.

For the rest of it, like who we build for, how the process runs, and why you own the site when we're done, that's all covered on the web design page

Be the call they're glad they made.

Whether it's a breaker that won't stop tripping tonight or a rewire they've been putting off, your site should make the decision easy. Let's build the one that does.

Get my electrician site