One-time service calls keep you busy, but they don’t build a business. Service agreements are different. They give customers a reason to call you first, which builds a revenue baseline before the month starts and fills slow seasons with scheduled work. While most electrical contractors know they need them, it’s hard knowing how to price them, structure them, and manage them once they’re in place.
This guide covers all of it. It discusses how to build a profitable electrical service agreement program, what goes into each tier, how to protect your margin on member pricing, and what running the program requires week to week.
If your revenue cycles based on dispatch volume, you’re starting from zero every month. Service agreements change that, making them worth building.
Emergency calls are unpredictable. You can’t plan around them, so any slow week hits your whole bottom line. With service agreements, you have guaranteed revenue on your schedule before you book a single job.
Now, you’re planning from a position of strength instead of scrambling to fill the gaps. Members call you first when something breaks instead of searching online, which means fewer lost jobs to competitors and stronger close rates.
That instinct to call you first compounds over time. Members who trust you spend more money, stay longer, and refer you to family and friends more often. These referrals and returning customers lead to more money and business.
There’s a large revenue gap between a one-time caller and a member. The longer a customer stays a member, that gap widens even further:
When you run the numbers, a service agreement payment pays for itself many times over. However, it only does so if you continue to manage it after setting it up.
Service agreements address three problems that every electrician runs into at some point:
The benefits of having a service agreement are clear. The question now becomes how to build a program that customers buy into.
Not all service agreements work. Plenty of independent contractors launch a program and underprice it. Then, they must spend more to deliver it than they collect in revenue. The difference between agreements that build profit and ones that don’t comes down to three things: clear value, smart pricing, and services that customers want.
Members need a reason to sign up and a reason to stay. The tangible benefits you offer should be visible and easy to explain in thirty seconds:
When members see what they’re getting and saving, the value of the agreement sells itself.
This is where most service agreement programs start to break down.
Instead of pricing for the program that sounds easier to sell, price for the one you can deliver profitably.
Electrical service agreements succeed when they’re built around what homeowners worry about. Keep it practical:
These perks are things your customers already call you about. Your agreement just locks them in before the call.
Tier structure is what makes your program easy to sell and manage. If it’s too simple, you leave revenue on the table. However, if it’s too complicated, your staff can’t explain it to your customers, which means they won’t buy it.
Three tiers give customers enough choice without turning a conversation into a negotiation:
Most customers will land in the middle tier. This is the tier where your value and margin both live.
Each tier should clearly define what the customer gets so that there’s no confusion when it’s time to schedule, invoice, or renew:
When your tiers aren’t clearly defined, it leads to billing disputes and unhappy members. Define it once clearly and don’t compromise.
Your tier prices need to be based on what it actually costs for you to deliver them. Start there and build outward:
When the value is obvious, and the math works, pricing your tiers right protects your profits. It also makes your agreements easier to sell.
While some parts of a service agreement run on their own, others need consistent attention from your team.
Sera’s Customer Membership feature takes care of the tracking and record-keeping, so your team isn’t buried in administrative work. This includes:
This frees your office staff to focus on outreach and service delivery.
Some parts of running an electrical service contract program can’t be automated. Your team must:
Sera's Service Utilization tracking and membership health dashboard make it easy to stay on top of all of the above, giving your team a clear view of which members are due for service, how your program is performing compared to prior periods, and where to focus attention during slower seasons.
The manual side of service agreement management is what separates the electrical businesses that build lasting member revenue from the ones that launch a program and watch it stall.
Members who don't hear from you stop renewing, which is why consistent follow-up is important. Stay on top of it, and you get predictable revenue, fewer billing disputes, and higher customer retention.
Member discounts are a selling point. The goal is to make members feel the value while protecting the margin you need to keep the program running.
Think of member pricing as a volume play. Members who get a discount on additional work tend to call more often and approve more work, which leads to more generated revenue per year. Instead of shopping around each time they need more work done, they call you because of discounted rates.
You also want to structure your rates so that the member’s loyalty generates volume that offsets the margin you’re giving up per job. Make members’ rates visible on every quote. When a member can see they saved money because of their plan, they stay loyal.
Sera’s Price Book surfaces member rates automatically when your techs build quotes for member customers. This ensures the right rate is applied every time your techs build a quote for a member customer. This also helps customers see their exact cost savings on every job, making the value of their plan tangible every time they receive a quote.
Member discounts need a ceiling. You don’t want to set a discount that’s too high for current costs. After you set a rate, review it every year and adjust it when the numbers make sense. Reviewing pricing regularly keeps you ahead of margin creep from rising labor or material costs.
Most service agreements fail because of avoidable execution mistakes. Most contractors get tripped up by:
Service agreements are one of the most effective tools an electrical company has for building a business that doesn’t depend on chasing the next call, whether you’re a new business or an established one. They create a revenue floor, fill slow seasons, and give your best customers a reason to stick around.
However, they require clear structure, honest pricing, and consistent management to protect your margins and satisfy your customers. Sera's membership tools help electrical contractors build service agreement programs, track member benefits, manage member pricing, and stay on top of scheduled services, all in one place. It keeps the operational side organized while you focus on delivering high-quality service.
Ready to see how our electrical contractor software supports service agreements from sign-up to renewal? Contact us today to schedule a demo, and we’ll show you exactly how it works.