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How To · For Electricians

Electrician Website Design: The 5-Page Structure That Books More Jobs

An electrician's website books more jobs with a simple five-page structure: home, services, areas covered, about, and contact. Each page does one job, and together they match exactly how a homeowner decides.

A British electrician in branded uniform installing a plug socket in a UK living room

LeadFly Websites  ·  6 min read

An electrician's website does not need to be large to book jobs. It needs five pages, each doing one clear job. More pages add clutter; fewer pages leave gaps. Five is the structure that converts.

Here is what each of the five pages must do, and why a homeowner needs every one of them before they call.

The home page states what you do and where

The home page has one job: tell a stranger, in the first screen, what you do and where you do it. "NICEIC registered electrician serving Watford and the WD postcodes" beats a vague headline every time. Add your phone number, a line of trust, and a clear path to the other pages. A home page that makes the visitor guess loses them.

The services page names every job you do

The services page should name every job you carry out, because each name is a search term and each answers a question. Fuse board upgrades, EICR electrical inspections, full and partial rewires, EV charger installation, outdoor lighting, fault finding, additional sockets: list them. A single "all electrical work" line ranks for nothing and reassures nobody.

The areas covered page wins local searches

The areas covered page exists to win searches like "electrician in St Albans" or "emergency electrician Rickmansworth". Name your home town, every neighbouring town you serve, and the postcodes. This page is often the one that ranks, because it matches the exact phrase a homeowner types. Without it, you are invisible for the searches that matter most.

Quick test: on your current site, can a visitor find your NICEIC or NAPIT number, your full list of services, and the towns you cover, each in one click from the home page? If any of the three takes hunting, that page is not doing its job.

The about page proves your NICEIC or NAPIT registration

The about page turns a qualified stranger into someone the homeowner trusts. It should show your NICEIC or NAPIT registration with the number, a line on Part P compliance, your years of experience, and a real photo of you. Electrical work is notifiable and dangerous done badly, so proof of registration is the single thing that closes the gap between interested and booked.

The contact page makes booking a callout effortless

The contact page should make getting in touch take seconds. A tappable phone number for emergencies, a short quote form for planned work, your service area, and your email. For an urgent fault the homeowner wants to call; for a rewire they want to enquire without a ten-field form. Make both effortless and the page books jobs.

Speed sits underneath all five pages

None of the five pages work if they load slowly. Page speed is a Google ranking factor and a conversion factor at once, so a slow site is worse at being found and worse at booking the visitor. Hand-coded HTML loads in under a second; a WordPress build on Elementor or Divi rarely does. Build the five pages light and fast, and the structure delivers.

Want the five-page structure built for you?

I build fast, mobile-first websites for Hertfordshire electricians on exactly this structure, with your NICEIC or NAPIT registration, your services and your towns. From £500, and you own everything. I'm based in Watford.

The bottom line for electricians: a website that books more jobs needs five pages, each doing one job: a home page that states what and where, a services page that names every job, an areas covered page that wins local searches, an about page that proves your registration, and a contact page that makes booking effortless. Build those five light and fast, and the structure does the work.