Electrical work is invisible when it goes right and terrifying when it goes wrong. That combination makes trust the whole game. People do not shop electricians on price. They pick the one who feels safe, certified, and unlikely to leave a mess behind the wall.

That trust is built long before the emergency, in a feed full of tidy installs and clear, useful advice. By the time the lights go out, the choice of who to call has quietly already been made.

Why electricians win on trust

Letting someone rewire your home is an act of faith. Every clean panel and every safety tip you post is a small proof that you take the work, and their home, seriously. Fifty of them over a year build a reputation that survives until the day someone needs you.

What to post

These are the angles Native works from for a business like yours, so you never stare at a blank caption:

  • The before and after. A dangerous old board next to your clean new one. Nothing sells safe work faster.
  • The finished install. A tidy consumer unit, neat cable runs, a job done properly. Craft that reassures.
  • A safety tip. How to spot an overloaded socket, when to replace an old fuse box. Genuinely useful, and highly saveable.
  • A real review. A five-star line from a homeowner, made into a clean post. Word of mouth, made visible.
  • The local angle. Serving a named town or neighbourhood makes you the trusted local, not a faceless call centre.

Finding a rhythm you can keep

Two posts a week is plenty. A finished job or before-and-after when you have one, and a safety tip when you do not. The tips never run out and are exactly what homeowners save for later.

The mistake to avoid

Waiting until work goes quiet to start posting, then giving up when a week does not ring the phone. Trust builds over months and then pays off all at once, on the evening the lights go out and yours is the name they already know.

How Native does it for you

Native learns your services and your area, then drafts the posts: safety tips, seasonal reminders, and a polished before-and-after whenever you send a photo. You approve from the van, and it publishes on a steady schedule while you are on a job.

The feed keeps working while you do, so you are already the safe pair of hands people think of when something sparks.