Electrical Roll-Up Platform

The Operating System for
Electrical Roll-Ups

Commercial/residential mix. Project bid hit rate. Journeyman utilization. Multi-state licensing. Managed at the portfolio level.

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The Consolidation Thesis

Electrical PE — and Why the Commercial/Residential Split Changes the Architecture

Electrical is the most structurally complex trade in home services PE. Commercial and residential businesses require different crews, different licensing, and different revenue recognition timelines.

The U.S. electrical services market shares the same structural characteristics that make HVAC and plumbing attractive to PE: fragmentation, recurring service revenue, skilled-labor moats, and demand driven by non-discretionary maintenance and compliance requirements. But electrical has a differentiation that changes the underwriting calculus: the commercial/residential split.


Residential electrical is high-frequency, lower-ticket, and increasingly attach-rate driven — panel upgrades, EV charger installation, smart home integration. The service call is the entry point; the installation is the margin. Commercial electrical is lower-frequency, higher-ticket, and project-bid driven — new construction, tenant improvement, industrial maintenance contracts. Win rate on bids is the primary revenue lever.


Most electrical roll-ups acquire across both categories without a framework for managing them differently. The result: a portfolio that is opaque at the entity level and incoherent at the portfolio level. RollForge fixes the architecture before the integration work begins.


Integration Failure Patterns

Why Electrical Integrations Stall

Electrical portfolios hit the same integration wall as every trade — but with electrical-specific failure modes that compound faster.


Platform Capabilities

What RollForge Standardizes — Day One

RollForge deploys in 19 days across an electrical portfolio. Bid tracking, journeyman utilization, and multi-state licensing live from day one.

Commercial/Residential Mix Intelligence

  • Revenue categorized by service line per entity (commercial project, residential service, installation, maintenance)
  • Mix benchmarks published monthly against portfolio peers and underwriting assumptions
  • Entity-level alerts when mix drifts outside investment thesis parameters
  • Margin-by-service-line tracked separately

Project Bid Management

  • Bid registry by entity: submission, estimated value, hit/miss outcome, win margin
  • Portfolio-level bid hit rate benchmarks by project type and size
  • Estimating accuracy tracked: bid margin vs. actual margin on completed projects
  • Lost bid analysis surfaced quarterly by project type and size

Journeyman Utilization

  • Journeyman-to-apprentice ratios tracked per entity
  • Revenue per journeyman FTE benchmarked across portfolio
  • Journeyman scheduling efficiency: billable hours vs. supervision overhead
  • Overtime exposure flagged 48 hours ahead; cross-entity reallocation modeling

Multi-State Licensing Compliance

  • License registry by credential type (apprentice, journeyman, master), state, and expiration
  • Jurisdiction-specific renewal requirements embedded — different exam cycles, CE requirements, and reciprocity rules by state
  • 90/60/30-day alerts to entity GMs and operating partner
  • New market entry license gap analysis before LOI

Residential Attach Rate Optimization

  • Panel upgrade and EV charger attach rates tracked per technician per call type
  • Portfolio benchmarks published monthly; high performers' protocols shared as SOPs
  • Quoting compliance tracked: technicians who quote vs. complete the attach conversation
  • Incentive program alignment tracked against attach rate outcomes
See the full Command Center → Run the Integration Risk Scanner →

Example Scenario

Cardinal Electrical: 8.4pt EBITDA Expansion, Bid Hit Rate from 39% to 51%

Portfolio
4 entities
P&L Close Timeline
19 days
EBITDA Expansion
+8.4pt (11.2% → 19.6%)
SOPs Standardized
114
51%
Portfolio bid hit rate (up from 39%)
3.4 days
Avg permit cycle (down from 6.1 days)
$380K
Billable hours recovered via journeyman reallocation
19 days
Full portfolio P&L close

Cardinal's operating partner identified the core problem within 60 days of close: four entities with nearly identical service offerings, but EBITDA margins separated by nearly 10 points. The top performer had a disciplined bid review process and a journeyman staffing model tuned to its commercial/residential mix. The bottom performer was over-resourced in commercial estimating and underperforming on residential attach.

Bid hit rate improvement came from exposing the estimating gap. The portfolio's commercial bid hit rate varied from 31% to 58% by entity. RollForge surfaced that the low-hit-rate entities were systematically underbidding labor on complex tenant improvement work — winning on price but losing margin. A shared estimating framework, adapted from the highest-performing entity, brought the portfolio average from 39% to 51% within one quarter.

Journeyman utilization alignment recovered $380K in annual billable hours by identifying entities running 3:1 apprentice-to-journeyman ratios when the portfolio benchmark supported 4:1. The rebalancing freed 2 journeymen for reallocation to higher-volume entities during peak commercial construction season.

Permit SLA standardization reduced average permit cycle from 6.1 to 3.4 days by standardizing the permit submission process and tracking permit lag as a KPI at the operating partner level. Permit delays were the single biggest cause of project timeline slippage — and the most preventable.

Panel conversion variance compression brought the entity range from 8–17% down to 9–14% — not by pushing everyone to 17%, but by establishing a floor. The platform-wide average lifted 4 points.

*Illustrative. Not a guarantee.

See the Full Cardinal Electrical Example Scenario →

KPI Framework

Electrical KPIs RollForge Tracks

The metrics that matter for electrical portfolio operations — tracked at entity level and rolled up to the portfolio level.

KPI What It Measures Why It Matters
Commercial/Residential Revenue Mix Revenue split by service line per entity Investment thesis tracking; mix drift is an early warning signal for margin problems
Bid Hit Rate Won bids ÷ submitted bids by project type Primary commercial revenue lever; 10pt improvement on $5M bid volume = $500K incremental contracted revenue
Estimating Accuracy Bid margin vs. actual margin on completed projects Identifies systematic under/over-estimation before it becomes a margin problem
Journeyman Utilization Revenue per journeyman FTE by entity Highest-leverage labor planning metric in electrical; licensing tier ratios directly determine throughput
Permit Cycle Time Days from permit application to permit issued Project timeline risk; permit SLA compliance is both a customer commitment and a revenue pacing signal
Panel Upgrade Attach Rate Panel upgrade conversion on residential service calls Highest-margin residential install; 5pt improvement on 200 monthly service calls = $60K–$120K annual revenue lift
EV Charger Attach Rate EV charger installation conversion on residential calls Fastest-growing residential electrical install category; 2026 demand growing at 35%+ YoY
License Compliance by Credential Active licenses vs. required by jurisdiction and tier Lapsed journeyman or master license = immediate project stop; portfolio-level tracking is mandatory at scale
See all KPIs in the Command Center →

Free Tools

Built for Electrical PE Operators


FAQ

Common Questions

How does RollForge handle the difference between commercial project revenue and residential service revenue? +
The two revenue streams are tracked separately at the job level — different revenue recognition, different margin structure, different KPIs. Commercial projects track bid-to-completion; residential service tracks attach rate and call volume. The portfolio dashboard shows both, with mix benchmarks against the investment thesis.
Can RollForge manage EV charger installation tracking as a separate service category? +
Yes. EV charger installation is tracked as a dedicated residential installation category, with separate attach rate, revenue per install, and permit compliance tracking. Given the growth rate in this category, it is one of the higher-value KPIs in the electrical platform.
How does multi-state electrical licensing work in RollForge — especially reciprocity between states? +
The license registry embeds jurisdiction-specific reciprocity rules. If a journeyman licensed in TX acquires work in CO, the system checks CO reciprocity requirements and flags the gap before the technician is dispatched. This prevents the common pattern of discovering a licensing issue on-site rather than before scheduling.
How does RollForge improve commercial bid hit rate? +
By creating portfolio-level visibility that did not exist before. When you can see that Entity A wins 58% of commercial bids and Entity B wins 31% — and you can filter by project type and size — the estimating gap becomes visible and addressable. RollForge does not estimate for you; it gives your estimating teams the benchmark data they need to calibrate.

Other Trade Roll-Up Guides

More Trade Roll-Up Resources

Ready to standardize?

Ready to Standardize Your Electrical Portfolio?

RollForge deploys in 19 days. Bid tracking, journeyman utilization, and multi-state licensing live from day one.

Start Free Trial → Try the ROI Calculator →

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