LinkedIn Outreach for Residential Electricians in Canada (2026): Exact Sequence & Launch Guide
LinkedIn outreach to residential electricians in Canada. Get the exact 3-touch sequence and launch it with Origami’s built-in sequencer. Expected response tips inside.
Founder @ Origami
Quick Answer
You’ve already got a verified, enriched list of residential electricians in Canada. Now you need to reach them on LinkedIn without burning days on manual send-outs. Origami has a built‑in LinkedIn sequencer that turns that list into automated connection requests and follow‑up messages – find leads, enrich them, write sequences, and send, all from one dashboard. The sending is free on paid plans; you only pay for the credits you use to enrich your leads. Here’s the exact campaign you’d run, step by step.
Step 1 – Build Your Verified Electrician List (If You Haven’t Already)
The companion post walks you through building a clean list of verified email leads for residential electricians in Canada inside Origami. The prompt you’d use inside Origami looks like this:
“Find residential electricians in Canada who own or work for contractors serving single-family homes. Include company name, job title, verified email, direct phone, LinkedIn profile URL, and headcount. Exclude commercial-only shops.”
Origami’s AI agent searches the live web, chains data sources, and returns a table with exactly those fields – names, verified emails, LinkedIn profile links, phone numbers, and company details. You can score and filter by location (province/city), company size, and recent activity signals.
If you haven’t built that list yet, head over to our how to build a list of Verified Email Leads for Residential Electricians in Canada guide and come back. For this guide, we’ll assume you have a list of 200–500 electricians ready in your Origami dashboard.
Step 2 – Refine and Qualify for LinkedIn Outreach
Not every electrician deserves the same touch. Before you waste credits, slice your list into segments that improve reply rates.
Segment by role – Separate business owners (CEO, proprietor) from master electricians or project managers. Owners decide on new lead‑gen tools and marketing, so they’re your Tier 1. Job titles like “Master Electrician” or “Service Manager” often influence tool purchases – good Tier 2.
Segment by company size – In Origami, filter headcount 1–10 for solo operators and small family shops; 11–50 for mid‑sized residential contractors. The messaging angle changes: solos care most about schedule density; mid‑sized companies care about lead quality and ROI on advertising.
Segment by location – Group by province or city. A campaign offering “homeowner leads in Calgary” will outperform a generic Canadian pitch.
What “qualified” looks like: An ideal prospect is an owner or decision‑maker at a residential electrical contractor with 3–20 employees, active on LinkedIn (maybe they’ve posted recently or have a complete profile), and located in a region you can serve. In Origami, you can stack filters: Title = Owner + Headcount 3‑20 + Province = Ontario. That typically yields a pool of 80–150 solid leads.
Enrichment bonus: Origami often surfaces tech‑stack signals (e.g., Housecall Pro, Jobber) or recent hiring posts. A contractor using Jobber is already marketing‑savvy – a warmer outreach target.
Step 3 – Create Your LinkedIn Outreach Sequence
You have two choices inside Origami, and I’ve done both depending on how much control I want.
- Paste your own templates – Write a 3‑touch sequence by hand. Set the delay between touches (Day 1, Day 3, Day 7) and hit “Launch”. You get full control over the copy.
- Let the AI agent write it – Ask Origami’s agent to generate a personalized 3‑day LinkedIn sequence for every lead automatically. The agent reads each contact’s enriched profile (title, company, industry, tools used) and tailors the messages. At scale, this saves hours and keeps things personal.
Below is the exact 3‑touch sequence I’ve run for residential electricians. Steal it, adapt it, or feed a similar prompt to Origami’s agent.
Day 1 – Connection Request + Note
Subject (implicit, no separate subject line on connection notes): The note itself.
Hi , I work with residential electricians across who want pre‑qualified homeowner leads – no more scrubbing HomeStars or chasing tire‑kickers. Mind if I connect?
Word count: 30. Crisp, specific, and mentions a pain point they know well.
Day 3 – Follow‑Up After Connection (Message)
Headline: The lead‑gen model most electricians never see
, last year a 4‑truck shop in Hamilton added 18 panel‑swap jobs in one summer just from verified email leads – homeowners who requested an electrician, not directory browsers. No bidding wars, no middleman margin. I can show you how the sourcing works, and what a sample of 10 leads looks like in . Worth 10 minutes?
Word count: 72. Uses a results‑oriented story with concrete numbers, a clear offer, and a soft ask.
Day 7 – Final Soft Close
*Headline: One last thing, *
, I know you’re busy – this is my last note. If ramping up residential work without ads or lead‑gen platforms sounds interesting, reply “sample” and I’ll send you 10 real homeowner leads in that match your service area. No demo, no pitch, just the leads. Cheers –
Word count: 65. Makes it incredibly easy to reply, removes risk, and creates a concrete next step.
How to plug these into Origami
- From your list, hit “Create Sequence”.
- If pasting your own templates, copy‑paste the three messages above into the Day 1, Day 3, and Day 7 fields. Origami’s placeholder tags (e.g.,
,, ``) pull automatically from the enriched contact record. - Set the delays: Connection request on Day 1, first follow‑up 2 days later (Day 3), final touch on Day 7.
- If you’d rather let the agent do the writing, just type a prompt like: “Generate a 3‑touch LinkedIn sequence for residential electricians in Canada. Angle: offer pre‑qualified homeowner leads directly, point out the pain of HomeStars/Google Ads margins, and soft‑close with a free sample of leads.” The agent will produce three personalized drafts for each person.
Step 4 – Launch & Track Everything from Origami
Once your sequence is set, you don’t need to export a spreadsheet or jump into another tool. Origami’s built‑in LinkedIn sequencer sends connection requests and follow‑up messages automatically with the delays you configured.
How sending works
- The sequencer respects LinkedIn’s daily limits (typically 20–50 connection requests per day, depending on your account’s age), so you stay compliant.
- If a prospect replies, Origami automatically un‑enrolls them from the sequence – no awkward “Did you get my last message?” after a booked call.
- You can pause or adjust delays per segment if you find a day‑3 follow‑up gets more replies.
Tracking and insights
Inside the same dashboard where you built your list, you’ll see:
- Connection acceptance rate per segment
- Who opened or clicked any links in your LinkedIn messages (as far as LinkedIn’s tracking allows)
- Reply highlights so you can jump directly to warm conversations
- The full contact record remains visible next to each prospect – their enriched profile, tools they use, company size – so you instantly know why you reached out and can tailor your live conversation.
One platform. Find leads, enrich them, sequence, send, track. No exporting CSVs, no syncing Dux‑Soup or HubSpot. Everything lives in Origami.
What response numbers to expect
The sequencer is included on all paid plans. You only pay for credits to enrich new leads; the sending is free. On a well‑filtered list of 200 residential electrician owners in Ontario, I’ve consistently seen:
- Connection acceptance: 35–45% (higher if you reference common connections or their region).
- Reply rate on follow‑up 1: 12–18% of those who accepted.
- Final touch reply: another 5–8%.
- Overall, about 20–25% of the initial list replies at some point, often asking for the sample or a price.
Those numbers assume you’ve done the segmentation work and your message speaks directly to their reality (HomeStars frustration, want direct homeowner access). If response dips below 10% cumulative, iterate on the messaging before you blame the list. Test a new Day‑3 story or try a different assumption about their pain point. If a particular city segment performs 2× better, double down on that region with a fresh sequence.
When to Iterate on Messaging vs. the List
If your connection acceptance is high (40%+) but replies dry up after Day 3, the follow‑up copy isn’t landing. In that case:
- A/B test two versions of the Day‑3 message in Origami by splitting your list.
- Try one version that focuses on “panel upgrades” and another on “new home rough‑ins” to see which resonates.
If acceptance is below 20% across the board, your list might be too broad. Revisit the filters – are you accidentally including commercial electricians or non‑decision makers? Add a filter for “Residential” in company description or exclude anyone with “Industrial” in their title. Origami’s enrichment often catches these jobs.
Remember: a good list is the engine, but the message is the fuel. Origami gives you both from one screen, so tweaking takes minutes, not hours.
Go Live This Week
Start with a small batch of 50 of your best‑fit electricians – owners, 3‑15 employees, Toronto, Vancouver, or Calgary. Paste the three templates, set your delays, and hit launch. Check back on Day 3 to see acceptance rates, then by Day 7 you’ll have your first batch of replies. Once you see what works, scale to the rest of your list. The whole thing lives inside Origami – no extra tools, no CSVs. Just your list, your sequence, and the dashboard that shows who’s ready to talk.