Executive Summary
We scanned 60 electrical contractors websites to understand the true state of WordPress in the industry. Of the sites analyzed, 21 were confirmed WordPress sites—and the data tells a concerning story.
The average electrical contractor website has 4.6 plugins installed, creating a fragile stack that requires constant maintenance. Worse, 81% of sites received a failing grade (D or F) for mobile performance—a critical metric when homeowners and businesses are increasingly searching on their phones.
With an estimated $167/month in hidden maintenance costs per site, electrical contractors are collectively spending over $42,000 annually just to keep their WordPress sites running. Our analysis suggests they could save $34,692/year by migrating to a modern platform.
Mobile Performance: The Ugly Truth
Google's PageSpeed Insights measures real-world performance. Here's how electrical contractors scored on mobile:
Why this matters: Electrical work requires trust. A slow, outdated website doesn't exactly scream "professional."
Plugin Fragility: A House of Cards
Every plugin is a potential point of failure—an update that breaks your site, a security vulnerability, or an abandoned project. Here's how electrical contractors stack up:
The sites with 20+ plugins face the highest maintenance burden—each update cycle risks breaking functionality, and the more plugins you have, the more likely conflicts become.
Page Builder Lock-in
Page builders promise easy editing but create vendor lock-in and performance overhead. Here's what electrical contractors are using:
71% of WordPress electrical contractors use a page builder. While these tools make editing easier, they add significant performance overhead and make future migrations more complex.
Security Concerns
Outdated WordPress installations and vulnerable plugins are the #1 attack vector for hackers. With electrical contractors handling sensitive homeowners and businesses data, these security gaps pose significant business risk.
The Real Cost of WordPress
We calculated the true cost of ownership including hosting, security, plugin licenses, maintenance time, and developer support:
By migrating to a modern platform like Webflow, electrical contractors could eliminate plugin costs, reduce security overhead, and drastically improve performance—all while cutting their total cost of ownership.
Methodology
We compiled a list of 60 electrical contractors websites from industry directories and public sources. Each site was scanned using our automated analysis tool, which checks:
- WordPress detection and version identification
- Plugin enumeration and vulnerability scanning
- Google PageSpeed Insights API for performance metrics
- Page builder and theme detection
- Security header analysis
Of the 60 sites scanned, 21 were confirmed WordPress installations. The remaining 39 used other platforms (Webflow, custom builds, etc.) and were excluded from WordPress-specific analysis.
Scan conducted December. Individual site data kept anonymous.