WireTrade is the online training platform built for electrical apprentices and tradespeople who need to master all the niches — not just one.
Course Tracks
Navigate the National Electrical Code like a pro. Article-by-article walkthrough with real-world application scenarios.
Service entrances, rough-in, trim-out. Everything a residential wireman needs, from box placement to final connection.
Feeder circuits, panel schedules, three-phase theory. The commercial side of the trade, demystified.
Ladder logic, overloads, across-the-line and soft-start configurations. From basic to complex control schemes.
NECC Article 722, device placement, notification circuits, and trouble signals. Code-compliant fire alarm installation.
BMS and BAS integration. BAS/BMS networking, BACnet fundamentals, and integration with HVAC controls.
Supervisory control and data acquisition. PLC fundamentals, HMI design, and industrial network architecture.
Termination, splicing, testing, and certification. Structured cabling for low-voltage and comms techs.
Leadership for tradespeople. Job planning, foreman responsibilities, labor management, and supervisory communication.
How it works
Start with the foundational NEC course — one-time base fee. Then add niche tracks as a monthly subscription. Residential, commercial, controls, fire alarm, BMS, motor controls, SCADA, fiber optics, and foreman training — all on your schedule.
"There is no single place online to learn the whole trade. Not anymore."
The electrical trade has always demanded breadth. You start in residential, you end up on a SCADA job. You wire panels by day, you study fire alarm circuits by night. The code doesn't stay in one lane — and neither should your training.
WireTrade exists because the industry needed a platform built around the reality of how electricians actually work: across niches, across specialties, across decades of career growth.
Not an exam prep tool. Not a single-niche course. A full apprenticeship companion — on your phone, on your schedule.
WireTrade is built for the apprentices showing up to the job site with questions — and the foremen who need their crews up to speed, fast.