Electrical contractor software for crews, phases, and field documentation

Electrical work moves in clear phases - rough-in, trim-out, panels, inspections, and service - but GC schedules and other trades rarely wait in a straight line. Precision Trades helps electrical subs keep assignments, status, and proof of work in one place so supers, inspectors, and your own leads see the same picture.

Rough-in, trim-out, and the coordination tax

When conduit runs, boxes, and panels happen across multiple visits, the failure mode is not “forgot a task” - it is two versions of truth: the whiteboard in the trailer, the PM’s spreadsheet, and the crew’s group text.

Centralizing who is on which job, what phase is active, and what blocked yesterday’s pull keeps estimators from re-selling capacity you already committed. Everyone works off one schedule and one job record.

Inspections, red tags, and defensible documentation

Inspectors and GCs remember how you show up: labels, photos, and notes tied to the right circuit or area. When something fails, you need a fast path from problem to fix without losing the paper trail.

Field updates linked to the job reduce “we thought that was done” moments. Completion-style summaries help you close phases and get paid without chasing photos from three different apps.

Service work alongside project crews

Many electrical shops run trucks for callbacks while project crews push production. Scheduling both in disconnected tools creates silent double-books and unhappy technicians.

One operations hub lets dispatch see truck roll work and multi-day jobs together, with simple mobile views so techs log status and photos without babysitting.

Visibility for owners without burying teams in admin

You need to know if crews are overbooked before you promise the next GC date. That does not mean hourly surveillance - it means honest workload signals from status, assignments, and exceptions.

Precision Trades is aimed at trade contractors who want fewer surprises: where labor is committed, which jobs are waiting on inspection or material, and what actually happened on site.

Next steps for electrical subs

If you are evaluating software, test a real cycle: rough to inspection, or a week of mixed service and project work. Adoption beats feature lists.

Review pricing, start a trial, and run one crew honestly through scheduling, field notes, and closeout. If the tool fits how your leads work, scaling is habits - not another integration science project.

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