Built for the operator running the day, not the dispatcher running the depot.
Solo and small-crew trades, one to ten people. If you are juggling pending items in your head, this is for you. If you have a fleet, you probably want something heavier.
Concrete examples, not personas.
- HVAC
Two installs and a service call. One waiting on a 60k unit. Today view tells you whether to slot another.
- Plumbing
Three service calls, one rough-in. The rough-in is on hold for an inspector signoff. Clock-Work keeps the slot open.
- Electrical
Permit pending from the county. The system flags the job amber on every view until the permit clears.
- Handyman
Six small jobs, three customer callbacks pending. The callback list is its own page, not a notes scribble.
- General contractor
A remodel where a sub said Tuesday. Clock-Work nudges if the sub has not confirmed by Sunday night.
- Locksmith
Mobile day, four stops. Plain-English entry from the van, addresses parsed.
- Appliance repair
Parts on order from the supplier. The job sits in the waiting-on list until the part scans as received.
- Remodeler
Permits, subs, materials, customer approvals. Four kinds of waiting-on, in one place.
Honest about the fit.
If you have a dispatcher routing five trucks, you want ServiceTitan or Jobber. If you need built-in invoicing, payroll, or estimating, you want Housecall Pro. Clock-Work is not trying to replace those. It is the layer between your calendar and your sticky notes, and it stays out of accounting.
If you already use Back-Talk for missed calls, the two products share customer and job context. One less thing to copy.
Tell us where you fit.
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