If you run a trades business — plumbing, electrical, building, painting, any of the hands-on trades — there's a good chance your current system for tracking jobs looks something like this: a notebook in the van, a WhatsApp group with the lads, and a pile of receipts in a shoebox on the kitchen counter.
When it's just you, or you and one other person, that system works. You know every job. You know who owes you money. You remember the follow-ups. It all lives in your head, and your head is reliable enough.
Then you take on a third person. Then a fourth. You start quoting more jobs than you can hold in memory. You win a bigger contract that runs over several weeks. And slowly, without any single dramatic failure, the WhatsApp-and-notebook system starts falling apart.
Nobody wakes up one morning and decides they need software. It creeps up on you. But if you recognise three or more of these, your current system is already costing you money.
You quoted a job three weeks ago. The customer rang back today and said yes. But you can't find the quote. Was it in the notebook? In a WhatsApp message? Did you price it on the back of a receipt? You end up either re-quoting from memory (and probably getting the number wrong) or telling the customer you'll call them back (and looking unprofessional).
You finished a job and told the customer you'd come back to do the second phase in April. It's now June. They've called someone else. Or you quoted a job, the customer said "I'll think about it," and you never followed up. Not because you didn't care, but because you had seventeen other things happening that week and it simply slipped.
Your phone has 400 photos of job sites, before-and-after shots, damage reports, and measurements. They're all in your camera roll, mixed in with photos of your kids and screenshots of football scores. When you need to find the photo of the leak under Mrs. Murphy's sink from three months ago, you're scrolling for ten minutes. If a customer disputes the work, you can't easily prove what was there before you started.
You're busy. The lads are busy. Jobs are getting done. But at the end of the month, the bank balance doesn't reflect how hard everyone worked. Some jobs made good money. Some barely broke even. A few probably lost money once you factor in materials, travel, and the callback to fix a snag. But you don't know which ones, because there's no easy way to see costs against revenue for each job.
Every Friday — or more likely, every Sunday night — you sit down and try to reconstruct the week. Who worked where, what materials were used, which jobs are done, which need invoicing. You're pulling information from text messages, notebooks, receipts, and memory. It takes two or three hours, and half of it is guesswork. That's time you should be spending with your family, or at least not working.
The solution isn't complicated. A trades business doesn't need Salesforce or a project management tool designed for software companies. It needs something simple that works on a phone, because that's where you live during the working day.
Here's what a proper job tracking system looks like for a trades business:
This isn't theoretical. We built RepairDesk, a job tracking and repair management app that handles exactly this workflow: logging jobs, tracking status, attaching photos, and managing the full lifecycle from intake to completion. It runs on Shopify and is live on the App Store today.
The same principles apply whether you're tracking jewellery repairs or plumbing callouts. The workflow is the same: a job comes in, you price it, you do the work, you get paid. The details change, but the structure doesn't.
For trades businesses that need something tailored — specific to how your crew works, your pricing model, and your follow-up process — we build custom job tracking tools as well. These are standalone web applications, not Shopify apps, built to run on any device with a browser.
A custom job tracker for a trades business typically falls into our Starter or Growth tier, depending on the features you need:
Both are fixed price — you know the cost before any work starts.
If your business is eligible, the LEO Grow Digital Voucher can fund up to 50% of the cost (up to €5,000). That's a government grant specifically designed to help small businesses adopt digital tools. It can bring a €6,000 build down to €3,000 out of pocket. Your Local Enterprise Office can tell you if you qualify.
The best time to set up a proper system is before the busy season, not during it. If your business is growing — if you're taking on more staff, quoting more jobs, covering a wider area — the WhatsApp-and-notebook system is going to break. It's not a question of if, it's a question of how much it costs you before you switch.
We're based in Cork and we build custom software for small businesses across Ireland. If you want to talk about what a job tracker could look like for your trades business, get in touch. The first conversation is free, and we'll be straight with you about whether custom software is the right move or whether an off-the-shelf tool would do the job.