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Work Scopes

Work scopes define the detailed description of work to be performed for each entry in your estimate. They communicate exactly what will be done during installation, demolition, or both—providing clarity for your team and your customers.

What Is a Work Scope?

A work scope is a text description attached to an estimate entry that explains:

  • What work will be performed - Detailed installation or demolition tasks
  • How it will be done - Methods, materials, or techniques
  • What's included - Specific items or services covered
  • What's excluded - Items or services not part of this scope

Work scopes flow from your estimate into the contract and can be shared with customers as a dedicated Work Scope Document.

Work Scope Types

Each estimate entry can have one or both types of work scope, depending on its action type:

Action TypeInstall ScopeDemo Scope
Install (+)YesNo
Demolition (-)NoYes
Demo & Install (&)YesYes
Labor Only (L)YesYes
Material Only (M)YesNo

Install Scope

Describes the installation work to be performed:

  • What will be installed
  • Installation methods
  • Materials and finishes
  • Quality standards

Example:

Install 42" upper cabinets with soft-close hinges. Level and secure to wall studs. Include crown molding trim at ceiling. All exposed edges to be finished to match cabinet face.

Demo Scope

Describes the demolition or removal work:

  • What will be removed
  • Disposal requirements
  • Protection measures
  • Site preparation

Example:

Remove existing base cabinets and countertops. Disconnect and cap plumbing lines. Remove debris from site. Protect flooring during removal.


Adding Work Scopes to Entries

Accessing the Work Scope Editor

  1. Open your estimate
  2. Find the entry you want to add a work scope to
  3. Click on the entry to expand it or access its details
  4. Locate the Work Scope section

Writing Work Scope Text

The work scope editor is a rich text editor that supports:

  • Bold, italic, and underline text
  • Bulleted and numbered lists
  • Font size adjustments
  • Images (upload photos or diagrams)

Best Practices for Writing Work Scopes

Be Specific:

❌ "Install new cabinets"
✅ "Install 12 linear feet of 36" base cabinets with soft-close drawers.
Cabinets to be maple with natural finish per customer selection."

Include Key Details:

  • Quantities and measurements
  • Materials and finishes
  • Quality standards
  • Installation methods

Clarify Boundaries:

  • What's included in this scope
  • What's handled by other trades
  • What's the customer's responsibility

Use Lists for Multiple Items:

Installation includes:

  • Remove protective packaging
  • Level and secure cabinet boxes
  • Install drawer slides and doors
  • Adjust hinges for proper alignment
  • Install hardware per customer selection

Work Scopes and Action Types

The action type you select for an entry determines which work scope fields are available.

Install (+)

Only the Install Scope field is shown. Use for new installations where nothing is being removed.

Demolition (-)

Only the Demo Scope field is shown. Use for removal-only work where nothing new is being installed.

Demo & Install (&)

Both Install Scope and Demo Scope fields are shown. Use for replacement work where you're removing existing items and installing new ones.

This is the most common action type for remodeling work.

Example - Kitchen Countertops:

Demo Scope:

Disconnect and remove existing laminate countertops. Remove backsplash. Cap plumbing connections. Dispose of materials off-site.

Install Scope:

Template and fabricate granite countertops per customer selection. Install with proper support and seaming. Cut and polish sink opening. Apply sealer. Install 4" granite backsplash.

Labor Only (L)

Both scope fields are available. Use when the customer is providing materials and you're providing labor only.

Material Only (M)

Install scope is available. Use when you're providing materials but not installation labor.


Work Scopes in Contracts

When you create a contract from an estimate, work scopes become part of the contract documentation.

What Customers See

The contract can include a Work Scope Document that shows:

  • All work organized by area (Kitchen, Bathroom, etc.)
  • Work organized by category (Cabinets, Countertops, etc.)
  • Separate sections for installation and demolition work
  • Clear descriptions of what will be done

Work Scope Document Features

The Work Scope Document provides customers with:

  • Navigation by area - Jump to specific rooms or zones
  • Category organization - View work by type (electrical, plumbing, etc.)
  • Install vs Demo separation - Clear distinction between removal and installation
  • Progress tracking - Mark items as complete during the project
  • Change order history - See how scope has evolved

Locking Work Scopes

When a contract is signed:

  • Work scopes become read-only
  • Changes require a change order
  • Original scope is preserved for reference

Work Scope Progress Tracking

During project execution, work scope completion can be tracked:

ProgressMeaning
0%Not started
PartialIn progress
100%Complete

Progress can be updated by your team or (if enabled) by customers through the Work Scope Document.

Filtering by Progress

In the Work Scope Document view:

  • Show all - Display all scope items
  • Hide completed - Show only remaining work

This helps focus on what's left to do as the project progresses.

Linking to Project Percent Complete

Your administrator can enable an option where work scope completion automatically updates the overall Project Percent Complete. When enabled:

  • As work scope items are marked complete, the project's percent complete is recalculated
  • The calculation is based on the weighted completion of all work scope items
  • This provides real-time project progress visibility without manual updates

This feature ties your detailed scope tracking directly to high-level project reporting, keeping everything in sync automatically.


Tips for Effective Work Scopes

Write for Your Customer

Remember that customers will read these descriptions. Avoid jargon and be clear about what they're getting.

Be Consistent

Use similar language and structure across entries. This makes the overall scope document easier to read.

Include Images When Helpful

The work scope editor supports images. Add photos or diagrams when they help explain the work:

  • Product photos
  • Installation diagrams
  • Reference images

Think About Change Orders

Well-written original scopes make change orders clearer. When scope changes, the difference between original and new is obvious.

Review Before Sending

Before creating a contract, review all work scopes to ensure:

  • All entries have appropriate scope descriptions
  • Demo and install scopes are complete for replacement items
  • Language is customer-friendly
  • No confidential notes are included

Work Scopes vs Notes

FeatureWork ScopeNotes
PurposeDescribe work to be performedInternal comments and reminders
VisibilityCustomer-facing (in contracts)Internal only (unless marked otherwise)
StructureTied to action type (install/demo)Free-form
In ContractYes - part of scope documentOptional

Use work scopes for customer-facing descriptions of work. Use notes for internal reminders and coordination details.


Next Steps