Every signed contract, crew schedule, and customer update routes back to the family. Here is what the shop looks like when the operational thread survives the hire.
No one is watching the intake. You're on the phone with a supplier. But this time, the system catches the signed agreement and starts the workflow.
A real project kickoff got initiated the way you would, captured the constraints, and set the stage for the crew.
Every spec, HOA doc, and timeline constraint lands in one place, flagged by phase, ready for the install team.
It reaches you the moment it matters, with everything you need to pick up right where it left off.
Anderson Sunroom · Crew A assigned · Pre-Thanksgiving rush
HOA letter received. Materials ordered. Schedule locked.
When the work order goes out, the next step goes with it, so the project doesn't stall waiting on you.
The kind of operational system a Top 200 remodeler needs to scale, built around how a family legacy actually works.
For a 50-year legacy built on personal oversight, this is the whole game: every signed contract that comes in while you're managing crews moves forward without routing back to the top.
If we're wrong, the conversation ends here. If we're close, this is rarely the only thing you're holding together by hand.
We built this from public information. How close did we get?
Tell us where we got it right, or where we missed. Under a minute.