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How to Choose Field Management Software

Field management software is only as good as the people who actually use it. Here's how to pick the right one.

What Field Management Software Should Do

At its core, it should make your field team's life easier — not harder.

Must-Have Features

FeatureWhy It Matters
Daily reportsDocument work completed, conditions, and issues
Time trackingLabor is your biggest cost — track it accurately
Photo documentationVisual proof of progress, conditions, and issues
Offline supportCell service on a jobsite is never guaranteed
Mobile-firstField workers live on their phones, not laptops

Important Features

FeatureWhy It Matters
Punch list managementTrack and close out deficiencies
RFI trackingKeep questions and answers organized
Equipment logsKnow what's on site and when
Material trackingDeliveries, waste, and usage
Change order documentationProtect your margins with documentation

Nice-to-Have Features

  • Plan viewing and markup
  • Integrations with accounting software
  • Custom forms and fields
  • Advanced reporting and dashboards
  • Multi-project oversight

How to Evaluate Any Field Software

1. The Field Test

Before buying, answer these questions:

  • Can a foreman figure it out in 10 minutes? If not, adoption will fail.
  • Does it work without cell service? If not, it won't work on half your jobsites.
  • Can you create a daily report in under 3 minutes? If not, nobody will do it.
  • Does it run on the phones your crew already has? If it needs special hardware, add that cost.

2. The Office Test

  • Can you pull reports easily? Data that goes in should be easy to get out.
  • Does it export your data? You should own your data, not the software company.
  • Can you see across projects? Multi-project visibility matters as you grow.

3. The Cost Test

Subscription price is just the beginning. Calculate the total:

Cost CategoryQuestions to Ask
SubscriptionPer user? Per project? Flat rate?
ImplementationDo you need a consultant to set it up?
TrainingHow long before your team is productive?
Ongoing adminDoes someone need to manage it full-time?
Data migrationCan you bring existing data in easily?
CancellationAre you locked into an annual contract?
Rule of Thumb

If the software needs a dedicated admin to manage it, factor that salary into the cost. If it needs a consultant to implement, that's a red flag for complexity.

Red Flags to Watch For

  • Long implementation timelines — Good software works on day one
  • Required annual contracts — If they won't let you go monthly, ask why
  • "Implementation consultant" fees — Means the software isn't intuitive
  • Per-user pricing that scales fast — 10 users shouldn't cost 10x more to manage
  • No free trial — You should be able to try before you buy
  • Training takes days — Your field team doesn't have days to spare

Green Flags to Look For

  • Free tier or real free trial — Confidence in the product
  • Works offline — Built for real jobsites
  • Month-to-month billing — They earn your business every month
  • Setup in hours, not weeks — Designed for busy contractors
  • Phone support — When you need help, you need it now
  • Data export — You can leave anytime with your data

The Adoption Problem

The #1 reason field software fails isn't features — it's adoption.

Why Field Crews Reject Software

  1. Too complicated — They're not IT people
  2. Adds work without removing work — If it's another thing to do, forget it
  3. Slow or unreliable — One bad experience and they're done
  4. Nobody asked them — Top-down mandates without input fail

How to Get Adoption Right

  1. Pick one champion — A foreman who's willing to try it
  2. Start with one project — Don't roll out company-wide on day one
  3. Replace something, don't add something — The software should eliminate a pain point, not add a task
  4. Get feedback in week one — If it's not working, pivot fast

Making Your Decision

Step 1: Define Your Actual Needs

Don't buy features you won't use. Write down:

  • What's the biggest pain point in the field right now?
  • What information do you wish you had but don't?
  • What takes too long?

Step 2: Try 2-3 Options

Most good software has a free tier or trial. Test them on a real project with a real crew.

Step 3: Ask Your Field Team

They're the ones who have to use it. Their opinion matters more than a feature checklist.

Step 4: Start Small, Expand Later

Pick one use case (daily reports, time tracking, or safety docs), get it working, then add more.