Work Order template and PDF guide (General) | documentorium
Assign and adjust execution details online, then generate a field-ready work order PDF. Use this after the customer approves the job and before technicians are dispatched, so...
When to use this template
Assign and adjust execution details online, then generate a field-ready work order PDF. Use this after the customer approves the job and before technicians are dispatched, so the field team has one operational instruction sheet.
What to include
- Work order number linked to the approved quote/contract and the exact service date window.
- Assigned crew members, arrival instructions, parking/access notes, and on-site contact details.
- Execution checklist: tasks to perform, required materials/tools, and safety or permit requirements.
- Authorization notes for field changes (who can approve extra work and spending limits).
- Completion section with technician notes, actual labor/materials used, and customer sign-off.
Common questions
- Can I edit this Work Order online before dispatch?
- Yes. Update crew assignments, site notes, materials, and task sequencing directly in-browser.
- Can I save this Work Order and duplicate it for recurring job types?
- Yes. With an account, save it as an operational template and reuse it for similar service calls or installs.
- Can I export this Work Order as a crew-ready PDF?
- Yes. Generate a PDF your team can open on-site or print for job folders.
- Can a technician change scope on site?
- Yes, but the work order should define who can approve changes and how to document added cost/time.
- Who should sign the work order?
- Usually the technician and the customer or site representative at completion.
- Should estimated and actual hours both be tracked?
- Yes. Estimated hours help planning; actual hours support billing accuracy and future pricing.
- What if the customer is not on site when work finishes?
- Document completion with photos and detailed notes, and send digital sign-off or acknowledgment immediately.
- How do I keep track of multiple jobs at once?
- Assign each job its own numbered work order with a clear scope, crew assignment, and due date. This keeps your team organized and prevents tasks from falling through the cracks.
- What if the customer asks for extra work on site?
- Document any scope changes on the work order before starting the extra work. Get the customer to acknowledge the additional cost so you avoid doing free work.
- Do I really need a work order for small jobs?
- Yes. Even small jobs can lead to disputes about what was agreed. A quick work order takes two minutes and protects you from a customer claiming the work was different from what they asked for.