Every state, different rules
Maryland, Texas, Ohio, Missouri, Minnesota, Pennsylvania — each industrialized-building program has its own requirements, formats, and label rules. Keeping reports compliant across states is its own full-time job.
Voice-first inspections for industrialized-building and modular work: in-plant QC, serialized-unit tracking, label and certification workflows, per-state program rules, and field installation compliance — all on one defensible record.
Industrialized-building inspection means keeping reports compliant across a patchwork of state rules while tracing every finding back to a specific serialized unit — at plant-floor speed.
Maryland, Texas, Ohio, Missouri, Minnesota, Pennsylvania — each industrialized-building program has its own requirements, formats, and label rules. Keeping reports compliant across states is its own full-time job.
Factory QC moves fast and produces a steady stream of units. When every inspection ends in a typed report, the paperwork becomes the throughput limit on the plant floor — not the line itself.
A label or certification ties to a specific serialized unit. If the documentation can't trace cleanly from finding to unit to label, the certification record is fragile when the program audits it.
Walk the line and dictate. Photograph the unit data plate and approved drawings — unit identifiers, model, and plan data pre-fill the inspection header. Findings, photos, and markups attach as you move down the floor.
Each state's industrialized-building program is a jurisdiction with its own adopted rules and reference documents. Load the program once and every inspection in that state cites and formats against its requirements.
Inspections bind to the serialized unit they cover. Factory QC and field installation findings carry the unit identifier through the record, so traceability holds from the plant floor to the set site.
Track a unit's QC findings to the point of label issuance. The inspection record supports the certification decision and stands behind the label with a complete, auditable chain of evidence.
Run both sides of the IHB lifecycle: in-plant QC reports and field installation compliance reports. Open items raised in the plant carry forward as verify items at set, closing the loop on the unit.
Supervisors see live coverage across units in production and units in the field. Scheduling, workload, and a daily digest keep both the plant queue and the installation route moving.
The serialized unit carries the same record from the office that loads the state program to the inspector on the line to the label decision and the field installation that closes it out.
An administrator stands up each state's industrialized-building program, uploads its adopted rules and reference documents, and defines the inspection types — in-plant QC, field installation compliance — each with its own checklist.
In the plant, the inspector photographs the unit data plate and drawings, selects the inspection type, and dictates QC findings against the checklist for that serialized unit. Everything attaches in real time, offline if the plant has dead zones.
The platform drafts the QC report in the program format with cited rules and graded deficiencies, bound to the serialized unit. The reviewer approves, and the record stands behind the label and certification decision.
At set, field installation compliance inherits open items as verify points. Corrections are confirmed against the same unit record, and the unit's compliance chain — plant to site — is complete and audit-ready.
Yes. Every state's industrialized-building program is modeled as its own jurisdiction with its own adopted rules, reference documents, and report formats. Maryland, Texas, Ohio, Missouri, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, or any other — load the program once and inspections in that state cite and format against its requirements.
Yes. Both are inspection types in the same workflow: in-plant factory QC reports and field installation compliance reports. Open items raised in the plant carry forward as verify items at the set site, so the unit's compliance loop closes cleanly.
Inspections bind to the serialized unit they cover, and the unit identifier carries through the record from the plant floor to field installation. Findings, photos, and the label decision all trace back to the specific unit, so the certification chain holds under a program audit.
Yes. A unit's QC findings are tracked through to the point of label issuance, and the inspection record — observations, photos, cited rules, reviewer approval — stands behind the certification decision as a complete, auditable chain of evidence.
Yes. Noise-tolerant transcription handles line drone and echo, and voice recording, photos, and observation edits all run fully offline against local storage. When connectivity returns, the queue syncs in dependency order — no lost work in a steel building with no signal.
Every finding links to the original session audio, transcript, photos, author, and timestamp in an immutable audit log with seven-year retention. When a state program reviews a serialized unit, you reproduce exactly what was inspected and cited at the plant and at set.
14 days, no credit card. We'll turn your first site visit into a sealed, cited, firm-style report before you're back at your desk.