Pressure Washing · Step-by-Step Guide
When a tech arrives at a site, the unit's full service history should be in their hand — not in a binder in the machine room or in a retired tech's memory. No ReKeying means every field entry becomes a permanent digital record linked to that specific equipment serial number.
A pressure washing tech arrives at a commercial property for a recurring soft wash job. He has no record of which chemical concentration was used last time, whether a particular surface had a reaction to the treatment, or whether there were notes about neighboring landscaping sensitivity.
Without job-level chemical history, techs re-assess application rates each visit — leading to surface damage on sensitive substrates and inconsistent results that erode commercial contract renewal rates.
Follow these steps in order. Each step builds on the previous one.
An asset registry is a list of every piece of equipment you maintain, keyed to its location. For each asset, the minimum record includes: equipment type, make, model, serial number, installation date, and warranty expiration.
The easiest time to build the asset record is when the equipment is installed. Model number from the box, serial number from the nameplate, installation date from the work order. Reconstructing these details months later from paper is expensive.
Service history is only useful when it is asset-specific, not just customer-specific. 'This specific unit has had its capacitor replaced twice in 18 months' is more useful than 'we serviced this customer three times.'
Service records that capture only what was repaired miss the value of predictive maintenance. Record observations too: refrigerant pressures trending low, heat exchanger showing early signs of fatigue. These observations predict the next failure.
Equipment that has had the same component replaced twice in 12 months is telling you the next failure is coming. Build automated outreach triggers off these patterns — reach out before the failure, not after.
When a tech is quoting a repair on a unit with a 10-year service history, that history changes the recommendation. A $400 repair on a 15-year-old unit with 6 service visits in 3 years is a different conversation than the same repair on a 5-year-old unit.
Arriving without unit history adds 45–90 minutes of diagnostic re-work per service call. At $100/hour and 3 such calls per tech per week, that is $15K–$23K/year in wasted labor per technician.
These mistakes are the most common reasons implementations fail. Avoid them.
A customer record with service history at the account level is not an asset record. Asset records track service history at the equipment level — this specific unit, at this specific location.
When a unit is replaced, the old asset should be retired and the new asset created. Continuing to log service against the old asset record creates a confusing history.
Shops without asset-level service history cannot honor implied warranties, cannot identify failure patterns, and cannot differentiate their service from a tech who looks at the unit cold on every visit.
Reading the guide is step one. Step two is having a working solution built for your specific workflow. Here's how we do it:
We study exactly where equipment service history happens in your pressure washing operation — the forms, the handoffs, the pain points.
Not a demo. Not a slide deck. A real, functional prototype that eliminates the pain point and works with your existing tools.
You test the prototype on a real job. If it doesn't fix the problem, you don't pay. No ReKeying, guaranteed.
Tell us about your operation and we'll build you a working solution. No ReKeying. No commitment. No credit card.
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