Appliance Repair · Step-by-Step Guide
When a repeat customer calls, nobody can find their history. Equipment lists, past invoices, and service notes are scattered across paper files and spreadsheets.
A homeowner calls back 6 months after a washer repair. The tech who serviced it is gone and the service history is on a paper ticket in a filing cabinet. Nobody knows what part was installed, what the failure code was, or whether it's still under labor warranty.
Without accessible service history, the shop cannot honor labor warranty claims, cannot pre-diagnose repeat failures, and has to start from scratch on every return visit — frustrating the customer and wasting diagnostic time.
Follow these steps in order. Each step builds on the previous one.
Determine where customer information currently lives: paper files, spreadsheets, your FSM software, email, techs' phones. Most companies have customer records fragmented across 3–5 places with different versions of the same data.
Determine what every customer record must contain: contact info, equipment on site (make, model, serial number, install date), service history (date, tech, work performed, parts used), and any open warranties or agreements.
Choose one system as the record of truth. Migrate existing customer data into it. Prioritize your active customers first. This is the hardest step — it requires cleaning duplicates and resolving conflicting records.
Every time a tech visits a customer, the record should be updated: what equipment was serviced, what work was performed, what parts were installed. This should be a required step before the job can be marked complete.
When a customer calls, your office staff should be able to pull the full service history before the call is 30 seconds old. This requires a cloud-based system accessible from any device, updated in real time by field techs.
Equipment installed 12 months ago is due for a maintenance visit. Service history triggers let you identify and reach out to these customers before they go silent.
Without accessible history, you lose upsell opportunities and repeat the same diagnostic work — costing $200–$500/incident.
These mistakes are the most common reasons implementations fail. Avoid them.
Spreadsheets can't enforce required fields, can't be updated by techs in the field, can't be searched efficiently at scale, and can't trigger automated actions.
The easiest time to capture equipment model, serial number, and installation date is at the time of install. Trying to reconstruct this information months later from invoices and memory is expensive and often incomplete.
Any customer information that lives on a tech's personal phone is gone when that tech leaves. Field-captured records must go into the shared system, not personal devices.
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 customer records happens in your appliance repair 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.
HVAC
Customer Records
Plumbing
Customer Records
Electrical
Customer Records
General Construction
Customer Records