FieldTag gives you one place to author a residential project and one sticker per room to bring it to site. Here’s the workflow, end to end.
Managers author in the app; trades scan on the wall.
A manager sets up the project in the app — levels, rooms and their stages — and attaches the plans, specs and warnings each room needs. Plans are stored once and referenced by the rooms that use them.
FieldTag produces a QR for each room. The same room can resolve to different trade views, so one sticker serves the plumber, the electrician and the builder — each gets the slice scoped to them.
The QR is printed and placed in the room it belongs to. From that point the physical room and everything FieldTag holds about it are linked by the sticker.
On site, a trade points their phone camera at the sticker. The room opens in the browser — no app to install, no account, no login. The link carries who they are.
A plumber sees plumbing items, fixtures and files; a worker sees plans, levels and warnings. Critical notes — falls, set-outs, hold points — sit right on the room. Everything is read-only.
If a trade needs to flag something, they leave a comment and verify it with their email. The note is tied to the room and the person, so the manager knows exactly where and who.
Back in the app, the manager watches rooms move through their stages and reads verified comments from site — without chasing anyone for a status update.
The thing that keeps a site off old information is keeping the information in one place.
Reissue a plan or change a spec in one place and every room that references it is instantly up to date. No superseded prints on the wall.
Site users can view and comment, never edit. Authoring stays with managers in the app, so the source of truth is always controlled.