Who we are, and why we built this

TrackOver LLC

We weren't a software company. We ran a small contracting outfit. Trucks, crews, dirt, long days. The same work the people we build for do every day. And like most small contractors, we ran the whole thing out of a glovebox full of apps that barely worked.

One app for jobsite photos. Another for time cards. A group chat for the crew. A spreadsheet for jobs and a shoebox for receipts. Every one of them cost money. None of them talked to each other. At the end of the month we were paying for all of it and still losing photos, missing hours, and guessing whether a job actually made us any money.

The day we'd had enough

It hit one morning. We'd just typed the same job into the fourth different app. A customer had asked for photos we couldn't find. Another invoice went out late. We stopped and said it out loud: enough.There had to be a better way to run a trade business than duct-taping together six tools built by people who'd never stood in a trench.

So we did something a little crazy. We started taking classes at night. We brought in developers and designers. We took everything we knew about running crews and turned it into the software we always wished we had. And we tested every version on our own jobs first. If it didn't hold up on a real jobsite, it didn't ship.

What it became

That tool became TrackOver. One place to run the whole operation. Photos, time, jobs, crews, customers, and billing, finally in sync between the field and the office. Most contractors don't stick to one trade, so we built it as a family of apps. DirtOps for excavation and utility work first, with SnowOps, LawnOps, and FiberOps right behind it, all sharing the same core so your data follows you from one season to the next.

We're still contractors at heart. We just got tired of paying a fortune to stay disorganized. Figured you probably are too.

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