The top section shows decision-level metrics. Controls and filter chips tell you exactly what slice of the project you are seeing. Trend charts explain burn behavior over time. Distribution panels show where labor is going. The RFI table is the source of truth.
No signal yet. Waiting for live data before any project-level call can be made.
These cards are for immediate scanning. They should tell you what exists, what is moving, what is stuck, and how much exposure is on the board.
Search, floor, workflow, and verdict filters. The chips below must always tell the truth about the current view.
Read this section to understand whether the labor curve is stable, accelerating, or drifting into ugly territory.
Monthly Simpson T&M burn with cumulative progression layered over it. This should help you see pace change, not just raw totals.
Weekly burn is where spikes, bad batching, and abrupt crew shifts get exposed fastest.
The largest labor consumers deserve immediate scrutiny. If one item is eating the board, that should be obvious.
These panels answer where labor is going, which floors are active, and what work fronts are still hot.
Click a floor card to filter the log below. Green = completed, yellow = in progress, orange = needs touch-ups, gray = not started.
Which areas are carrying the labor burden right now.
Supervisor-logged shift hour distribution by crew member.
These are the active work fronts. If the wrong items are here for too long, your workflow is weak.
The table is the operational core. Charts summarize it. The log is where you verify reality.
| RFI # | Subject | Floor | Workflow status | Answer / verdict | Answered? | Man-hours | Tickets | Initiated | Answered date |
|---|