Why Tracking Piece Work Matters
If you pay your crew by the piece, you need accurate production data. Get it wrong and you either overpay — eating into your margins — or underpay, which creates trust problems with your crew.
The challenge is that piece work happens on job sites, in the field, in real-time conditions where paperwork is the last thing anyone wants to deal with. Let us look at how contractors typically track piece work and what actually works.
Method 1: Paper Time Cards
The oldest method. Your crew writes down what they did at the end of each day on a paper card or tally sheet.
Pros: No technology required. Simple to understand.
Cons: Cards get lost, wet, or illegible. Numbers are written from memory at the end of the day. No way to verify. You spend hours deciphering and entering data into a spreadsheet every week.
Method 2: Text Messages and Phone Calls
A step up from paper. Your crew texts you their numbers at the end of the day.
Pros: Fast. Everyone has a phone.
Cons: Messages get buried in your inbox. No standardized format. You are still manually entering everything into a spreadsheet. And when someone forgets to text you, you are back to chasing people down.
Method 3: Spreadsheets
You build a Google Sheet or Excel file and have your crew or foremen enter data.
Pros: Better organization than paper. Can do calculations automatically.
Cons: Formula errors. Accidentally overwriting data. Multiple versions floating around. Not designed for real-time field entry. Most crew members do not want to navigate a spreadsheet on their phone.
Method 4: Purpose-Built Software
Tools like Piece Work Pro are designed specifically for tracking piece work in field-based trades.
Pros:
- Crew logs pieces from their phone when they clock out
- Data is captured at the point of work, not from memory
- Pay calculates automatically based on your rates
- Reports are ready when you need them
- GPS confirms crew location
- Nothing gets lost
Cons: Requires your crew to use an app. But honestly, if your crew can use Instagram, they can use a piece work app.
What to Look For in a Piece Work Tracking System
- Mobile-first — Your crew is on job sites, not at desks. The tool needs to work on a phone.
- Simple enough for your crew — If it takes more than 30 seconds to log pieces, your crew will not use it.
- Automatic pay calculations — You should not have to pull out a calculator.
- Exportable reports — You need to get data out for payroll and job costing.
- Locked records — Once approved, records should not be editable. Audit trail matters.
Making the Switch
If you are currently using paper or spreadsheets, switching to digital tracking does not have to be complicated. Start with one crew or one project. Let your team get comfortable with the process. Once they see that it takes less time than writing on paper, adoption happens naturally.
The contractors who track piece work accurately are the ones who know exactly what their jobs cost, pay their crew fairly, and bid their next job with confidence.