Trailer unit history should follow the repair
Keep customer, company, unit, complaint, attachments, notes, and status visible as the job moves from intake to completion.
Trailer repair shops
Trailer repair work needs fast intake, recurring unit history, parts availability, technician handoff, and invoice-ready documentation. Shop Command helps the service desk, parts counter, and technicians keep that story together.
Trailer repair service orders
Unit history and complaint context
Parts and labor handoff
Invoice-readiness review
Workflow fit
Keep customer, company, unit, complaint, attachments, notes, and status visible as the job moves from intake to completion.
Connect part usage, cost, sale price, technician work, and completed-work notes before the office reviews invoice totals.
Show what is on site, what is completed, what is waiting on parts, and what is stuck before billing.
Open a trailer unit and review prior service context.
Create a service order with two complaints.
Assign technician work and add parts to the complaint.
Review completed-not-invoiced work before billing.
Trailer units come back with recurring complaints or repeat fleet work.
Parts availability and service status are hard to keep aligned.
The office spends time rebuilding what happened before invoicing.
FAQ
No. The workflow is useful for trailer repair teams that need service orders, unit history, parts, labor, and invoice review connected.
No. Start with the service, parts, technician time, and invoice-readiness workflow, then decide what else should stay connected.
Use one service order, parts handoff, technician time, or invoice-readiness problem to test whether Shop Command fits.