07-12-2022 10:47 AM
Hello, I just wanted to reach out and gather some feedback on how many people allow their technicians to complete the jobs versus having the dispatchers complete out the ticket in house. We have been on ST for 7+ years and have handled it both ways in the past. We currently have dispatchers complete the tickets because it provides a timestamp of who "verified" the job was closed out properly, in the past we had issues with technicians completing tickets and no one going back to verify it or not knowing who didn't verify the ticket, this results in the problem that no form triggers or signatures are stopping someone from closing out the job because from the office side we can bypass all those requirements without even knowing we are bypassing requirements. If anyone has any feedback on which method they follow and why they believe it's best, please share a message!! Thank you 😊
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07-14-2022 03:20 PM
At the shop where I used to work, we always had the technicians closing out their own tickets. It wasn't worth the inefficiencies for us to have the revenue producers waiting to get a hold of a dispatcher or spending that time debriefing the call. We set expectations and spot checked for accuracy. Then also used exception reporting to catch other "outliers". Such as $0 jobs, Commercial business units on non-commercial job types (or vice versa), Recall/Warranty job types without the proper box checked, etc.
Depending on what you're checking for in your review process, there may be some reporting to help flag the outliers.
07-15-2022 05:25 PM
@barbara_6 Hi there! From my experience it's more common for the technician to close out jobs but a lot of companies do utilize required forms that trigger when doing so. It really comes down to preference and staffing, honestly!
08-02-2022 05:29 AM
Yes, I really want us to get to that route because it causes too much overhead, just struggling with then making sure all tickets get checked and everything truly did get completed properly.
07-14-2022 03:20 PM
At the shop where I used to work, we always had the technicians closing out their own tickets. It wasn't worth the inefficiencies for us to have the revenue producers waiting to get a hold of a dispatcher or spending that time debriefing the call. We set expectations and spot checked for accuracy. Then also used exception reporting to catch other "outliers". Such as $0 jobs, Commercial business units on non-commercial job types (or vice versa), Recall/Warranty job types without the proper box checked, etc.
Depending on what you're checking for in your review process, there may be some reporting to help flag the outliers.
08-02-2022 05:27 AM
Thank you, very helpful information!
07-12-2022 01:04 PM
In this case, it would be preference. I've seen it done successfully both ways. Just depends on whether you have more overhead power on the office side or vice versa. Try creating a form with a required* field, last I check that cannot be bypassed from the office or field.
07-15-2022 02:32 PM
There is a setting that can be turned on by your CSM that can make those required forms be required on the office side too!
08-02-2022 05:25 AM
Thank you! It was not working and I did not know there was a setting to turn on, we clearly don't have it turned on!
07-12-2022 12:53 PM
We have had forms required in the past, and they can be easily bypassed from the office side unless something has changed recently. Overall, just trying to figure out if we should change operations and allow our technicians to complete their own tickets or if people prefer having the dispatchers close out the tickets to verify accuracy because there are certain things technicians cannot verify accuracy for such as business units, return visits, follow ups etc. Thank you!
07-12-2022 12:49 PM
Hi @barbara_6 what I've seen work for either sides to close out job is using triggers and forms but making specific fields required so that the form cannot be bypassed. You can also use conditional logic in forms to control if-then situations. This form can be used on either office or field.