Temporary fencing companies manage hundreds of panels across dozens of sites, often simultaneously. Every panel on a site is rented revenue - when you can't track what's where, you can't bill accurately and you can't recover missing inventory. TMI fixes the operational foundation.
The work gets done. The fence goes up. The problem is everything that happens after - tracking which panels are at which site, billing for the actual days on rent, and recovering inventory when the job is done.
You know you have 800 panels. At any given time, maybe 200 of them are at sites you can account for precisely. The rest are somewhere - extended rentals, jobs that ended but weren't fully pulled, panels that got relocated without being tracked. That unaccounted inventory is costing you replacement cost and rental revenue.
A fence goes up on a commercial construction site. The project runs three weeks longer than the original estimate. If you're billing by invoice cycle rather than by actual days on site, you're leaving three weeks of rental revenue on the table every time this happens.
Install crews and pull crews scheduled by text message and phone calls. A pull job gets scheduled on the same day a large install needs your full crew. Conflicts discovered the morning of. Customers waiting. Overtime paid because the coordination failed.
Designed for the specific operational model of a temporary fencing company - inventory by location, rental billing by actual days, crew dispatch, and recovery all managed from a single system.
Every panel assigned to a site at install. Quantity tracked in and out. You know exactly how many panels are at each location and when each site's rental clock started.
Billing calculated from actual install and pull dates, not invoice cycles. Extended rentals billed automatically when a job runs past the original estimate. Revenue leakage from under-billing eliminated.
Install and pull jobs scheduled on a shared board. Crew capacity tracked. Conflicts visible before the day of. Jobs sequenced efficiently so your crews aren't doubling back across town.
Sites flagged when project end dates pass without a pull scheduled. Recovery crew dispatched before panels sit untracked for weeks. Missing inventory identified and addressed systematically rather than discovered at year end.
Every site, every rental period, every invoice tracked per customer. Repeat contractors get accurate quotes based on their actual history. Dispute resolution backed by documented site records instead of memory.
Delivery trucks, forklifts, and specialized installation equipment tracked by location and availability. Job assignments made against actual equipment availability, not guesswork about where the truck ended up after the last job.
Start with The Audit. One session to map your workflows, find the highest-leverage problems, and build your plan.