Craig Sjoquist
New Member
Good idea is to have that you can remove signage for safety repairs till paid in full and signed in some wording like that
this is old but we still use it. I like the part down the bottom about art and sketches.
Do you also link your Filemaker system to Quickbooks by any chance?
Hey all, I know this is an old thread
Hello,We wrote an Access database for Job Orders. It's a huge benefit to have the order in a digital form so that we can look up old orders quickly, and have customers contact info/billing info fill in automatically. The drawback is that we could not figure how how to have each one assigned a unique permanent number. We have managed fine, but there are times that I wish we had that feature.
"A designer knows he has achieved perfection not when there is nothing left to add, but when there is nothing left to take away."
-Antoine de Saint-Exupery
So, you're entering the job into quickbooks, tracking it there and then billing it out?Work Order/Sales Order through Quickbooks
Hey all, I know this is an old thread, but I wanted to ask a couple of questions since my business went a little different direction than I expected.
I started out on the design sign then got into brokering large format print. Over a couple of years, that turned into buying a large format (8300s) Aqueous machine for doing proofs, art prints and a few high end banners/posters. I have since evolved and have decided to open a full sign/print retail shop, splitting it off from the creative side completely. Now I have the wide format, as well as a print press. I'm using Quickbooks for my books, and a simple job jacket/ticket system with "Incoming", "In Progress", and "Ready for Pickup" separation of the tickets.
Does anyone have suggestion for a better system for tracking numbering and intake for these jobs? I'm really worried about getting overwhelmed - QUICKLY!! I want to keep using Quickbooks, but I think I probably need a better intake and filing system. Thoughts?
You forgot gender!I think the point to these kinds of forms (and forms in general) is to differentiate between what information you need, and the information you just thought about and added to fill the empty space.
Case in point. The POS system we use has a system for adding customer information; here's what it asks for:
View attachment 171236
I know that one could argue that this is all useful information. But, come on. Do we really need an office phone number, cell phone AND an additional phone number? Is job Authority critical information? When has country ever been anything but the US? Is Industry type relevant? And what do we need a birthday for? Anyone here want to ask their female customers what their birthday is? How about we add a field where we can enter the weight of the customer (why not)?
Almost all of this we leave blank, and that's why I say that it is poorly designed and a waste of time.
Whatever you do, take the time to really ask yourself if the information is useful. Is it really useful? Why?
The goal (in my opinion) is to make any form sleek and efficient - easy to fill out, has the info you'll need, and nothing else.
what exactly do you mean?Good idea is to have that you can remove signage for safety repairs till paid in full and signed in some wording like that
I think they mean, if there were an issue with follow up payment, then the sign company could become concerned at a necessary repair on their new sign, and the contract allows them to remove it for repairs at their discretion, perhaps the customer will then pay for the sign...what exactly do you mean?