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PR-2102 · Live

Chem Script

ChemScript holds a chemistry standard for every site on the route, written by the field supervisor: the target ranges, dosing rules, and trigger thresholds that site should be kept to. A site is whatever the operation treats and keeps in spec: a pool, a fountain, a cooling tower, a pest-control account, a facility under a sanitation program. When a route tech finishes a visit and submits their readings, ChemScript checks each number against that site's standard and flags anything out of range. The field supervisor sees only the visits that drifted, with the off reading called out and by how much. Every site gets checked the same way on every visit, without the supervisor having to remember each site's targets or read the numbers by hand.

Built for
the person it works for
Processes
one unit of work
Priced
12 rivets
per appointment
Returns
3 min
back to the field supervisor
3 min × $18/hr
$0.90
Returned Each Run

The promise

The field supervisor opens the day to a route that is already checked: the sites that are fine pass quietly, and the few that drifted are waiting, already flagged. Every site is held to the standard the supervisor set for it, without the supervisor having to carry each site's target ranges in their head or read the numbers one by one. The attention that used to be spread thin across the whole route goes to the handful of visits that actually need a decision.

How it works

The path from input to value.

  1. 01

    Write a script for each site

    The field supervisor sets each site's target ranges, dosing rules, trigger thresholds, and seasonal or conditional overrides once, and updates them as the site changes. A site is whatever the operation treats: a pool, a fountain, a cooling tower, a pest-control account, a facility sanitation program.

  2. 02

    Capture readings at the visit

    The route tech opens the site's active script and records the visit's readings against it.

  3. 03

    Check on submission

    When the tech submits, ChemScript compares every reading to that site's script and flags anything outside the defined range.

  4. 04

    Review only what drifted

    The field supervisor sees the flagged visits and reviews them; the in-range visits pass without needing a look.

  5. 05

    Keep it with the visit record

    When the field management system is connected, ChemScript seeds the first script from existing chemistry history, opens the right site's script from the job, and writes the readings and flags back to the visit record.

The day before. The day after.

Same moments. Lived differently.

  • 7:00 AM

    Before

    The field supervisor pulls up the day's route. Dozens of sites, each with its own target ranges. Tries to keep straight which ones run hot and which ones to watch.

    After

    The supervisor opens the route. Every site already carries its own script. Nothing to memorize.

  • 12:00 PM

    Before

    Readings come in through the morning. The supervisor scans a handful from memory, comparing numbers to what each site should be. Most visits go unchecked; there is not time for all of them.

    After

    Techs record readings against each site's script through the morning. The in-range visits pass quietly. The two that drifted are already flagged and waiting.

  • 3:00 PM

    Before

    One site's sanitizer was low again. Nobody flagged it. The reading was right there in the submission, but no one compared it to the standard.

    After

    The supervisor opens the flagged visits, sees exactly which reading is off and by how much, sets a dosing adjustment on one site and a re-check on the other.

  • 5:30 PM

    Before

    A customer calls about a fouled, out-of-spec system. The supervisor goes back through the week's readings by hand to work out when it started to drift.

    After

    The route closes out with every visit checked against its standard. The site that would have gone out of spec was caught at noon, not from a callback a week later.

What it doesn’t do

The edges we drew on purpose.

A product that tries to do everything ends up doing nothing well. Here’s what we left out, and why we don’t feel bad about it.

  • ×Does not dose chemicals or control any treatment equipment
  • ×Does not diagnose why a reading is out of range or prescribe a fix beyond the thresholds the supervisor set.
  • ×Does not schedule, dispatch, or route the visit.
  • ×Does not author or certify regulatory compliance records