How Simple Tech Can Save Time on Every Restoration Job
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Watch the video on YouTube - Most folks doing this work never got handed the right tools. You’re out there dealing with water, fire, mold—real messes—and still stuck using folders, group texts, and dry erase boards to keep track of jobs. That’s been the norm for too long.
I had a good chat with Matt Gregory, CEO of Apex Era, who started in the field. The talk wasn’t about big ideas or tech-speak. It was about the stuff that actually matters: making your day easier, cutting down the hassle, and giving you a setup that just works.
How Most of Us End Up in Restoration (And Why We Stay)
The Real Workflow in the Field: Folders, Text Chains, and Dropbox
Why Most Restoration Software Is Too Complicated to Use
What Good Restoration Tools Actually Look Like
Now there are a few tools that actually make sense.
Take magicplan for example — Walk a room, scan it with your phone, get a clean floor plan. No guessing. No manual measurements.
When your tools talk to each other, the whole job gets smoother. You capture once, calculate once, and stop double-handling every bit of info.
The goal isn’t to have more tools. It’s to have the right ones that do their part and don’t make your day harder.

Learn more: 11 Best Floor Plan Sketching Software for Restoration Businesses
Stop Stacking Tools That Do the Same Thing
You don’t need 17 different apps that all sort of do the same thing. That’s just noise. Here’s what happens when you over-stack:
Too Many Tools Means:
Wasted time switching between systems
Confused techs who never get trained right
Redundant features doing double duty
There’s this idea that everything should integrate with everything else. But most of the time, if you’re using one tool right, you don’t need the other one.
Stick with what makes sense. Keep it lean. That way, new folks don’t need a whole course just to log in and start working.
Getting Crews to Actually Use the Tech
Even if you’ve got the right tech, you still have to get your team to actually use it. And that’s no small thing. The field moves fast. People are busy. If something slows them down or makes their day harder, they’ll drop it in a heartbeat.
To get buy-in, tools need to be:
Faster than the old way
Easier to learn than a microwave
Helpful on Day 1, not Day 30
That’s what separates useful software from shelfware. The minute a new tech helps someone wrap up a job quicker or communicate better with the office, that’s when it sticks.
Real Fixes Are Finally Coming From Inside the Industry
Some of the most exciting changes in restoration right now aren’t coming from the outside. They’re being built by folks who know exactly how broken the system is.
Stuff like:
High-output dehus – New gear pushing 250+ pints per day, meaning fewer machines, quicker dry-outs, and faster job turnover.
Voice Capture in magicplan – While walking a job, you can just talk—describe what you see, what’s damaged, what needs to be done—and it automatically turns your voice into written notes you can drop into reports later. No more stopping to write things down or trying to remember details hours later.
These aren’t surface-level updates. They’re real attempts to fix the pain we’ve been living with for decades. What’s different now is that these solutions are coming from people who’ve walked the job sites, seen the mess, and decided to do something about it.
Use Fewer Tools That Actually Help You Get Paid Faster
At the end of the day, restoration isn’t about dashboards. It’s about showing up, fixing the damage, and getting the job done. Tech should help with that. Not get in the way.
Here’s what matters:
Does it save time in the field?
Does it help your team work better?
Does it get you paid faster?
If it hits those, it stays. If it doesn’t, scrap it. Keep it simple. Pick the stuff that makes your life easier. That’s the only stack worth building.
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Sam Miller
RevOps Manager
Restoration
4 min read





