5 Ways to Reduce Windshield Time in Restoration
“Windshield time.”
In restoration, it’s the hours your team spends behind the wheel driving to and from jobs, and someone’s always paying for it.
It’s not just about fuel or payroll. It’s the time you lose, the focus that gets broken, the momentum that stalls.
We’ve seen it happen more times than I can count. A technician goes out to document a loss, but they miss a room. Or continuous flooring shows up, because it always does. Suddenly, that “one visit” turns into two. That’s double the drive, double the time, double the cost.
You can’t eliminate windshield time. However, you can make sure you only pay for it once.
Here are five ways to do that.
1. Capture Everything the First Time
Nine times out of ten, the entire floor is affected. Continuous flooring? Almost guaranteed. We tell teams all the time: don’t just scan the kitchen and leave. Document the full scope on day one, so you’re not stuck going back for the details you missed.
DocuSketch makes this simple. One tour and every corner is captured. That means fewer return trips and more time moving jobs forward.
2. Standardize Your Site Checklists
Missed documentation is one of the biggest profit leaks. We often hear things like “we forgot to measure the hallway” or “did we get that ceiling photo.” Every forgotten room or measurement means another unplanned trip.
That’s where standardized checklists matter. They do more than keep people accountable. They free up your team to focus on the work, instead of trying to remember every single detail. Consistency across crews means nothing gets missed and no one is reinventing the wheel each time they walk into a loss.
One of the best explanations of this comes from my colleague Robb, in this LinkedIn post. He shows how checklists create repeatable success and cut down costly errors. It may sound basic, but putting it into practice saves hours on the road and protects your margins.
3. Leverage Remote Collaboration
Project managers don’t need to be at every job site, every day. With DocuSketch 360° scans, the office can see exactly what was captured and step in with questions or approvals without making the drive themselves.
This keeps a select few team members on the ground while others can stay focused on moving projects forward, without everyone racking up unnecessary miles.
4. Optimize Scheduling & Routing
This feels obvious, but it often gets overlooked. Try grouping jobs in the same area, when possible, and use route-planning tools like Routific, or Circuit to map the most efficient path. Less zigzag across town means more hours onsite and fewer wasted miles in traffic.
Want to see how this works in practice? Take a look at the Field Service Route Optimization Demo by NextBillion.ai. It’s a handy resource that shows how teams can cut down drive time with smarter planning.
5. Build in Quality Control Before Leaving
Before your team pulls out of the driveway, do a final check: every room accounted for, photos OK, notes all set. A two-minute review beats a two-hour return trip.
The short pause onsite saves long delays later from “we didn’t document that.”
The Bottom Line
Windshield time will always be part of restoration. But duplicate windshield time? That’s optional.
With DocuSketch, you capture the full scope once, cut the wasted miles, and keep your team moving forward, not circling back.
Doing This Can:
- Cut wasted drive time and fuel
- Protect project margins by reducing unplanned trips
- Keep your team focused on restoring, not revisiting
- Make documentation once and done feel like the standard
For More Ideas on Optimizing Your Team’s Time and Driving Efficiency
Explore the DocuSketch Resource Library for guides and articles on improving field documentation best practices, time management workflows, and tips for using technology to streamline operations.
You might also like:
- How to Create a Restoration Company Business Plan (That’s Actually Useful). Practical steps to map workflows and cut wasted time.
You can’t cut out windshield time, but with DocuSketch, you can reduce it. Capture it once, and keep your team moving forward.