Holiday Readiness Checklist for Restoration Pros
When the Holidays Don’t Slow Down
In December 2022, a historic Arctic blast swept across North America, driving temperatures as low as –40°F in parts of the Midwest. More than 1.7 million homes lost power, and insured losses from burst pipes and water damage exceeded $6 billion, according to the Insurance Information Institute.
For most people, the holidays are a time to slow down. For restoration professionals, it’s different. Depending on the weather and where they work, a quiet night can shift quickly into response mode. When a freeze hits or a pipe bursts, they’re the ones heading back out to keep homes safe and families at ease.
The 2022 freeze wasn’t just a weather event. It was a test of readiness. It showed how much depends on preparation, not only on the right tools but on strong systems and resilient people.
One burst pipe can soak a ceiling, ruin insulation, and trigger mold growth within 24 hours. These are the moments when crews discover how well their systems hold up under pressure.
Readiness means more than backup generators and dehumidifiers. It means leadership, empathy, and systems that protect both your clients and your team.
Plan Ahead: Build Systems That Stand Up to Stress
"Plan before [disaster] happens, and make sure your people are taken care of... especially during the holidays.”
That’s Ben Justesen's top priority ahead of the holiday period.
Holiday readiness starts with clear communication and consistent systems. When everyone on your team knows who to call, where to find documentation, and how to escalate issues, a stressful situation becomes more manageable, and service stays consistent. With DocuSketch, teams can leave notes directly on a project timeline, link those comments to 360° visuals, and share updates instantly across the team. That means every field technician and project manager sees the same information in real time, even when shifts change or new crew members step in.
Ben’s Readiness Checklist:
- Set your team up for success. Provide food, energy drinks, and real breaks so people can stay grounded and connect with their families. Establish a clear end-of-day cutoff so everyone can reset and show up ready for tomorrow.
- Have temp services for fieldwork lined up beforehand and make arrangements with competitors to pass off incoming work you can't take on if needed.
- Know and communicate who your leaders are. Big jobs in stressful periods will need direction from someone experienced.
- Build connections and foster industry relationships. Create a strong network of trusted partners and resources so you always know exactly who to call when you need specialized support or equipment.
Don’t let missed emergency calls mean leaving someone without help. A backup roster and automated call forwarding can turn near misses into wins.
"Have contingency plans in place before the holiday season arrives. Know your main team, your backups, and let your team know what could happen." — Ben Justesen
Take Care of Your People: Leadership Starts Before the Storm
"If you take care of your people, that's how you get through [tough] events. If you don't, you struggle," says Todd Sangid.
For him, leadership during the holidays isn’t about pushing harder. It’s about creating space for honesty, empathy, and human connection.
Crews working through the Christmas or New Year's period need more than good pay. They need to feel valued. Building trust should start early, through one-on-one check-ins before the end of the year, sharing small wins in team meetings, or showing gratitude with a meal or a thoughtful message.
Todd’s Team-Care Checklist:
- Be authentic. Take care of your people, treat them well, give them breaks when they need them, and support them through the mentally taxing parts of the job. When you take care of your people early, that foxhole mentality kicks in, and that’s how you get through holiday events efficiently.
- Protect your relationships. If a relationship you’ve worked hard to cultivate calls you during a freeze and you can’t respond, all your hard work goes out the window. Preparing your team ahead of time ensures you can show up when it matters.
- Set expectations for a full-team response. During unexpected events, everyone—from mitigation to reconstruction to office administrators—may need to jump in. If you’re willing and able, you work, and you do what you have to do.
When leaders take the time to check in with their team, it shows them that they matter. A technician who feels seen and supported is far more likely to step up when calls come in. Those small moments of care build loyalty, strengthen communication, and keep teams calm and focused when the pressure’s on.
Build Your Network: Partners, Vendors, and Tools
The 2022 freeze showed how much faster companies recovered when they had trusted vendor and partner relationships. Crews who already had backup contacts on speed dial could secure additional resources before shortages hit. Those who didn’t often lost precious time waiting.
Readiness isn’t just internal. It depends on who stands with you when demand spikes. Check in with partners now. Confirm they can step in to support if needed, so expectations stay realistic.
Documentation also plays a crucial role in how smoothly claims progress. The Insurance Information Institute advises policyholders to thoroughly document property damage, noting that clear evidence helps prevent delays and disputes during the claim process. Restoration teams using tools like DocuSketch to capture 360° visuals and floor plans can provide that same level of clarity to carriers, helping everyone move faster and with fewer surprises.
Key Steps to Strengthen Your Holiday Support Network:
- Confirm partner availability ahead of the holidays so there are no surprises when demand spikes. Ask to share emergency hours and contact details for on-call staff. Setting expectations now prevents delays later.
- Update partner and adjuster contact lists and circulate them to your team leads. Include backup numbers and email addresses so there’s always a way to reach key people if someone’s out of office.
- Ensure standard documentation for all projects. When photos, reports, and measurements follow a consistent structure, it saves time for carriers and reduces the need for back-and-forth communication during approvals.
- Back up key files to cloud storage and confirm that your team can upload from mobile. That way, even if laptops are left behind or offices close early, no vital data gets lost when projects move fast.
“We had arrangements where I could call some competitors for help. You can’t do that without trust and relationships built ahead of time.” — Ben Justesen
Readiness Is a Culture, Not a Checklist
Each year brings new challenges. Weather shifts, materials evolve, and customers expect more. What stays the same is the need for dependable systems and a culture that prioritizes preparedness as part of the job, not an afterthought.
Readiness isn’t a one-time task. It’s built through repetition, communication, and care. When your team feels supported and your systems are tested, the holidays stop being a time of panic and become a time to prove your professionalism.
You can’t predict the next freeze, flood, or fire, but you can prepare your people for them. A solid plan, clear documentation, and a culture of care will carry your team through any season.
Start your readiness plan today. Discover how DocuSketch enables restoration professionals to plan smarter, respond faster, and safeguard their team when it matters most.


