Boss PDX Field Operations Guide

GET /field/overview

The operating standard for everyone on a Boss PDX job site. This includes field crew, subcontractors, project managers, and site leads. If you set foot on a client's property on our behalf, this guide is for you.

Why this exists. Boss PDX has grown faster than its documentation. These standards aren't punishment — they're the playbook we should have written from day one. Follow them, and projects run smoother, clients are happier, and you get paid on time with less hassle.

How to Read This Guide

Each section is structured the same way so you always know what you're looking at:

Section What It Contains
The Standard The expected behavior. The baseline. This is the "everything is working correctly" state.
Common Scenarios Real situations you'll encounter with the exact right way to handle them. Think of these as request/response pairs — the situation comes in, your response goes out.
Do Not Hard stops. Things that will create problems for you, the client, and the company. These aren't suggestions.
When In Doubt The fallback. When a situation doesn't match anything here, this tells you exactly who to contact and how.

Your Team

You'll see these roles referenced throughout. Know who they are on your project before day one.

RoleHandlesContact Via
Account Manager Money, scope changes, client issues, new projects Zoho Cliq or Zoho Mail
Project Manager (PM) Scheduling, on-site logistics, progress, construction decisions Zoho Cliq
Project Administrator Materials, delivery dates, permits, documentation Zoho Cliq or Zoho Mail
The golden rule. When in doubt, message your PM on Zoho Cliq. That is always the right first move.

Client Interactions

GET /field/client-interactions

You are a guest in someone's home or business. Every interaction either builds trust or breaks it. There is no neutral. This section defines how Boss PDX professionals interact with the people who are paying for our work.

The Standard

Every client interaction should leave the client feeling like they made the right decision hiring Boss PDX. You are polite, brief, and professional. You do not give opinions on their home, their choices, or their timeline unless asked — and even then, you direct them to the PM.

Common Scenarios

⟶ Client asks: "How's it going? Are we on schedule?"
Your response: "Things are moving along well. [PM name] has the full picture on the schedule — I'll make sure they give you an update."

Why: You might think you're being helpful, but if you say "we're ahead" and something changes, or you say "we're behind" and the PM hasn't communicated that yet — you've created a problem. Let the PM own the timeline.
⟶ Client says: "Hey while you're here, can you also look at this other thing?"
Your response: "I appreciate you thinking of that. That would need to go through our project team so we can scope it properly. I can pass that along, or you can reach out to [Account Manager name] directly."

Why: This is how scope creep starts. Every "quick favor" becomes an expectation, and eventually a dispute. See the Scope & Changes section for the full protocol.
⟶ Client is unhappy or confrontational about something
Your response: "I hear you, and I want to make sure we address this properly. Let me get [PM name] looped in — they'll be the best person to resolve this for you."

Do not: Argue. Defend. Blame a coworker. Promise a fix. Get emotional. Your only job is to acknowledge and escalate.
⟶ Client tries to text you directly about the project
Your response: "Hey [client name], I want to make sure your request gets handled quickly — the best way is to reach out to [PM name] or email info@bosspdx.com. That way nothing falls through the cracks."

Why: Personal texts between field workers and clients create invisible conversations the office can't see or manage. This is how miscommunications happen.

Do Not

Side work is a fireable offense. If a client asks you to do work outside of the Boss PDX contract — even small things — the answer is always: "Let me connect you with our office so we can set that up properly." Accepting side work puts your employment, our insurance, and the client at risk.

When In Doubt

Client says something unexpected
Acknowledge it
Message PM on Zoho Cliq
PM handles it

If it's urgent and your PM isn't responding, escalate to the Account Manager. If neither responds within 30 minutes, email info@bosspdx.com.

Scope & Change Requests

PUT /field/scope-changes

Scope changes are the #1 source of project problems at Boss PDX. This section exists because workers on site have been agreeing to extra work, swapping materials, and making handshake deals with clients — and it creates chaos for everyone. Here's how to handle it correctly.

The core rule. You cannot add, remove, change, or swap any work without a formal Change Order processed through the Boss PDX admin team. On-site workers, including PMs, laborers, and subcontractors, do not have the authority to modify scope. Period.

The Standard

The scope of work is defined in the signed contract. That contract was carefully estimated, priced, and agreed to. Any deviation — no matter how small — needs to go through the office. This protects the client, protects you, and protects the company.

Changes over $2,000 require a formal contract amendment under Oregon law. Changes under $2,000 still require a documented Change Order.

Common Scenarios

⟶ Client: "Can you just move this outlet a few inches to the left?"
Your response: "I'd want to make sure that doesn't affect anything else in the plan. Let me flag it with [PM name] and they'll get back to you on it — usually pretty quick."

Why: Moving an outlet might require re-routing wiring, updating the permit, and adjusting the invoice. What feels like 5 minutes of work can cascade into hours of documentation. Let the office decide.
⟶ Client: "I changed my mind on the tile — can we swap it?"
Your response: "Absolutely — changes like that happen all the time. [Project Administrator name] handles the materials side and can walk you through the options and timing. I'll pass that along."

Why: Material changes affect pricing, lead times, and potentially the construction sequence. The administrator needs to be in the loop before any material is ordered, returned, or installed.
⟶ Client: "I'll just pay you directly for this extra work."
Your response: "I appreciate that, but all work has to go through Boss PDX so it's covered under our license and insurance. I'll make sure the team knows you're interested and they'll get you a quick quote."

Why: Work done outside the contract is uninsured, unlicensed, and puts the client's home and your livelihood at risk. This is also how legal disputes start.
⟶ You discover something behind a wall that changes the plan
Your response:
  1. Stop work on that specific task immediately.
  2. Document it — take photos, send to PM on Zoho Cliq with a description.
  3. Wait for direction. Do not improvise a solution. Do not proceed with the original plan.

Why: These are the "unknown unknowns" referenced in client contracts. The PM and Account Manager need to communicate this to the client and issue a Change Order if needed. Proceeding without authorization can void the contract terms.

Do Not

When In Doubt

Client requests a change
Acknowledge
Tell them it goes through the office
Message PM on Cliq
PM/Admin issues Change Order

Communication Protocol

POST /field/communication

Bad communication is the root cause of most problems at Boss PDX. Not skill. Not materials. Communication. This section defines who you talk to, when, and through what channel — so nothing falls through the cracks.

The Standard

All project communication happens in Zoho. Not in personal texts. Not in phone calls that aren't followed up in writing. Not in side conversations on site. If it's not in Zoho, it didn't happen.

Communication Channels

ChannelUse ForResponse Time
Zoho Cliq Day-to-day field communication. Quick questions, photo updates, check-ins, urgent flags. Within 30 minutes during work hours
Zoho Mail Formal communication. Anything involving clients, vendors, or that needs a paper trail. Within 4 hours during business days
Zoho Projects Task updates, progress tracking, time logging. Where you see what's expected of you today. Updated daily

Required Daily Communication

Every day you're on a job site, the following must happen:

Escalation Path

When something goes wrong or you need a decision, follow this chain:

1. Your PM
2. Account Manager
3. info@bosspdx.com

Always start with your PM on Cliq. If you don't hear back in 30 minutes and it's urgent, go to the next level. Never skip a step unless someone is unreachable.

Do Not

Jobsite Conduct & Professionalism

GET /field/jobsite-conduct

These are the non-negotiable baseline standards for being on a Boss PDX job site. They apply to everyone — crew, subs, PMs, and site leads. Think of this as the dress code, house rules, and code of conduct rolled into one.

The Standard

Appearance

Punctuality

Site Cleanliness

Behavior on Site

Client Property

The "would I do this in front of Lucas" test. Before you do anything on site, ask yourself: "Would I be comfortable doing this if the CEO were standing right here?" If the answer is no, don't do it.

Tools & Systems

POST /field/zoho

Boss PDX runs on Zoho. These are the four tools you need to know, what each one does, and what's expected of you in each. If you're not using these tools, you're invisible to the office — and that creates problems for everyone, including your paycheck.

Zoho Cliq

💬 Real-Time Communication — Your Primary Channel
What it is: The company chat tool. Think of it as Slack or Teams — but this is the one we actually use.

What you use it for:
  • Quick questions to your PM or admin
  • Photo updates from the job site
  • Flagging issues or discoveries
  • Confirming verbal instructions in writing

Expectation: Cliq is installed on your phone. Notifications are on during work hours. You respond to messages within 30 minutes.

Zoho Mail

✉️ Formal Communication — The Paper Trail
What it is: Your Boss PDX email. Every employee has one.

What you use it for:
  • Communication that involves clients or vendors
  • Anything that needs a formal record
  • Sending or receiving documents, permits, specs

Expectation: Check your email at least once a day. Reply within 4 business hours for anything directed to you.

Zoho Projects

📋 Task Tracking — Your Daily Work Order
What it is: The project management tool. This is where you see your tasks, log your time, and update progress.

What you use it for:
  • Clock in / Clock out — this is mandatory. No time logged = no pay processed.
  • See your assigned tasks for the day
  • Update task status as you complete work
  • Log any notes about issues encountered

Expectation: You clock in when you arrive at site. You clock out when you leave. Every day. This is directly tied to your paycheck.

Zoho Books

💰 Finance — Invoices & Expenses
What it is: The accounting system. Most field workers won't interact with this directly, but you should know it exists.

What you might use it for:
  • Submitting expense receipts (materials purchased with company card)
  • Viewing invoices related to your projects

Expectation: If you use a Boss PDX card (Ramp), submit the receipt the same day in Zoho Books or forward it to receipts@bosspdx.com. Using the wrong card or not submitting receipts will be flagged.
If it's not in Zoho, it didn't happen. Verbal conversations, personal texts, and handshake agreements are invisible to the company. If you need something documented — put it in Cliq. If you worked hours — log them in Projects. If you spent money — receipt it in Books.

Pay & Time Tracking

GET /field/pay

You get paid weekly through Gusto. The process is simple, but it depends on you logging your time correctly. No logged time = no pay processed. Here's the full flow.

How You Get Paid

You clock in/out in Zoho Projects
Caitlin reviews & reconciles
Submitted to Gusto
Gusto pays you weekly

Time Tracking Rules

Pay Schedule

DetailInfo
Pay FrequencyWeekly
Processed ByCaitlin (via Gusto)
Time SourceZoho Projects time entries
Pay Issues ContactCaitlin on Zoho Cliq or Mail

Company Cards (Ramp)

Before you get your card or Gusto access: You must pass a brief onboarding quiz on time tracking and expense procedures. This ensures everyone starts on the same page and prevents the costly errors we've seen in the past.

Do Not

Escalation Matrix

ESC /field/escalation

Quick reference for who handles what and how to reach them.

Situation First Contact Channel If No Response in 30 min
Client asks for scope change PM Cliq Account Manager
Discovery behind wall / under floor PM Cliq + photos Account Manager
Safety issue or injury PM + 911 if needed Phone call → Cliq Lucas directly
Client is upset or confrontational PM Cliq Account Manager
Materials wrong or missing Project Administrator Cliq PM
Can't access site / locked out PM Cliq or Phone Account Manager
Forgot to clock in/out Caitlin Cliq or Mail Lucas
Failed inspection PM Cliq immediately Account Manager
Client offers side work Decline + inform PM Cliq
Everything else PM Cliq info@bosspdx.com

Glossary

REF /field/glossary

Terms used throughout Boss PDX field operations.

TermDefinition
Change OrderA formal document modifying the original scope, timeline, or cost of a project. Required for all scope changes, no matter how small.
Precon MeetingPre-construction meeting. Happens before work begins to align the team on scope, sequence, and expectations.
PMProject Manager. Your primary point of contact for day-to-day operations on a project.
Account ManagerHandles the business relationship with the client — money, contracts, and escalated issues.
Project AdministratorManages materials, permits, and documentation for your project.
ScopeThe specific work described in the signed contract. Anything outside of scope requires a Change Order.
Known UnknownsThings we expect might be an issue but can't confirm until work starts (e.g., what's behind a wall).
Unknown UnknownsSurprises — things no one anticipated. Handled via Change Orders when discovered.
Horse TradeWhen a client and worker informally swap or substitute work items without going through the office. This is not allowed.
GoBackWhen finished work needs to be redone due to quality issues. The goal is zero GoBacks.
Lien WaiverA document signed by the contractor waiving the right to place a lien on the client's property after final payment. Protects the homeowner's title.
RampThe company credit card platform. Each authorized employee gets their own card with spending controls.
GustoThe payroll system. Processes weekly pay based on hours submitted from Zoho Projects.
Zoho CliqThe company chat platform. Primary channel for day-to-day field communication.
Zoho ProjectsProject management and time tracking tool. Where tasks are assigned and hours are logged.
Zoho BooksThe company's accounting system. Used for invoicing, expense tracking, and receipt management.
CCB LicenseOregon Construction Contractors Board license. Required for certain roles and responsibilities.
EPA Lead DisclosureFederal requirement to inform homeowners about lead-based paint hazards before renovating homes built before 1978.