Reduce Visits

Track Without Daily Visits

Daily site visits are time-consuming and often unnecessary. Cameras let you maintain oversight while making visits purposeful, not habitual.

Why This Matters

Save Travel Time

A 30-minute round trip, 5 days a week = 2.5 hours. That's 10+ hours per month per project.

See More, Travel Less

Camera shows progress constantly. Visit when needed, not on autopilot.

Better Use of Time

Spend saved hours on planning, client communication, or managing more projects.

When to Still Visit

Cameras reduce visits, not eliminate them. Physical presence is still valuable for:

Scheduled inspections and walkthroughs
Critical milestone meetings
Issues spotted on camera that need hands-on review
Client meetings and presentations
Quality control spot-checks

The New Pattern

Before cameras: Visit daily "just to check." Much travel for little new information.

With cameras: Check remotely daily (5 minutes). Visit when there's a specific reason. Same oversight, fraction of the travel.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many site visits can I realistically eliminate?

Most clients reduce visits by 50-70%. Instead of daily visits, they might visit 2-3 times per week. The camera handles routine oversight; visits become purposeful rather than habitual.

Won't contractors slack off if I'm not there?

The opposite often happens. Contractors know the camera is always watching, which improves accountability. And you're not 'not there'—you're watching remotely. They know this.

What if I see something wrong on camera?

Address it through your normal channels—call the site super, send an email, discuss at the next meeting. The camera gives you information; you still manage through communication.

Does this work for multiple projects?

This is where cameras really shine. Managing 3-5 projects without cameras means 3-5x the driving. With cameras, you can check all projects from your desk in minutes, then visit strategically.

Related Topics

Work Smarter, Not Harder

Reclaim hours every week while maintaining better oversight.