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FireFlight Reporting and Dashboards | FireFlight Data Systems
Last updated: April 2026
FireFlight's reporting workspace gives every team member three paths to answers: ad-hoc tools to build their own views without SQL or IT involvement, prebuilt dashboards ready to open on day one, or custom reports built to specification by the FireFlight team. In 2026, most reporting delays are not data problems. They are access problems. This workspace removes the dependency on a developer to answer a question from your own system.
FireFlight reporting workspace overview

If your team is waiting on IT to pull a report that should take thirty seconds, or exporting data to Excel every week to build a view that should already exist in your system, this is the problem FireFlight's reporting workspace was built to solve.

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How does the reporting workspace actually work?

There are three distinct paths to answers in FireFlight reporting, and they are designed for different situations rather than being interchangeable. Understanding which path fits a given need is what makes the workspace efficient rather than overwhelming.

01

Ad-Hoc: Build Your Own View

Drag-and-drop field selectors, filters, and grouping logic. No SQL required. Ideal for analysts, department heads, and project leads who need a specific view on demand. The report reads from live data and stays current without rebuilding.

02

Prebuilt Dashboards: Ready on Day One

Dashboards built by the FireFlight team against specific roles and workflows. No setup required. Finance, operations, inventory, and compliance each have dashboards aligned to their function, available from the moment the workspace is activated.

03

Custom Reports: Built to Your Spec

For complex joins, regulatory submission formats, or client-facing deliverables. Submit the specification and the FireFlight team builds, validates, and delivers the finished report. Recurring reports run on schedule without manual intervention.

What can non-technical users actually build with ad-hoc tools?

Ad-hoc tools in FireFlight give users direct access to the data behind their own workflows through an interface that does not require database knowledge. A department head who wants inventory turnover by warehouse, or a project lead tracking open work orders by technician, builds that view directly in the system. The field selectors are configured to match the data model the user already works with, which means the orientation is about what they want to see rather than how the underlying tables are structured.

The output is a live view, not a static export. When the underlying data changes, the report reflects it on the next refresh. A manager who built a dashboard for a weekly review does not rebuild it the following week or request an updated extract. Grouping and comparison logic handles the analytical work that typically requires SQL or a pivot table: revenue by region, downtime by asset type, procurement spend by supplier category. Those comparisons are configured in the ad-hoc interface without the user needing to know how the data is joined.

Saved views accumulate over time as the team builds the reporting library that matches how the operation actually reviews performance. Each saved view is available to authorized team members, which means the analytical work done by one person does not have to be repeated by everyone else who needs the same perspective.

Audit trail and data integrity in reporting

Every report generated in FireFlight reads from the same transactional records that drive the audit trail. An ad-hoc inventory report and a formal compliance submission pull from the same data layer. There is no separate reporting database to keep synchronized with operational records, and no risk of a dashboard showing figures that diverge from the underlying transactions.

For operations subject to regulatory review, the compliance data in FireFlight is reportable through the same tools as operational data. An environmental compliance officer pulling air permit monitoring records for a state submission uses the same ad-hoc interface as an inventory manager building a stock turnover view. The data is different. The tools are the same. PCG has built reporting systems for regulated industrial and environmental operations since 1995.

What are the prebuilt dashboards and who are they designed for?

Prebuilt dashboards in FireFlight are built by the FireFlight team against specific workflows, roles, and operational areas. An operations manager opening the work order dashboard sees open orders, completion rates, technician utilization, and overdue items in a single view that was designed for exactly that function. No setup. No configuration. The dashboard is available the moment the workspace is activated.

Prebuilt dashboards are organized by system and by role. Finance teams have dashboards covering procurement spend, invoice status, and accounts payable aging. Inventory managers have dashboards covering stock levels, reorder alerts, and turnover by category. Compliance officers have dashboards covering inspection schedules, overdue certifications, and audit trail activity. Each dashboard is a starting point, not a ceiling. Users can modify prebuilt views or use them as templates for ad-hoc variations without affecting the original.

For organizations deploying FireFlight for the first time, the prebuilt dashboards provide immediate operational visibility before any custom reporting work is done. On go-live day, the reporting layer is already functional for the core operational roles. That matters because it means the team is working with data from day one rather than waiting for a reporting setup phase to complete after go-live.

Clarity through FireFlight reporting

When should you request a custom report instead of building it yourself?

Custom reports from the FireFlight team are the right path when the requirement involves complex joins across multiple workspaces, formatted output for regulatory submission or client delivery, or calculations that require logic beyond what the ad-hoc interface handles. A compliance officer preparing a quarterly air permit summary for a state regulator needs a report that matches a specific format and pulls from multiple compliance and inventory records in a precise sequence. That is a custom report request.

The request process is direct. A user submits the specification (what data, what format, what grouping, what time period) and the FireFlight team builds, validates, and delivers the finished report. Delivered reports are available inside the system as recurring reports that refresh on schedule. They are not one-time exports that have to be requested again next quarter.

For operational reports that go to external stakeholders in a specific format, custom reports are also the right path. A client receiving a monthly inventory status report, or a finance team requiring a specific accounts payable aging format for auditors, gets a report built to their specification rather than a raw data export they have to reformat before it is usable.

Meet Ikhana

Your Personal Guide on Every Page

From the first click to the final step, Ikhana, your on-screen tutor, shows you how the reporting workspace works. Every field, every button, every page explained with clarity, right where you need it.

In the reporting workspace, Ikhana guides users through building ad-hoc views, navigating prebuilt dashboards, and submitting custom report requests. Help is on the same screen where the work is happening. No separate documentation window. No support ticket to open. Just an answer, when you need it, where you need it.

Learn more about Ikhana

What data can FireFlight reporting actually pull from?

The reporting workspace reads from every data source active in the FireFlight platform. A dashboard that needs to combine inventory data with procurement costs and work order completion times does not require an export from three separate systems and a manual merge in a spreadsheet. Those data sets are in the same platform and available to the same reporting tools simultaneously.

Financial data, compliance records, operational logs, and relationship history all feed the same reporting layer. A dashboard showing total cost of ownership for a specific asset category pulls from EAM maintenance records, procurement costs, depreciation schedules, and downtime logs in a single query. Cross-system visibility is what makes reporting useful for decisions rather than just for documentation after the fact.

  • FireFlight ERP and Operations: Work order completion rates, downtime logs, technician utilization, and operational KPIs by department or site
  • FireFlight Inventory and SCM: Stock levels, turnover rates, reorder status, supplier performance, and procurement spend by category
  • FireFlight Financial and Billing: Invoice status, accounts payable aging, cost of ownership by asset, and budget variance by cost center
  • FireFlight Compliance and EAM: Inspection schedules, overdue certifications, audit trail activity, and asset maintenance history
  • FireFlight CRM and Client Tracking: Client interaction history, open work orders by account, communication logs, and relationship activity by team member
  • FireFlight PLM and Product Data: BOM revisions, design change history, MRP output, and product cost tracking from development through production

What PCG has learned across 31 years of reporting system implementations

The most consistent reporting failure PCG sees is not a technical problem. It is an access problem. The data exists in the system. The person who needs it cannot get to it without asking someone else. That asking cycle (the request, the wait, the delivery, the reformat, the question about whether the numbers are current. That cycle is where reporting time actually goes. FireFlight's three-path reporting structure is built to close that cycle by making the data accessible to the person who needs it without requiring an intermediary.

The second pattern that appears repeatedly: organizations that have built their reporting workflow around scheduled exports to Excel find themselves maintaining two systems instead of one. The operational system holds the transactions. The spreadsheets hold the analysis. When the two diverge, and they do regularly, the reconciliation work falls to whoever built the spreadsheet. FireFlight reporting removes that duplication by keeping the analytical layer inside the same system as the operational data.

What changes once reporting is built into the operation?

The operational improvements are measurable and they appear in the first weeks of use, not after an extended setup phase.

  • FireFlight Weekly report preparation time drops because dashboards are current without manual data assembly
  • FireFlight Department heads answer their own data questions without routing requests through IT or a developer
  • FireFlight Compliance reporting for regulatory submissions is produced from the same data as operational reports, without a separate extraction process
  • FireFlight Management decisions are based on current operational data rather than on last week's export
  • FireFlight Cross-functional reports that previously required manual data merges from multiple systems are built in one place against one data source
  • FireFlight Audit documentation is available on demand because the audit trail feeds the same reporting layer as operational dashboards
  • FireFlight New team members access historical performance data and operational context from the reporting workspace without requiring briefings from prior staff

Operations that have been managing reporting through scheduled exports, manual spreadsheet builds, and IT request queues carry a coordination cost on every reporting cycle. FireFlight does not eliminate the need to analyze data. It removes the overhead of getting to the data in the first place. Most deployments are operational in weeks, not months, and the reporting layer is functional on go-live day. The ad-hoc tools are available from the first login, which means useful reporting starts in weeks, not months after a setup phase.


Frequently Asked Questions

FireFlight What is the difference between ad-hoc reporting and the prebuilt dashboards in FireFlight? +
Prebuilt dashboards are ready to open on day one with no configuration required. They are built by the FireFlight team against specific roles and workflows. Ad-hoc reporting is the self-service layer that lets users build their own views using field selectors, filters, and grouping logic. Both read from the same live data. The difference is who builds the view and how much configuration is involved.
FireFlight Can non-technical users build their own reports without help from IT? +
Yes. The ad-hoc reporting interface uses drag-and-drop field selectors, filters, and grouping logic that does not require SQL or database knowledge. A department head who wants to see inventory turnover by warehouse, or a project lead tracking open work orders by technician, builds that view directly in the system. The learning curve is about what they want to see, not about how the underlying data is structured.
FireFlight How long does it take to get a custom report built by the FireFlight team? +
Custom report requests are submitted with the specification (what data, what format, what grouping, what time period) and the FireFlight team builds, validates, and delivers the finished report. Turnaround depends on the complexity of the request. Delivered reports are available inside the system as recurring reports that refresh on schedule, not as one-time exports that have to be requested again next quarter.
FireFlight Does FireFlight reporting connect to financial, compliance, and inventory data at the same time? +
Yes. The reporting workspace reads from every data source active in the FireFlight platform. A dashboard that needs to combine inventory data with procurement costs and work order completion times does not require an export from three separate systems. Those data sets are in the same platform and available to the same reporting tools simultaneously.
FireFlight Can reports be exported or shared with stakeholders outside the system? +
Yes. FireFlight reporting supports exportable and shareable formats for stakeholders who need the data outside the system. Custom reports built by the FireFlight team can be formatted to match the specific output requirements of regulatory submissions, client deliverables, or internal finance reviews. Recurring reports are generated on schedule and available for distribution without manual intervention.
FireFlight What is Ikhana and how does it help with the reporting workspace? +
Ikhana is FireFlight's on-screen tutor that guides users through every field, button, and page in the system. In the reporting workspace, Ikhana explains how to use ad-hoc tools, navigate prebuilt dashboards, and submit custom report requests. Help is available on demand, on the same screen where the work is happening, without opening a separate support ticket or documentation window.
FireFlight How does FireFlight reporting stay current as data changes? +
Ad-hoc reports and dashboards in FireFlight read from live system data. When the underlying operational data changes, the report reflects it on the next refresh. A manager who built a dashboard for a weekly review does not need to rebuild it or request a new export. Prebuilt dashboards update on the same cycle. Custom recurring reports run on a configured schedule against current data.

Ready to replace the weekly export-and-reformat cycle with a reporting layer that stays current, adapts to your workflow, and gets your team to answers without waiting on anyone?

Schedule your free consultation

Allison Woolbert
Allison Woolbert
Principal, Phoenix Consultants Group  |  Developer, FireFlight Data Systems

PCG founded 1995. 500+ applications built across 31 years, roughly one-third in regulated environments where software failure carries direct operational and compliance consequences. FireFlight is the platform built from that body of work. When you contact PCG, Allison is the person who answers.

phxconsultants.com LinkedIn

FireFlight Data Systems is a product of Phoenix Consultants Group. PCG founded 1995. All system configurations are custom-built for each deployment. Implementation timelines, module availability, and integration scope vary by organization. Contact PCG directly to discuss requirements specific to your operation.

This workspace is fully integrated with the following enterprise systems:

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Customer Relationship Management
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ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning)

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