Work Execution and Project Integration Workspace | FireFlight
Last updated: April 2026

Work Execution and Project Integration

Project-linked work orders, labor and material estimates tied to scope, scheduling and dispatch across crews, JIT inventory staging, and actuals versus plan reporting all in one workspace that keeps planning and execution in the same system.

FireFlight's Work Execution and Project Integration workspace connects project planning directly to work order execution. Labor estimates, material requirements, and timelines defined in the project flow into work orders automatically. As work is executed, actuals post back to the project record in real time. The gap between what was planned and what is happening closes because both exist in the same system. Most operations are live in weeks, not months.
FireFlight Work Execution and Project Integration workspace showing project-linked work orders and crew scheduling

The most common source of project delivery failure is not bad planning. It is the gap between the plan and the execution layer a project plan that exists in one system, work orders that are managed in another, and materials that are tracked somewhere else entirely. By the time a work order is late, a crew arrives without the right materials, or an estimate turns out to be significantly wrong, the plan is already disconnected from the reality of what is happening on the ground. FireFlight closes that gap by design: planning and execution share the same workspace, the same data, and the same record.

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Why do project plans and work order execution so often disconnect?

Most operations that manage project-driven work use at least two separate systems: a project management tool for planning and tracking, and a work order system for assigning and executing tasks. The connection between those systems depends on someone manually transferring information copying task details into work orders, updating the project plan when work is completed, reconciling hours logged in the work order system against estimates in the project tool. That manual transfer is where the disconnect happens.

A work order that takes longer than estimated does not automatically update the project schedule. A material shortage that delays a work order does not automatically flag the downstream project milestone that depends on it. A scope change approved in the project record does not automatically revise the estimates on the work orders that have already been issued against the original scope. Each of those disconnects is manageable when it happens once. Over the course of a multi-week project with dozens of work orders across multiple crews, the accumulated lag between plan and reality is what produces the surprised project manager at the end of a phase who did not know the project was in trouble until it was already late.

Project plan to work order execution bridge in FireFlight showing labor and material estimates linked to active work orders

Labor and material estimates in FireFlight are not planning artifacts that get filed away when execution begins. They are live constraints attached to work orders. When a technician logs more hours than the estimate on a work order, that variance appears on the actuals versus plan report while the work order is still open not after it has been closed and the project phase is over. The information is available at the point where it can still affect a decision about the remaining work.

Scheduling and dispatch in the workspace assign work orders to crews with start dates, estimated durations, and material requirements confirmed before the crew is sent. When a schedule changes, the system shows the downstream impact on dependent work orders and project milestones. A field operations manager who reschedules a work order on Tuesday morning can see whether that rescheduling pushes a project milestone before making the change not after calling the project manager to explain why the milestone moved.

How does JIT inventory staging prevent the crew-arrives-without-materials problem?

The crew-arrives-without-materials problem has a consistent cause: materials are tracked in one system, work orders are managed in another, and nobody confirmed the connection before dispatch. A material that shows as available in the inventory system may already be reserved for a different work order scheduled the same day. A material that was available yesterday may have been consumed by an unrelated job that morning. Neither of those conditions is visible to the dispatcher using a system that does not connect inventory to work order scheduling.

JIT inventory staging in FireFlight reserves materials for a work order based on its scheduled execution date at the time of scheduling, not at the time of dispatch. The reservation is held in the same inventory system that tracks all other consumption so a conflict between two work orders competing for the same material on the same day surfaces when the second work order is scheduled, while there is still time to resolve it. The crew going out on Thursday knows the materials will be there because the system confirmed availability and held the reservation when the work order was created, not when the truck was loaded.

Every work order execution event posts to the project record in real time. Hours logged, materials consumed, and work order status changes all update the project's actuals simultaneously. There is no end-of-day upload, no weekly sync, and no reconciliation step required to bring the project record current. A project manager checking the actuals versus plan report at 3pm on a Wednesday is looking at everything that has been recorded through 3pm on that Wednesday.

PCG has been building work order and project execution systems for field operations since 1995 industrial service contractors, environmental remediation firms, construction managers, and specialty service operations where the distance between a project plan and a completed work order is measured in dollars and client relationships. The workspace architecture in FireFlight reflects 31 years of watching where that distance creates problems and designing to eliminate it.

How does the workspace handle unplanned and reactive work alongside scheduled projects?

Reactive work an emergency repair, a client-requested scope addition, an equipment failure that requires immediate response does not wait for a project plan to exist before it needs a work order. FireFlight supports direct work order creation from the live operations view without requiring a project structure to be in place first. The reactive work order goes through the same scheduling, dispatch, and materials confirmation process as a planned work order. Hours and materials consumed on reactive work are tracked in the same system, against the same cost records, and appear in the same actuals versus plan reports.

For operations that run a mix of planned project work and reactive service work, the practical value of that integration is that both types of work compete for the same resources crews, materials, equipment in a system that knows what is already committed. A reactive work order created on a Thursday morning that needs the same crew as a planned work order on Friday afternoon shows the conflict immediately. The field operations manager makes the priority decision with full information rather than discovering the conflict when the crew shows up to two jobs at once.

Workspace apps

VA note: Work Orders app card is using the FireFlight placeholder icon. Replace with confirmed icon from the elementor/thumbs directory when available.

Integrated systems

Product Lifecycle Management Product Lifecycle Management
ERP ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning)
Enterprise Asset Management Enterprise Asset Management
Supply Chain Management Supply Chain Management
Inventory Management System Inventory Management System
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Meet Ikhana

Your Personal Guide on Every Page

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

In the Work Execution workspace, Ikhana walks through work order creation from project scope, material staging confirmation, crew assignment, and the actuals versus plan view. Field team members and project managers both get to the right information without needing to know the system architecture behind it.

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What the workspace gives your operation

  • FireFlight Project-linked work order management. Work orders are created from project scope records, not as standalone documents. Labor estimates, material requirements, and timelines from the project plan carry into each work order at creation. When work is executed and closed, the project record updates automatically no manual transfer between systems required to keep the plan current with what has actually been completed.
  • FireFlight Labor and material estimates tied to scope. Estimates are not planning notes that get filed when execution begins. They are active constraints attached to work orders that drive the actuals versus plan comparison. A work order running over its labor estimate shows the variance on the dashboard while the work order is still open, when the information can still change the management of the remaining work on the project.
  • FireFlight Scheduling and dispatch across crews and timelines. Work orders are assigned to crews with start dates, estimated durations, and materials confirmed before dispatch. Schedule changes show downstream impact on dependent work orders and project milestones before the change is made. Resource conflicts between planned and reactive work surface at scheduling time, not at dispatch time.
  • FireFlight Real-time execution with JIT inventory tools. Materials are reserved for work orders at the time of scheduling, not at the time of dispatch. Availability is confirmed against live inventory records that reflect all other active reservations. A crew going out on Friday knows the materials will be there because the system verified availability and held the reservation when the work order was created.
  • FireFlight Integrated reporting for actuals versus plan. Hours logged, materials consumed, and costs incurred on work orders post to the actuals versus plan report continuously. The comparison is available midproject, at the work order level, before the project phase is complete. The first time a project manager sees a significant variance is not at the phase review it is when the work order that generated the variance is still open.
  • FireFlight Built-in flexibility for reactive and proactive work. Planned project work orders and reactive work orders share the same scheduling, dispatch, and materials confirmation process. Both types compete for the same resources in a system that tracks all active commitments. Adding a reactive work order shows conflicts with existing scheduled work immediately, so priority decisions are made with full information rather than discovered after a double-booking.

What PCG learned across 31 years of field operations system builds: the operations that delivered projects consistently were not the ones with the best project managers or the most sophisticated scheduling tools. They were the ones where the person scheduling the work and the person executing the work were looking at the same current picture of what was planned, what was available, and what was already committed.

That shared picture requires a single system, not a well-maintained handoff between two. The Work Execution and Project Integration workspace is built on that premise. Planning and execution are not connected they are the same environment.

Having estimates, tasks, and schedules tied to actual work orders has completely changed our project delivery. We catch variances when there is still time to do something about them.
Lara KimField Operations Manager, specialty contracting group

What operations see after deployment

  • FireFlight Work orders are created from project scope rather than from memory or a separate document. Labor estimates and material lists from the project plan carry in automatically, which removes the most common source of discrepancy between what was planned and what was actually issued to the crew.
  • FireFlight Crews arrive with the right materials because availability was confirmed at scheduling, not assumed at dispatch. JIT reservations hold the required inventory against the work order's scheduled date rather than leaving it in a general pool that may be depleted before the crew arrives.
  • FireFlight Estimate variances surface during execution rather than at close-out. Project managers see actuals versus plan at the work order level while work orders are still open which is when adjusting scope, reallocating resources, or having a conversation with the client is still an option rather than a post-mortem.
  • FireFlight Reactive work no longer creates invisible resource conflicts. When an urgent work order is added to the schedule, the system shows what is already committed on the affected crews and materials. Priority decisions happen in the scheduling view rather than at the job site when two crews need the same equipment.

Questions field operations and project management teams ask before deploying FireFlight

FireFlight How does FireFlight connect project planning to work order execution?
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In FireFlight, work orders are created directly from project scope records rather than as standalone documents. Labor estimates, material requirements, and timelines defined during project planning carry into each work order automatically. When execution begins, actual hours and materials consumed post back to the project record in real time so the plan and the actuals are always visible in the same system without a manual transfer between a project management tool and a work order system.
FireFlight What does JIT inventory mean in the context of work order execution?
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JIT (Just-in-Time) inventory in FireFlight means materials are staged and reserved for a work order based on its scheduled execution date rather than being held in a general pool. When a work order is scheduled, the system confirms that the required materials will be available at that location on that date. If a conflict exists the same material is needed by multiple work orders at the same time it surfaces before the crew arrives on site rather than after.
FireFlight How does scheduling and dispatch work across multiple crews in FireFlight?
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The workspace assigns work orders to crews or individual team members with scheduled start dates and estimated durations. Dispatch confirms the assignment and triggers any required notifications. When priorities shift or a work order needs to be rescheduled, the change is made in the same system that holds the project timeline and the materials reservation so rescheduling one work order shows the downstream impact on the project schedule rather than creating an invisible gap.
FireFlight What does integrated reporting for actuals versus plan show in FireFlight?
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The actuals versus plan report compares estimated labor hours, material quantities, and costs against what was actually recorded on completed and in-progress work orders. The comparison is available continuously not just at project close-out. Project managers can see which work orders are running over estimate while those work orders are still open, which is when the information can still affect scope, scheduling, or resource decisions.
FireFlight How does FireFlight handle both reactive and proactive work in the same workspace?
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Proactive work scheduled maintenance, planned project tasks, and recurring service work is managed through the planning and scheduling tools in the workspace. Reactive work emergency repairs, unplanned service calls, and urgent project adjustments is created as work orders directly from the live operations view without requiring a project plan to exist first. Both types flow through the same work order, dispatch, and reporting structure, so the actual versus planned comparison includes reactive work that was added after the project started.
FireFlight Which enterprise systems does the Work Execution workspace integrate with?
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The workspace integrates with FireFlight's ERP module, Enterprise Asset Management, Product Lifecycle Management, Supply Chain Management, and the Inventory Management System. Work orders created in the execution workspace draw material reservations from inventory, post labor costs to the ERP general ledger, and update asset maintenance records automatically. PCG configures the integration scope during deployment based on which systems are active in your operation.
FireFlight How long does it take to deploy the Work Execution and Project Integration workspace?
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Most operations are running live work order and project execution in weeks, not months. The timeline depends on the number of active projects, the crew and resource structure being configured, and which integrated systems are in scope. PCG handles configuration and data migration. Existing project plans and open work orders are brought into the system as part of deployment.

If your project planning and work order execution currently live in separate systems that require manual reconciliation to keep current, the gap between them is costing you in delayed variances, material surprises, and schedule updates that nobody made. FireFlight puts both in the same workspace. Deployment takes weeks, not months, and PCG handles the migration of existing project and work order records.

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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.

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Disconnected work orders, unclear schedules, and last-minute resource gaps lead to delays and missed deadlines. This workspace unifies labor, materials, and project timing—so your teams stay in sync, adapt quickly, and deliver exactly what’s needed, when it’s needed.

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