WorkshopOS

How it works

WorkshopOS is built on the principle that every action in a workshop should be documented, provable, and impossible to silently change.

Work orders as legal documents

When you create a work order, you're not just adding a row to a database. You're creating a legal document that will serve as the source of truth for everything that follows.

Every work order includes:

If a client requests changes mid-production, those changes create a new version of the work order — linked to the original. The history is preserved.

Production tracking

When a worker starts production on a work order, the system records:

If work is paused or resumed, those events are also recorded. When production is completed, the completion event includes a final material reconciliation.

This creates a complete chain of custody from work order approval to finished product.

Materials and inventory

Materials aren't just "items in stock." They're tracked with:

If material goes missing, you can trace it back through the entire chain. If an inspector asks "where did this wood come from?", you can prove it.

Financial integration

WorkshopOS doesn't just track work — it tracks money.

Invoicing

When a work order is completed, you can generate an invoice directly from it. The invoice includes:

Payments

When payment is received, it's recorded and linked to the invoice. If partial payments occur, each one is a separate event.

Credit notes

If you need to correct an invoice, you don't edit it — you issue a credit note that references the original. This preserves the audit trail and complies with accounting regulations.

Evidence exports

At any time, you can export a complete evidence chain as a PDF:

This PDF is designed to be presented to inspectors, auditors, clients, or courts. It's not just a report — it's evidence.

What this means for you

With WorkshopOS: