Home inspectors must take lots of notes in order to provide value to their clients. One of the problems has always been taking notes in the field and then transcribing them back at the office until now. Toolkit
Value PropositionDue to the nature of the job, the home inspector is constantly out of the office. In the past, even small laptop computers needed to be set down somewhere before they could be used to enter information; lugging one around did not make sense. The Tablet PC changes all that. Now the home inspector has a tool that can be carried almost everywhere, and can replace the clipboard, the voice recorder, and the calculator. Day in the LifeThe home inspector has two inspections due today, and downloads maps for each onto his Tablet PC. He reads over the notes from the real estate agent who hired him for the inspections, and prepares the background material for each. Opening Mi-Forms, he enters as much information as he has about the location, does some background research into the neighborhood and comparable properties, and enters that information into Mi-Forms as well. He takes his Tablet PC and drives to the house, where he meets the prospective homeowners and their real estate agent, informs them of the background information he discovered in his pre-inspection, and then gets to work. He picks up his digital voice recorder and walks around the house, dictating notes that will be automatically transcribed by his Tablet PC when he synchronizes the two. Because the voice files are stored digitally, he can run the sound file through voice recognition later, correcting anything he needs to. While he walks through the house measuring and dictating, he takes pictures with his digital camera. When he gets back to where he left the Tablet PC running, he downloads the pictures through his Bluetooth wireless connection. While the files are downloading, he processes the voice files and ensures that the measurements are accurate. He then walks through the house quickly, Tablet PC in hand, to sketch the basic floor plan. He inserts his drawing from Windows Journal into Visio and overlays the sketch with a more refined drawing using Visio's basic architectural tools. All told, he spends about 20 minutes doing this. When finished inside the house, he takes his Tablet PC outside and begins taking pictures and making notes in Mi-Forms. Because his camera and Tablet PC are in close proximity, the Bluetooth connection is active, and the files from the digital camera are automatically displayed on his Tablet PC screen. When he finishes the house inspection, he enters most of the data into his Mi-Forms inspection form, where the data can be automatically massaged and fed into a report for the client. He reviews his findings and clarifies any ambiguous notes. All the information ends up in Mi-Forms. The pictures he took are fed into Photoshop Elements, where they are cleaned up with a few taps of the pen, and annotations are made to identify points of interest. The pen makes this process quicker. The pictures are then linked with Mi-Forms data elements so that the report can be generated quickly. Although the entire inspection was done with just a modicum of time savings, his report is all but complete when he leaves the house, potentially saving hours of time back in the office. All he has to do is cross-check his facts and clarify recommendations, then email the report to the client. He does the same work with the second inspection, and when he returns to the office, he returns a few phone calls, opens his Mi-Forms application, and generates the inspection reports for each property. He double-checks the accuracy, digitally signs the documents, and emails them to the client. Summary of Benefits
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