construction manager taking notes on site visit

How to Write a Field Report: The Ultimate Guide

As an architect, you know how important it is to draft and share field reports. A clear and accurate field report is crucial to avoid costly misunderstandings, mistakes, discussions, and even lawsuits.

In this article, you will learn everything you need to know about creating professional field reports.

What is a Field Report?

Field reports – also called site reports, inspection reports, construction field reports, site progress reports, or site visit reports – are drafted during regular site inspections and site meetings. They are used to document and share open items discussed and the planning of the project. All tasks, actions, and deadlines are documented.

The field report is typically drafted by the architect. After the site inspection or meeting, the report is completed and distributed to all parties. That way, everyone involved knows exactly what is expected of them and by when.

Field reports usually answer questions such as:

  • Is the work being carried out correctly and according to plan?
  • Are adjustments or improvements required?
  • What agreements have been made?
  • Any changes and additional work needed?

For small, simple projects, an email could suffice to document them. But emails can easily get lost. The standard in the construction sector is a detailed field report, usually in PDF format.

It goes without saying that all parties involved in a construction project would prefer a clear, well-arranged, and structured field report.

The Importance of Field Reports

Avoid Having Problems Escalate

Visiting your construction projects regularly and documenting all relevant matters and required adjustments will help you detect irregularities early in the construction process.

Don't let small errors escalate into big problems. The earlier mistakes are discovered, the easier and cheaper it is to correct them. It is therefore crucial not to wait until the end of the construction process for inspections and field reports. Because by then, it is often too late to make the required adjustments.

Quality control is something you should build in from day one, not something you can add at the very end.

Avoid Misunderstandings Through Good Communication

Many parties are involved in a construction project. The more parties, the higher the risk of misunderstandings or miscommunication. And, as a result, costly errors and frustrating delays.

Regular site visits and clear field reports that clearly state who should do what and which adjustments are needed are key to a successful project. They reduce the risk of errors and delays, helping increase the project's profitability.

Best Practices For Field Reports

Here are 9 best practices you should apply to your field reports:

1. Add Structure to Your Field Report

Clearly structured texts are processed much more easily and quickly than chaotic, unstructured texts. When information follows a predictable pattern, it is easier to read and more likely to be actioned. Try to be consistent in structuring your reports, including titles, paragraphs, and other content elements. This makes it easier for others to process your reports.

Avoid long pieces of text. Divide your text into paragraphs and add meaningful titles to improve readability.

Write in clear and understandable language. Phrase it as you would explain it to someone who knows nothing about the project.

2. Assign Each Item a Status and a Unique Number

Assign a status to the items in your field reports, for example, ‘OK' or ‘NOT OK'. Track the progress of the items and keep the status up to date.

Give each item a unique number and ensure it never changes so it can be referenced in future discussions.

Many architects number their items by first taking the serial number of the report in which this item first appeared, followed by a serial number of the item within that report.

For example, 'item 3.2' is the second item in report 3. If item 3.2 still occurs in report 10, then we know it is already there, since report number 3. If you use a field report app like Deltek ArchiSnapper, the items in your field reports are automatically numbered this way.

3. Use Photos and Sketches

Our brain processes photos much more easily than text. Photos show the problem at a glance and are easier to comprehend than text. Using photos instead of text significantly reduces the chance of misunderstandings and mistakes.

4. Show the Location of Items on a Floor Plan

Avoid discussions and costly mistakes by making it clear in the plan where the problem is located.

By placing location pointers on a floor plan, you no longer need to describe with text where the problem is located. With one look at the plan, the contractors know where to start. By locating all items on a plan, you can forward the complete plan with all items on it.

5. Assign Items

Assign the items in the report to one of the different parties involved. This will make it clear to everyone who should perform a certain task or solve a particular problem.

If you use structured software for construction field reports and site management, you can also send each contractor only their assigned items, so that they do not have to search for them among all the other items in the report.

6. Add Other Details to Clarify Items

For each comment, you can add details to make the items even more accurate. For example, you can add a deadline, an extra description about what the problem is or what the actions to take are, or “tag” your comment as urgent.

Be consistent and add relevant information to each item. If your communication is clear and all parties know exactly what is expected of them, there will be fewer misunderstandings and the project will close out faster.

7. Use a Field Report Checklist

For some activities, using a field report checklist on site is useful, especially if you need to review a set list of items during each site visit. For example, you might have checklists for start-up meetings, a punch list, or a safety or quality inspection.

8. Start from the Previous Report

The purpose of a field report is to provide an up-to-date overview of work progress and pending items.

Most architects start from the previous report when creating a new one. Resolved items and those no longer relevant can be removed. Items that are still active can be updated. And new items can be added. This way, you do not have to start from scratch with every new field report.

9. Send the Field Report Immediately After Your Site Visit

You should prepare and distribute your field report to all parties involved as soon as possible after your site visit. It is important that the different contractors involved quickly get an up-to-date overview of the open items so they can take the necessary action.

If the field report is not emailed to all parties until a few days later, some items or comments may no longer be relevant. This can cause confusion and will reduce the credibility of the field report.

Most architects send the complete field report, with all items, to all parties involved. In addition to the full field report, some architects also send a filtered report per assigned contractor. By doing so, each contractor has a list of only their assigned items and does not have to search the full field report for the information relevant to them.

How to Write an Effective Field Report

There are many approaches to building field reports, but almost all share common elements.

Here's a helpful overview of the most important building blocks of a professional field report:

General Project and Report Info

Include project name, client name, project number, project address, report date, and report number. By including this information, everyone can immediately see which project and report it concerns. This data also helps if you need to find an old report in your archives.

Project Status

Include a high-level description of the current status of the project. In addition to text, many architects add one or more photos to the project status to give everyone a quick idea of the current status.

Planning

Include an overview of the most important construction phases and tasks, including the tasks already completed, completion percentages of the tasks in progress, and dependencies between the different tasks. This way, contractors can see when they can start their work and use this information for their own planning.

Contacts Table with An Indication of People Present On-Site

Most field reports include a contact table listing all parties involved in the project, including name, role, and contact information. This table often indicates not only which contacts were present during the site visit, but also who received the report.

List of Field Observations and Open Items

This is the core of the field report. Include an overview of the observations and open items, along with details such as photos, text, date, assignee, floor-plan location pointers, status, and more. This way, everyone gets a clear view of the agreements made, and the contractors involved have all the input they need to know which items need work.

Practical Information

The field report often includes the date of the next site meeting or other practical information.

Prepare Field Reports Efficiently with A Field Report App

Building comprehensive field reports is an administrative burden that many architects struggle with. Fortunately, there are field report tools that can help.

With a field report app, you can easily document items on-site with your smartphone or tablet, insert and annotate photos, add or record text, and place a pointer on a floor plan. After the site visit, your site report will be automatically available and ready to distribute with one click.

This not only saves you a lot of time (easily 1 to 2 hours per report) but also enhances your professional image.

Deltek ArchiSnapper is an easy-to-use field app that streamlines field work with paperless inspections, automated field reports, and simplified punch lists. This leading field report app focuses on what matters most to A&E firms, making collaboration easy and effective.

Try Deltek ArchiSnapper for Free

Join 10,000+ architects, engineers and contractors who use Deltek ArchiSnapper for fast field reports and efficient punch lists.

The Benefits of Digital Field Reports

With a field report app, you are freed from the hassle of manually creating site reports. By immediately entering the necessary information on-site via your smartphone or tablet, the report is ready when you leave. This will help you save hours of time, week after week after week.

Here are the biggest benefits of using an app to create field reports:

1. All Information is Centrally Available and Searchable

By digitizing your field reports, you make all data structured and searchable. With digital site reports, you have a central database of all your items and reports. All photos and plans are also stored securely and centrally and are not spread over different camera rolls, mailboxes, or text messages. That means you can easily find, edit, filter, sort, and group your items, and share them with other parties.

2. Smooth Collaboration with Colleagues

Because all colleagues work in the same cloud environment, they can easily collaborate on projects or take over projects when a colleague is absent.

In addition, using one central field report software across the whole company ensures uniform site reports with the same structure and layout for all colleagues.

3. Floor Plans Available Anytime, Anywhere

With a field report app, you will always have easy access to all your documents and detailed project plans, whenever and wherever you need them (smartphone, tablet, laptop).

You can show others exactly where a problem is by indicating numbered location pointers on a floor plan or annotating and sketching on a plan for further clarification.

4. Use of Voice-to-Text

Using your voice to create your field reports is no longer a thing of the future. Voice-to-text is available by default on almost every smartphone and tablet. Speech technology makes on-site item documentation even easier and faster. You speak, and the text rolls out.

5. Start From the Previous Report

When creating a new site report, most architects start with the previous report and build from there. With a professional field report tool, this process is fully automated and gives you access to field report templates.

On the construction site, you can create a new report as a copy of the previous one on your smartphone or tablet, and immediately start completing and updating the report and the list of items.

This way, you no longer need to print and review your previous report every time you visit the site, and you no longer need to manually copy and paste items in Word.

6. Automatic Item Numbering

No more copy-and-paste or manual adjustments to the numbers in your reports and items.

With a digital field-reporting tool, your reports and items are automatically and logically numbered. The layout (logo, header, footer, and more) of the reports is also applied automatically.

7. Sign and Send Field Reports from the Construction Site

With a comprehensive field report app you can use on-site, you can have your site report ready and available immediately on your smartphone or tablet. You can review it, have it signed off on, and distribute it to the parties involved, all directly from the construction site.

8. Assigned Parties Can Provide Feedback on Pending Items

Assigned parties can provide feedback on their pending items via text and photos. Once resolved, they can submit them for approval. No more emails, phone calls, or text messages to stay informed about the status of pending items.

ArchiSnapper: The #1 App for Field Reports

Deltek ArchiSnapper is an easy-to-use yet powerful application specifically designed for field reports and punch lists for architects and engineers. More than 10,000 users automatically generate professional reports directly on-site with ArchiSnapper on their smartphones or tablets.

How does ArchiSnapper work?

ArchiSnapper users say the app saves them at least 1 hour of work per report, and thus easily several hours per week. That's time they can now spend on useful work instead of struggling with reports and photos in Word.

With ArchiSnapper, you can:

  • Visit the site with the ArchiSnapper app on your smartphone or tablet and document items with photos, annotations on photos, floor plan annotations, assignees, and more.
  • Automatically generate your report in PDF format – ready for distribution. Your logo and other layout settings are applied automatically.
  • If desired, you can complete the report at the office on a laptop or desktop before distributing it.

Try Deltek ArchiSnapper for Free

Join 10,000+ architects, engineers and contractors who use Deltek ArchiSnapper for fast field reports and efficient punch lists.

construction worker using field reporting app on site

Featured Thoughts

close up of architect using mobile app during site visit

Article

Field Report App: 7 Things To Look For In The Best App

Discover seven things that should be part of any great field report app and find the right solution for your projects.

construction manager working with architect on a construction site

Article

Perfect Your Field Report: Template and Checklist

Discover the benefits of using a field report template. Streamline your reporting process and explore a practical field report example to help you get started.

architect and construction worker on punch list walkthrough

Article

Construction Punch Lists: The Ultimate Guide

A punch list is an essential document in the architecture and construction industry to identify any work that does not meet contract specifications.

architect using mobile phone while working on site

Article

Celebrating Engineers Who Make a Difference

Deltek celebrates our customers who are at the forefront of creating safe, dynamic, and future‑ready communities that enrich lives.

Project Manager Updating Gantt Chart Schedule and Task Timelines on Laptop

Article

Powerful Schedule Risk Assessment Outputs with Deltek Acumen

Learn how project teams can transform project risk analysis with Deltek Acumen Risk’s detailed insights and actionable schedule assessment tools.