
Vim Python IDE
Inspection Logging
Auditzo
BusinessLOG SOC
eAuditor
Safe Workplace
Inspection Logging is inspection management software for multi-location teams that need a better way to track assets, inspections, service records, repairs, reminders, and audit-ready reports.
Many teams still manage inspection operations through a mix of spreadsheets, PDFs, shared drives, email threads, and paper records. That approach usually works until someone needs a clean history fast: what was inspected, when it was inspected, what failed, whether it was repaired, and which records support it. Inspection Logging brings that work into one system.
With Inspection Logging, teams can: - Track assets by location - Log recurring inspections - Store professional service records and certificates - Manage repair requests tied to the original asset and inspection - Assign location-based access to users - Use QR-linked assets for faster field workflows - Send reminders to the right people - Generate PDF reports and export records for audits or internal review - Keep a clear audit trail of what happened and when
Inspection Logging was designed for organizations that need consistent inspection record keeping across multiple sites. Instead of stitching together generic tools, Inspection Logging gives operations, facilities, safety, and compliance teams a workflow built around the actual job.
The goal is straightforward: reduce administrative drag, improve visibility, and make inspection records easier to trust.
Vim Python IDE
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Inspection Logging's answer:
Ruby on Rails, PostgreSQL, Tailwind CSS, S3 bucket storage.
Inspection Logging's answer:
The idea came from seeing good teams do the actual work well, but still struggle with the record keeping around that work. The same pattern kept showing up: inspections were being tracked in one place, certificates in another, repairs somewhere else, and reporting was mostly manual. I built Inspection Logging to give those teams one system that actually matched how the work happens.
Inspection Logging's answer:
The main audience is teams managing inspections across multiple locations. Usually that means facilities, operations, safety, compliance, or property teams that need a better system than spreadsheets, shared drives, and email threads.
Inspection Logging's answer:
Someone should choose Inspection Logging if they want something more practical than a generic checklist app. A lot of tools can capture an inspection. The harder part is keeping the history usable later. Inspection Logging is built to keep assets, inspections, service records, repairs, reminders, and reports connected so the day-to-day work is easier and the record keeping does not fall apart.
Inspection Logging's answer:
I built Inspection Logging around the part most software skips: what happens after the inspection gets logged. For a lot of teams, the real pain is not filling out the checklist. It is keeping the records clean, tying repairs back to the right asset, finding certificates later, and pulling a report without digging through five different places. That is the part I focused on.