Using Job Assemblies

Pre-built scope packages that turn a 90-minute estimate into a 90-second one.

An assembly is a complete, pre-built scope package for a job type you build over and over. Instead of adding 40 line items one by one, you pick the assembly, customize the few pieces that change between jobs, and you're done. Speed, consistency, and protected margin — all three at once.

What ships with V104

V104 ships with five prebuilt assemblies based on the most common Arise Above project types:

Standard Kitchen Remodel — Cabinet demo, flooring, countertops, plumbing rough-in, electrical updates, paint, finish carpentry. Mid-tier finish baseline.
Bathroom Renovation — Full gut and rebuild. Tile shower, vanity, toilet, lighting, fan, paint, flooring. Includes plumbing and electrical rough-in lines.
Roof Replacement — Tear-off, underlayment, shingles, drip edge, flashing, ridge vent, dump fees. Sized by squares.
Full Interior Repaint — Walls, ceilings, trim, doors. Includes prep, primer, two coats. Sized by sqft.
Flooring (Vinyl Plank, 1,000 sqft) — Demo existing, prep subfloor, install LVP, transitions, base shoe. Scaled per sqft.

How to load an assembly

  1. Open the Estimate tab and start a new estimate (or open an existing draft).
  2. Tap + Assembly in the line items section.
  3. Pick the assembly that matches the job. Filter by category if you've got many saved.
  4. Adjust the variables — square footage, fixture grade, finish tier — then tap Insert.
  5. Every line item lands in the estimate, fully priced, ready to edit.

Saving your own assemblies

The shipped assemblies are a starting point. Your real edge comes from building assemblies that match how you actually run jobs.

  1. Build an estimate the way you'd want it baselined.
  2. Tap the menu icon in the top right of the estimate.
  3. Select Save as Assembly.
  4. Name it. Tag it. Add notes about when to use it.

Every future estimate that fits this template is now one tap away.

Why assemblies beat line-by-line

Build one assembly per repeat job type in your business. The first time costs you 30 minutes. Every subsequent estimate of that type costs you 30 seconds.