ServiceTitan is built for HVAC trucks, not for a tech servicing equipment inside a chip fab: problems and solutions
ServiceTitan, Jobber, and Housecall Pro dispatch home-service trucks well and fall apart when a Chandler tech has to service equipment inside a chip fab, where access requires badging, gowning, and escort, and every job leaves a calibration record. Custom field service software for that runs $50k to $115k over 4 to 7 months. If you run standard residential or light-commercial service, those tools are the right fit.
Businesses in Chandler run into very specific operational problems. Across semiconductors and electronics, technology and software, advanced manufacturing, the same Suppliers and contractors serving the chip fabs juggle cleanroom certifications, work orders, and inspection records in disconnected files, so an audit means days of digging for one signed document. keeps surfacing, manual workflows that do not scale, disconnected tools that leak data, and software that fights the team instead of helping it. The right custom build closes those gaps directly, turning the daily friction Chandler companies feel into systems that just work, so the team spends time on customers instead of workarounds.
You service precision equipment for Chandler's fabs and tech manufacturers, and your scheduling tool was built for plumbers. It assumes a tech drives up, does the job, and leaves. It has no concept of badged fab access, cleanroom gowning, an escort requirement, or a calibration certificate that must be captured and filed against the asset. So your dispatchers work around the tool, access coordination happens in email, and calibration records end up in a folder disconnected from the work order.
ServiceTitan, Jobber, and Housecall Pro optimize residential and light-commercial dispatch. A Chandler equipment service firm needs scheduling that respects fab access lead times, captures calibration and inspection records against each asset, and tracks the certifications a tech must hold to even enter a customer's cleanroom. None of that fits a home-services tool, so the most controlled, high-stakes parts of the job live outside the system.
The problems nobody warns you about
- Scheduling tools ignore fab access lead times, badging, gowning, and escort needs
- Calibration certificates end up in a folder disconnected from the work order and asset
- There is no check that a dispatched tech holds the certs to enter a customer's cleanroom
- Access coordination happens in email, outside the system that schedules the job
The case for owning your field service management
You build custom field service software when access and compliance are part of every job. A Chandler equipment service firm needs scheduling that accounts for fab access requirements, calibration records captured against each asset, and tech-certification checks before dispatch. That is the reality home-services tools were never built for, and it is exactly where your high-stakes work lives.
Budgeting a field service management build in Chandler
| Project scope | Typical cost | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Custom fab-equipment field service platform | $50k to $115k | 4 to 7 months |
| Calibration and asset-history module | $30k to $60k | 2 to 4 months |
| Access-aware scheduling add-on | $25k to $50k | 6 to 10 weeks |
What your build should include
Field Service Management services we deliver in Chandler
Digital Heroes builds the full field service management stack for Chandler teams. Typical engagements cover dispatch software, work order management, technician scheduling, mobile field app and ServiceTitan alternative.
Exactly what you get
You get field service software that respects what a Chandler fab-equipment job actually involves: access-aware scheduling that factors badging, gowning, and escort lead times, certification checks so only cleared techs are dispatched to a cleanroom, and calibration records captured against each asset and work order. Mobile capture works offline inside shielded fabs, asset service history is auditable on demand, and the system integrates with your ERP for parts and billing. It is the opposite of a home-services tool. Pair it with a mobile app for the offline capture itself, an HR (Human Resources) system tracking the tech certifications it checks, and an inventory system for service parts.
How to choose a developer in Chandler
Choose the developer who asks about customer access requirements before scheduling logic. The thing that breaks ServiceTitan for you is everything around the fab job: badged access, gowning, escort, certification checks, and calibration records, not the dispatch itself. The right team designs for those constraints from the start. Ask how they handle fab access lead times in scheduling, ask how a calibration record ties to an asset and survives an audit, and ask how an uncertified tech gets blocked before dispatch. Insist on offline mobile capture, because the most controlled jobs happen where the network does not reach.
- !A developer who only knows home-services dispatch, ask how they handle fab access
- !No calibration-capture plan, ask how a cert ties to an asset
- !No certification check before dispatch, ask how an uncertified tech is blocked
- !No offline mobile capture, ask how a job inside a shielded fab gets recorded
- !No ERP integration, ask how parts and billing flow
If field service management is on the roadmap, lms, crm, shopify usually follow within the year. Budget them as one conversation.
Rohan advises mid-market and enterprise teams on ERP, CRM and custom software, and has led delivery on dozens of business-software builds.
Writes for Digital Heroes, shipping business software for 2,000+ brands across 55+ countries since 2017.
Frequently asked questions
Why won't ServiceTitan work for fab equipment service?
Because ServiceTitan is built for home and light-commercial service where a tech drives up and does the job. It has no concept of badged fab access, cleanroom gowning, escort lead times, certification checks before dispatch, or calibration records filed against an asset. For a Chandler equipment service firm, those are the whole job, and they live outside the home-services model.
How does access-aware scheduling help?
It factors the real lead times for badging, gowning, and escort into the schedule, so a job is booked when the tech can actually get on site rather than slipping because access was not arranged. That coordination moves out of email and into the system that schedules the work.
Why do calibration records need to tie to the asset?
Because a fab customer audits the service history of their equipment, and a calibration certificate sitting in a disconnected folder cannot be tied to the asset or the work order quickly. Capturing it against the asset makes the history auditable on demand, which is a contractual expectation in this work.
Do techs need offline capture?
Yes. Shielded fab environments drop connectivity, so the mobile app must capture calibration and inspection records offline and sync on return, exactly like the inspection and field workflows other Chandler builds require. Without it, records get lost where it matters most.
Can we start smaller?
Yes. A calibration and asset-history module at $30k to $60k captures and files service records properly against assets, which solves the most audit-critical gap before you build out full access-aware scheduling.