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How to stop missed progress claims when site and accounts are disconnected

How to stop missed progress claims when site and accounts are disconnected

If your PM says a stage is done on Tuesday but accounts finds out next Friday, you have a cashflow gap you didn’t need.

For many Australian builders, missed claims are not a “lazy team” problem. They’re a handoff problem. Site knows what happened. Accounts knows how to invoice. But the handoff in the middle is patchy, inconsistent, or too dependent on one person remembering to send an email.

This guide gives you a practical fix: a repeatable handoff rhythm where site confirms milestone readiness, accounts gets a clean evidence pack, and invoicing is raised in Xero on time.

The real issue (and why it keeps happening)

A progress claim is rarely missed because no work happened. It gets missed because readiness was never made visible in one place.

In a typical setup:

  • Supervisor confirms milestone progress on site
  • PM keeps notes in a separate thread or spreadsheet
  • Accounts waits for someone to call or email
  • Invoice is delayed or forgotten until the weekly scramble

What this means

You are financing completed work longer than necessary. That squeezes wages, supplier payments, and your ability to start the next job cleanly.

Two realistic buyer scenarios

Scenario 1: Metro custom home builder (8–15 homes/year)

You run jobs across Sydney’s outer metro and Newcastle. Your PMs update site progress quickly, but accounts is central and only sees what lands in inboxes. One missed frame-stage claim can delay tens of thousands in receivables for a week or more.

What this means: even if your margins are healthy on paper, working capital pressure makes decisions feel reactive.

Scenario 2: Regional builder (3–8 homes at once)

You cover a wider regional footprint, so supervisors are mobile and signal quality is not always reliable on site. Evidence gets captured, but it’s stored in mixed formats and sent late. Claims don’t fail because work is incomplete; they fail because proof is incomplete when accounts needs it.

What this means: you carry avoidable admin drag while your team already feels stretched.

A decision framework: choose your claim handoff model

Before changing tools, choose the operating model. Keep it simple and pick one owner for each step.

  1. Trigger: What exact milestone event marks claim readiness?
  2. Evidence standard: What minimum proof is required before accounts is notified?
  3. Handoff channel: Where does readiness appear so accounts can trust it?
  4. Invoice owner: Who raises the invoice in Xero once ready?
  5. Escalation timer: If no invoice is raised in 24 hours, who gets alerted?

What this means

You stop relying on memory and start relying on a clear system boundary: site confirms readiness, accounts invoices in Xero.

The workflow that works in practice

For most builders, the cleanest rhythm is:

  1. Milestone reached in project schedule
  2. PM/supervisor completes milestone task checklist
  3. Evidence pack attached (photos, notes, required docs)
  4. Claim-ready status is flagged
  5. Accounts raises invoice in Xero
  6. Status syncs back for visibility and follow-up

Important boundary: iGyro can flag milestone/payment readiness and hold workflow evidence; invoicing is raised in Xero by accounts.

What this means

Everyone sees one source of workflow truth without pretending your construction platform is your accounting ledger.

Comparison table: common claim handoff models

Model How it works Where it breaks Best fit
Email-and-memory Supervisor or PM emails accounts when stage is done Easy to forget, no audit trail, hard to train new staff Very small teams with low job volume
Spreadsheet tracker Team updates a shared claim sheet weekly Often stale, duplicate entries, weak accountability Transitional teams improving process
Task-driven workflow + Xero invoicing Milestone tasks trigger claim-ready status and accounts invoices in Xero Requires setup discipline early Builders wanting repeatable scale

What this means

If you want fewer misses without adding headcount, the third model usually gives the best control-to-effort ratio.

Cost and timeline breakdown for implementation

You don’t need a six-month transformation. Most teams can tighten this in 2–4 weeks.

Week-by-week rollout

  • Week 1: Define milestone triggers and evidence standard
  • Week 2: Configure task templates and claim-ready statuses
  • Week 3: Pilot on 2–3 active jobs and tune exceptions
  • Week 4: Roll out to all current jobs and lock cadence

Typical effort breakdown (internal)

  • Owner/manager process design: 4–6 hours
  • PM/supervisor workflow setup and testing: 6–10 hours
  • Accounts handoff and invoice rhythm setup: 3–5 hours
  • Team training and SOP updates: 2–4 hours

What this means

The biggest cost is not software line items. It’s unclear ownership. Once ownership is explicit, claims speed up quickly.

What gets left out of most quotes

Most software quotes focus on “features.” They skip operating discipline.

What usually gets missed:

  • Who owns claim readiness on each job
  • What minimum evidence is non-negotiable
  • How exceptions are escalated when a milestone is partially complete
  • How quickly accounts must raise invoice once marked ready
  • How to review misses weekly and fix root causes

What this means

If you only buy software and skip handoff rules, missed claims keep happening with better-looking dashboards.

Practical checklist you can use this week

Use this at your next operations meeting:

  • [ ] Define claim trigger milestones for each contract type
  • [ ] Set a minimum evidence pack for every claim stage
  • [ ] Assign one role accountable for claim-ready status
  • [ ] Agree a maximum response time for accounts invoicing in Xero
  • [ ] Add an escalation alert for overdue claim-ready items
  • [ ] Run a weekly 20-minute “missed claim review”
  • [ ] Track reason codes (late evidence, unclear stage, owner missing, etc.)

What this means

You create a closed loop: detect, invoice, review, improve.

Frequently asked questions

Does iGyro create invoices automatically?

No. iGyro manages construction workflow and can flag when a payment stage is due. Invoices are created in Xero.

How many jobs should we pilot before full rollout?

Start with 2–3 active jobs that represent your normal mix (for example, one custom home and one spec build). That gives enough variation to stress-test your process.

What if a milestone is mostly done but missing one item?

Use a clear exception status (for example, “nearly ready—awaiting certificate/photo”). Avoid marking claim-ready until minimum evidence is complete.

Can small teams use this, or is it only for larger builders?

Small teams often benefit fastest because one missed claim has a bigger cashflow impact. Keep your process light, but keep ownership clear.

Related iGyro Reading

Next step

If your team is missing claims because site and accounts are disconnected, book a video call and map your current handoff in plain language. You can also sign up for a free account and test a claim-ready workflow on a live job this month.