A new technician joins your fire alarm team. On his third solo visit he misses the sounder test for a zone that was temporarily disabled during the previous contractor visit. Nobody briefed him specifically on that step. The panel shows clear. He signs off the job. Three weeks later the facilities manager notices the zone fault during a routine walkthrough. The inspection is reopened, a second visit is raised, and your company absorbs the cost of both.
That is a training failure, but it is also a template failure. If the work order for that job had included a mandatory checklist step requiring confirmation that all zones are restored to normal before sign-off, the technician would have either caught the fault himself or been unable to close the job without recording a deviation. The expertise would have been built into the job, not assumed to exist in the person doing it.
Work order templates are the mechanism for encoding what your best engineers know into a format that every engineer follows on every visit.
What a work order template actually contains
A template is a pre-configured job type. When a dispatcher creates a work order for a quarterly fire alarm inspection, the template populates the job with everything that type of visit requires: the checklist, the parts likely needed, the estimated duration, the safety requirements, and the documentation that must be produced at the end.
The six components that every useful maintenance template includes:
1. Task checklist Ordered steps that the technician must complete and confirm. Not a generic list, but the specific sequence for this job type. For an addressable fire detection system inspection under BS 5839-1, the checklist includes: visual inspection of all detectors for physical damage, test of a sample of detectors per Clause 35.2, confirmation that all devices show normal on the panel, check of the event log for uncleared faults, battery condition check, and review of the site logbook entry from the previous visit. Each item is a tick or a recorded value, not a free-text field where anything can be written.
2. Required parts and consumables A default parts list for the job type. A quarterly elevator safety inspection under EN 81-20 does not typically consume parts, but an annual maintenance visit for a traction lift will typically require lubrication of the guide rails and running gear, new wedge clamps if inspection shows wear, and replacement of any worn buffer springs identified during inspection. The template specifies what to bring. The system checks whether those items are in the technician's van before confirming the assignment.
3. Estimated duration The time the job should take under normal conditions. This is not a loose estimate for scheduling purposes only. It sets expectations for the technician, helps dispatchers build accurate schedules, and creates a baseline for identifying jobs that are running over time. A quarterly gas suppression system inspection in a server room should take 90โ120 minutes. If a technician consistently logs 3 hours on that template, either the template is wrong or there is a performance issue worth investigating.
4. Safety instructions and permit requirements Job-specific hazards and the permits or precautions required before work starts. A maintenance visit to a chiller plant room requires a refrigerant handling risk assessment if the job involves system access. Elevator work inside the pit requires confirmation that the car is stopped at the highest landing and the pit stop switch is in the off position before entering. These are not suggestions. A template that includes them as mandatory pre-checks prevents an engineer from starting work without completing them.
5. Required photos or inspection evidence Define upfront what photographic evidence must be captured for the job to be considered complete. For fire door maintenance, this means photos of both the door leaf and the frame, the intumescent strips, and the self-closer mechanism. For an elevator annual inspection, it means photos of the pit condition, the rope condition at the sheave, and the drive machine. Photos taken within the work order are timestamped and GPS-tagged, which matters if a client ever disputes whether a visit took place.
6. Customer sign-off and report format What the technician presents to the client at the end of the visit and in what format. Some contracts require a printed or emailed service report immediately on completion. Some require the client's facilities manager to sign the work order on screen. The template specifies which applies, so the technician does not finish the job and drive away without the required documentation.
PPM templates vs reactive templates vs installation templates
Not all job types are built the same way, and mixing the structure of these three categories is one of the most common template design mistakes.
Planned preventive maintenance templates
PPM templates are built around a fixed interval and a regulatory or contractual requirement. The checklist is exhaustive because the job must be fully complete before the next scheduled visit. There is typically no deviation path built in, the job either passes or generates a corrective action that becomes a separate reactive work order.
For a six-monthly elevator thorough examination under LOLER 1998, the template checklist maps directly to the items required by the competent person carrying out the examination. Rope condition, brake operation, governor function, safety gear test (on a selection basis), overspeed governor trip speed. The result goes into a Form F54 or equivalent. If the template structure mirrors the regulatory examination criteria, the completed work order is also the regulatory record.
For a quarterly fire suppression system check under NFPA 25 or BS EN 12094, the template includes flow tests at specified test points, cylinder pressure readings, weight checks on CO2 banks, and verification that manual controls are accessible and signed. The template creates the inspection report as a byproduct of the completed checklist, not as a separate document someone types up later.
Reactive maintenance templates
Reactive jobs are unplanned by definition, but the work carried out often is not. A door operator replacement on an elevator, a detector head swap on a fire panel, or a refrigerant leak repair on a DX system all follow a predictable sequence even when the fault was not anticipated.
Reactive templates capture that sequence. They include a fault diagnosis section at the start, requiring the technician to record symptoms, the suspected cause, and the confirmed fault before starting work. This is not administrative overhead. It is the data that feeds into your asset history, your failure mode analysis, and your contract renewal pricing. A client who has had three door operator failures on the same elevator shaft in 18 months is either operating the lift incorrectly or has a deeper mechanical issue. You only see that pattern if the fault data is structured.
A reactive template also carries a different parts approach. Instead of a definitive parts list, it carries a diagnostic parts kit: the items most commonly needed for this fault category. For a fire panel fault attendance, that might include a selection of spare detector heads, sounder bases, and a spare zone card for the relevant panel model. The technician may not use all of them, but the van should carry them.
Installation and commissioning templates
Installation templates are the longest and most branching. The job follows a defined phase structure: pre-installation survey, material delivery and storage, mechanical installation, wiring, commissioning, testing, handover. Each phase has its own checklist and may require sign-off before the next phase begins.
For an elevator new installation or modernisation, the commissioning phase must include confirmation that all safety circuits are tested and functional before the car is handed over for test running. The template enforces phase gates, the technician cannot mark phase three complete without sign-off from the site supervisor or the client's representative.
For a fire detection system installation, commissioning includes zone mapping verification (every detector to its correct zone on the panel), a cause-and-effect test for all automatic outputs, and a final witness test with the client present. The template schedules that witness test as a distinct step that cannot be skipped. A job that goes from installation to client handover without a documented witness test is a liability.
Templates and van stock readiness
The parts list on a template does not just inform the technician what to bring. In a field service management platform, it drives a stock readiness check at the point of dispatch.
When a work order is raised from a template and assigned to a technician, the system compares the template's required parts list against that technician's van stock. If the van is missing a required item, the dispatcher sees the gap before confirming the assignment, not when the technician calls from site.
For elevator maintenance teams, this matters for low-frequency, high-consequence parts. An annual maintenance visit that requires a full lubrication kit, a buffer inspection tool, and a set of wedge clamps will fail on site if any of those items are not in the van. A dispatcher making the assignment without knowing the van's current stock is working with partial information.
For fire alarm maintenance, the same logic applies to detector compatibility. An addressable detector replacement job requires knowing which series of detectors are compatible with the panel on site. The template can specify the part number required; the system checks whether the van carries it. A technician arriving with Series 65 Apollo detectors at a site running S2Z protocol will not be able to complete the job.
For HVAC teams, templates for refrigerant work should carry the refrigerant type and estimated quantity required for the job, so the system can check not just whether the van has R-32 on board, but whether the remaining cylinder weight is sufficient to complete a charge of the expected size.
The practical outcome of this connection is a measurable reduction in failed first-time fixes. Industry data consistently puts first-time fix rate as one of the three most significant operational KPIs for field service businesses. Templates that are linked to stock readiness checks shift that metric from something you measure after the fact to something you control before the van leaves the depot.
How templates reduce training time
The single largest use of templates that companies underestimate is onboarding. A new hire with 18 months of general maintenance experience but limited specific knowledge of Schindler 5500 traction lifts can carry out an annual maintenance visit correctly if the template tells them exactly what to inspect, in what order, with what tools, and what to record.
That does not mean templates replace trade knowledge. A technician who does not understand elevator mechanics cannot diagnose a fault from first principles. But for routine planned visits, where the sequence is well-defined and the job is not diagnostic, a good template means a new technician can perform to the same standard as an experienced one from their first solo visit.
The same is true for cross-training. A fire safety engineer who occasionally covers HVAC PPM calls does not carry the same depth of knowledge as a dedicated HVAC engineer. A template that walks through the HVAC checklist step by step, with reference values, photographic requirements, and fault escalation criteria, reduces the risk of a cross-trained technician missing something an HVAC specialist would catch instinctively.
Template quality improves with use. The first version of a template comes from your most experienced engineer: what they know the job requires. After 50 uses, the template reflects what the job actually encounters in the field, with common exceptions, typical failure points, and the parts that are needed more often than the original estimate suggested. That feedback loop is only possible if you are tracking completed work orders by template type and reviewing the data.
Automatically generating work orders from templates
Templates deliver the most value when they feed automatic work order generation rather than requiring a dispatcher to create jobs manually.
For PPM contracts, the platform uses the contract's maintenance schedule (quarterly, biannual, annual) and the template for each visit type to generate work orders in advance. A building with four elevators under a quarterly maintenance contract generates 16 work orders per year per elevator type, automatically, with the right checklist, the right parts list, and the right estimated duration. The dispatcher reviews and assigns them; they do not build them from scratch.
For reactive jobs, a template fires when the fault category is selected at work order creation. The dispatcher selects "elevator door fault" from the category list; the door fault reactive template pre-populates the checklist, the diagnostic parts kit, and the estimated duration. The dispatcher confirms and assigns; they do not type a task list from memory each time.
This automation has a compliance function beyond scheduling efficiency. If a quarterly visit is due within 14 days and the work order has not been created yet, the platform flags it. The gap between "this visit is contracted" and "this visit has been scheduled" is where PPM completion rate SLA breaches originate. Closing that gap automatically, by generating the work order from the template before it is overdue, prevents the breach rather than reporting it.
How RemoteOps handles work order templates
RemoteOps builds templates at the job-type level, with separate template configurations for PPM, reactive, and installation job categories. Each template carries a checklist with required and optional steps, a parts list linked to the inventory system, estimated duration for scheduling, and documentation requirements for sign-off.
When a work order is created, the template populates the job. When the technician is assigned, the system checks van stock against the template's parts list. When the job is completed in the field, the checklist steps are recorded with timestamps, photos are attached to the relevant steps, and the completed work order becomes the service record that the client receives.
For elevator companies, the template library can mirror the EN 81-20 and EN 81-28 maintenance requirements, so the completed work order is also the regulatory maintenance log. For fire safety, templates can be structured to the BS 5839-1 contractor visit requirements, with the inspection record generated as a byproduct of the completed checklist. For HVAC teams, templates for F-Gas-regulated refrigerant work carry the required fields to produce a compliant service record under Regulation (EU) 517/2014.
The objective is that a completed work order, generated from a template, requires no additional administrative work to become the documentation the client or regulator needs.
FAQ
What is the difference between a work order template and a checklist?
A checklist is one component of a work order template. The template defines the full job: checklist, parts list, estimated duration, safety requirements, and required documentation. A standalone checklist tells a technician what to do; a template tells the dispatch system, the inventory system, the scheduling system, and the technician simultaneously.
How many templates does a typical maintenance company need?
This varies by vertical and service range, but a useful starting point is one template per recurring job type. An elevator maintenance company covering routine PPM visits, annual thorough examinations, trapped passenger response, and door fault reactive calls needs at minimum four templates. A fire alarm company covering quarterly contractor visits, detector replacements, panel fault attendance, and system commissioning needs four to six. The number should reflect the distinct job types you actually run, not an attempt to build a template for every possible scenario.
Can a template accommodate site-specific variations?
Yes. A base template defines the standard job. Site-specific notes at the asset or customer level can override or supplement it. If a particular building has restricted access to the plant room before 9am, that instruction appears on the work order generated from the template for that building. The base template remains consistent; the site layer adds the variation.
How do templates connect to compliance documentation?
A template designed to mirror a regulatory inspection requirement, such as EN 81-20 for elevator maintenance or BS 5839-1 for fire alarms, produces a completed checklist that matches what the regulation or standard requires. When the technician finishes the job and records the results against each step, the work order is the compliance record. No separate report needs to be written; the documentation is a byproduct of doing the job correctly.
What happens when a technician encounters a fault that is not on the template?
The template covers the standard job. It cannot anticipate every fault. When a technician encounters something outside the template, they record it as an observation or a fault note on the current work order and the system can generate a linked reactive work order for the follow-up. The original PPM work order closes on schedule; the corrective action becomes a separate job with its own tracking, parts, and SLA.
Internal links
- Field Service Inventory Management: Van Stock to Job Site: how van stock readiness connects to dispatch and first-time fix rate
- SLA Management for Maintenance Companies: how PPM completion rate SLAs connect to template-driven scheduling
- How to Automate Compliance Documentation: turning completed work orders into regulatory records automatically