1. Select the Proposal You'd Like to Check
2. Scroll Down and Click on Reports
3. See Your Product and Job Reports
When a proposal is created in DripJobs using our Production Rates feature, the Reports tab provides a detailed financial and operational breakdown of the project. This section is designed to help you understand costs, pricing, labor, and profitability before the job moves forward.
Product Report
The Product Report focuses on the materials included in the proposal.
In this section, you can see:
Product Name: Each material added to the proposal (for example, specific paint brands or equipment).
Estimated Gallons: The calculated quantity needed based on the job details.
Estimated Product Cost: Your internal cost for each product.
Estimated Cost + Markup: The price charged to the customer after markup.
Estimated Profit: The difference between product cost and the marked-up price.
At the bottom, a total summary shows the combined gallons, total product cost, total price with markup, and total estimated profit from materials alone.
This report helps you clearly understand how much you’re spending on materials versus how much revenue and profit they generate.
Job Report
The Job Report focuses on labor and work execution.
Here you’ll find:
Substrate Name: Each task or area being worked on (e.g., power washing, spraying doors, rolling siding).
Units / Measurements: Square footage, linear feet, or quantity.
Coats & Gallons: How many coats and how much paint is required.
Paint Hours & Prep Hours: Estimated time needed to complete each task.
Estimated Labor Cost: Internal labor cost for the work.
Estimated Labor Price: What the customer is being charged for labor.
Estimated Profit: Profit generated from labor after costs.
A total at the bottom summarizes total hours, total labor cost, total labor price, and total labor profit for the entire job.
Why This Matters
Together, the Product Report and Job Report give you a full picture of:
Material costs vs. material profit
Labor costs vs. labor profit
Overall job profitability
This allows you to confidently review pricing, make adjustments if needed, and ensure the proposal is both competitive and profitable before sending it to the customer. When a proposal is created in DripJobs, the Reports tab provides a detailed financial and operational breakdown of the project. This section is designed to help you understand costs, pricing, labor, and profitability before the job moves forward.
Product Report
The Product Report focuses on the materials included in the proposal.
In this section, you can see:
Product Name: Each material added to the proposal (for example, specific paint brands or equipment).
Estimated Gallons: The calculated quantity needed based on the job details.
Estimated Product Cost: Your internal cost for each product.
Estimated Cost + Markup: The price charged to the customer after markup.
Estimated Profit: The difference between product cost and the marked-up price.
At the bottom, a total summary shows the combined gallons, total product cost, total price with markup, and total estimated profit from materials alone.
This report helps you clearly understand how much you’re spending on materials versus how much revenue and profit they generate.
Job Report
The Job Report focuses on labor and work execution.
Here you’ll find:
Substrate Name: Each task or area being worked on (e.g., power washing, spraying doors, rolling siding).
Units / Measurements: Square footage, linear feet, or quantity.
Coats & Gallons: How many coats and how much paint is required.
Paint Hours & Prep Hours: Estimated time needed to complete each task.
Estimated Labor Cost: Internal labor cost for the work.
Estimated Labor Price: What the customer is being charged for labor.
Estimated Profit: Profit generated from labor after costs.
A total at the bottom summarizes total hours, total labor cost, total labor price, and total labor profit for the entire job.
Why This Matters
Together, the Product Report and Job Report give you a full picture of:
Material costs vs. material profit
Labor costs vs. labor profit
Overall job profitability
This allows you to confidently review pricing, make adjustments if needed, and ensure the proposal is both competitive and profitable before sending it to the customer.


