A near miss gets called out on channel 2. Every crew on site hears it. It never becomes a record.
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Memo is an on-site device that listens to your existing radio traffic, including a hold on the pour, a near miss, or a late delivery, and turns it into log entries, safety records, and alerts in the construction management platform you already run. Nothing changes for the crew.
A near miss gets called out on channel 2. Every crew on site hears it. It never becomes a record.
The pour holds 40 minutes waiting on the pump truck. The super works it out over the radio. The daily log, written at 5pm, says “concrete delayed.”
A sub calls in a changed condition at 6:40am. Three months later it’s a claim, and nobody can prove what was said or when.
The radio already carries the truth about your job. It disappears the second someone lets go of the button.
Deliveries, delays, safety callouts, and equipment issues are captured the moment they cross the radio and pushed into your daily log as structured entries. The log still belongs to your PM. The part the radio knows about arrives already written.
Crews already call them out. Memo captures every one (timestamped, classified, and searchable) without adding a single form or changing how anyone works.
An injury, a strike, a stopped lift: the radio call becomes a notification to the right super, PM, or safety lead in seconds. Not a surprise in tomorrow’s standup.
Every transmission becomes a timestamped, searchable archive. Delay claims, T&M disputes, and OSHA documentation are answered from what was said on site, the day it happened.
Weather holds, crane stops, and inspection arrivals are pushed from your platforms to the channel the crew actually monitors.
Memo monitors the radio channels your site already operates. This works with any make or any model. There is no new hardware on workers and no licensing changes.
Every transmission is transcribed and classified on the device in real time, identifying what happened, where, how urgent it is, and who needs to know.
Structured events flow into your systems. Critical alerts reach the right people in seconds, and your systems can push back out over the radio.
Setup: power, antenna, listening in 45 seconds. No IT project. Day 1 value.
Who lose an hour a day reconstructing what the radio already knew.
Who want the record to match the site without writing it twice.
Who know the near misses are being called out — and have no mechanism to capture them.
Who want every job documented the same way, automatically.
FAQ
Yes. Memo listens to the channels you already operate, whether analog or digital, from any manufacturer. There are no proprietary radios, no licensing changes, and nothing new on the crew.
It writes the radio’s share of them. Memo captures the events that cross the air, such as deliveries, delays, holds, safety callouts, and equipment problems, and ports them as timestamped entries into the platform you run, whether that’s Procore, Autodesk Build, or something else. The parts of the log that never hit the radio, like weather, photos, and quantities, stay with your PM. The field-events section just shows up pre-written.
No. All transcription and classification runs on the device, on site. What leaves, if anything, is structured event data, sent only to the systems you choose and on your terms.
No. Memo documents operational events on shared work channels everyone already hears. It isn’t worn by anyone, doesn’t track individuals, and doesn’t score performance. It captures what happened on the job, which is the same thing your daily log is supposed to do.
Job sites are loud. Memo is built for exactly this audio: short, noisy, jargon-heavy push-to-talk transmissions. That’s the core of the product, not an edge case.
Power and an antenna. The device is listening in under a minute. Integrations to your platforms come after, typically during the pilot, not before it.
Tell us about your radios, your platforms, and the records you’re missing. We’ll show you exactly what Memo would capture.