Ventus Software – Enterprise Software for Contractors & Specialty Service Contractors

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Your One Source Enterprise Software Solution

Built to meet the needs of your Service & Construction business.

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Key Features

Our all-in-one platform brings six essential modules together to streamline every aspect of your service and construction business:

Designed for service and construction operations, our enterprise platform brings together dispatch, scheduling, project management, job costing, and accounting in a single powerful solution

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Construction

Total project insight. Total control.

Job Cost

Project Management

Estimating

Document Control

AIA Progress Billing

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Service/Facility Management

Every site. Every facility. Every service call. Managed with confidence.

Work Order Management

Dispatch

Service Contract Tracking

Customer Equipment/Asset Tracking.

Preventative Maintenance Scheduling

Electronic Field Invoice with Photo Capture & Document Review.

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Accounting

Every dollar. Every detail. In sync.

Complete AR with Customizable Aging & Integrated Credit Card Processing.

AIA Progress Billing (G702 & 703) Creation & Storage

Accounts Payable with Purchase Order Capability

Payroll with Certified Payroll Tracking (CAP)

Time Management Approval Processing

Equipment/Fleet Tracking

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Field Mobility

Total field visibility. Seamless connection.

Mobile Data - Field Mobile Invoicing for Service Technicians

eTime: Electronic Time Cards for Hourly Employees

Client Connect: Portal for Your Clients

Icon representing Inventory Management

Inventory Control

Know every part. Control every move.

Multiple Warehouse Capability

Serial Part Tracking

Bar Code Scanning

Automated Restock Reporting

Core & RMA Tracking

Reporting & Forms

From data to design — your reports, your way.

Powerful Reporting

Reports can be Exported to Excel

User Defined Report Writers

Forms Designer

Industry Applications

From bidding and build completion to service contracts and dispatching, our industry leading applications unite projects, services, and accounting into one seamless solution, empowering you to manage your entire enterprise with ease.

HVAC & Mechanical

Track work orders, automate preventative maintenance, dispatch technicians efficiently, and track equipment performance to minimize downtime and maximize profits.

Plumbing

Manage work orders, monitor parts inventory, and capture on-site job details, so your plumbing teams stay productive and profitable.

Electrical

Streamline bids, automate purchase orders, centralize project documentation, and monitor labor and material costs across all simple or complex electrical jobs.

Petroleum Services

Easily coordinate installs and dispenser replacements while staying on top of customer asset history and compliance testing. From accounting to inventory management, boost efficiency and profitability across every site.

Roofing

Produce accurate material takeoffs, assign crews, and monitor job progress in real time to deliver quality roof installations on schedule.

Specialty Services

Support in the trades such as landscaping, security systems, or custom fabrication with fully customizable workflows and dashboards.

Case Studies

Things to remember when evaluating ERP solutions

How to Choose Construction ERP Software Best Suited for Your Business.

Modern construction ERP systems unite field and office operations through a single integrated platform.

Choosing an enterprise resource planning (ERP) system is a pivotal decision for any growing specialty contractor. Whether you’re a President/CEO, Operations Manager, Controller, or Service Manager at a mechanical, electrical, plumbing, HVAC, or other specialty trade firm, the right construction ERP can streamline projects, service work orders, financials, and field operations.

But how do you know which system is best for your organization?

With so many solutions in the market, and the promise that different tools can “connect” through open APIs, it’s important to know what to look for in a fully integrated ERP. Below is an overview of key features in a modern all-in-one construction ERP, critical evaluation criteria (and why they matter), and practical guidance for assessing usability, vendor support, industry fit, and integration flexibility. By focusing on the factors below, you can confidently select an ERP that supports your business strategy now and over the next decade.

 

Key Features to Look For in a Modern Construction ERP

 

A modern, all-inclusive construction ERP should cover the core aspects of your business in one system. Look for the following capabilities when evaluating solutions in the market:

  • Project Management & Job Costing: Robust project management tools, such as progress tracking, change order control, and document management, should tightly integrate with job costing and accounting. This ensures every project’s budget, labor, and material costs are tracked in real time alongside your financials. The best ERPs connect field and finance so project updates immediately reflect in cost reports, work-in-progress (WIP) reporting, and billing. Strong project controls help keep jobs on schedule and on budget, which is vital for contractors managing thin margins.
  • Integrated Financial Management: A construction ERP should include full construction accounting (GL, AP/AR, payroll) that is directly linked to project operations. Construction accounting has unique requirements like progress billing, retainage, certified payroll, and change order tracking. A strong ERP handles these seamlessly by generating AIA G702/G703 style progress invoices or time-and-material billing directly from project data. Up-to-the-minute financial visibility is critical not only for project performance, but also for long-term planning and business health. It also reduces manual transfers between separate accounting and project systems, minimizing errors and ensuring a single source of truth.
  • Service Management & Dispatch: Many specialty contractors run a construction division, but a significant portion of revenue, especially during slower economic periods, comes from service work and preventative maintenance. If that’s your organization, ensure the ERP includes service management functionality. Work order management, dispatch and scheduling, maintenance contract tracking, preventive maintenance scheduling, service billing, and mobile field invoicing all drive efficiency, trust in your data, and real-time visibility for your team. An integrated approach avoids patchwork systems that create double entry and operational friction.
  • Field Mobility & Remote Access: In construction and service work, teams are constantly in the field. Modern ERPs should offer mobile tools and secure remote access so field teams can work in real time. Common capabilities include mobile time entry, daily field reports, work order updates, photo capture, and customer signatures. For example, giving technicians mobile access to work orders in the field allows them to add labor, materials, photos, documents, accept payments, and capture signatures immediately. This reduces delays, mistakes, and double entry. An ERP without strong mobility will quickly feel inadequate and outdated.
  • Inventory and Equipment Management: Specialty trades often manage parts, materials, tools, and equipment across multiple locations. Look for integrated inventory control (parts catalogs, barcoding, multi-warehouse tracking, automated reordering) if material management is meaningful in your operation. Equipment management can help track usage, rentals, maintenance schedules, and depreciation. When these are integrated, the organization can see what’s on hand, on order, allocated, installed on a job, or consumed on a ticket, which drives tighter control and better margins.
  • Reporting & Analytics: A modern construction ERP should provide dashboards and reporting tools that support decision-making across both divisions and departments. Real-time reporting on job profitability, labor productivity, cash flow, over/under billing, and service response times is extremely valuable. Look for customizable dashboards or reporting features that let your team focus on the KPIs that matter. Real-time reporting gives management actionable insight rather than waiting for end-of-month spreadsheets.
  • Remote Hosting and Scalability: Demand for remote access and scalability continues to grow. ERPs are increasingly moving from on-premises servers to hosted or cloud-based deployments to reduce infrastructure burden and support access from anywhere. This approach can limit hardware expense, improve availability, and scale more easily as your company grows.
    Scalability means the system can handle increasing projects, users, and data volume without performance issues or costly rework. Confirm the ERP can also support multi-entity or multi-division operations if you run multiple locations, business units, or service lines. A scalable ERP future-proofs your investment and allows you to add capabilities over time.
  • Must Have Features: Before comparing vendors, define your must-have requirements. The best construction ERPs combine project management, accounting, field mobility, service dispatch, inventory, and reporting into one cohesive platform. If a solution lacks a core capability (for example, you have a service department but no service module, or you need construction accounting but they only offer an integration with QuickBooks), assess the operational impact and the true cost of third-party add-ons.
  • Integration Capabilities: Even an all-in-one ERP may need to exchange data with other tools (GPS tracking, automated material takeoff, payroll services, estimating, etc.). Modern ERPs often provide open APIs and integration tools so you’re not locked into a silo. Integration flexibility helps avoid data silos and duplicate entry while protecting you from outgrowing the system as your technology stack evolves.

 

 

Beyond feature lists and sales demos, here are practical ways specialty contractors can validate fit by focusing on usability, vendor support, industry experience, and integration flexibility:

Evaluating Usability, Support, and Integration: Practical Tips

  • Hands-On Usability Testing (when practical): Don’t just watch the demo. Ask for a trial or sandbox environment when it can be made available. Hands-on time is one of the best ways to validate fit, but with many ERPs the day-to-day experience depends on configuration choices, option settings, security roles, integrations, and workflows that may still be evolving. Because of that, not every vendor can provide a meaningful “out-of-the-box” sandbox early in the evaluation. When hands-on access is feasible, allow the people who will use the system (project managers, accountants, dispatchers, etc.) to perform common tasks using your scenarios: create a sample project, enter a change order, dispatch a technician, run a cost report, and review actual screens and reports. Pay attention to whether the steps and terminology feel intuitive. If your team finds it confusing or cumbersome in a realistic walkthrough, adoption and training effort will likely take longer and have more challenges. If a sandbox isn’t available, request a role-based, day-in-the-life session where your team drives the clicks in the actual UI using your workflows and sample data, so you can still evaluate usability and fit before committing.
  • Check Vendor Support and References: Interview vendors about support structure and long-term support cost expectations. Ask about response times, support hours, escalation paths, included training, and expected price increases. Insufficient training and weak support are common reasons implementations struggle. Call references. Preferably specialty contractors with similar workflows and ask about support during deployment and day-to-day operations. Strong support reduces downtime, risk, and internal frustration.
  • Assess Industry Fit and Vendor Experience: Ask vendors to demonstrate trade-specific scenarios. For example: how an electrical change order is handled, how service schedules a preventive maintenance visit, and how a technician completes a field invoice. The depth and ease of the demonstration will show whether the vendor truly understands your business. Also review the vendor’s roadmap. Are they making steady improvements driven by client feedback? Choosing software that doesn’t fit your workflows creates long-term risk.
  • Implementation Risk and Change Management: Replacing an ERP is difficult, and success depends as much on adoption as it does on software features. Most failed implementations occur in the first year due to weak executive sponsorship, inconsistent process enforcement across departments, and insufficient training. Choose a vendor with a formal implementation plan and training program, designate one or two internal super-users, and ensure leadership sets clear expectations, timelines, and accountability.
  • Data and Migration Plan: The ERP is only as reliable as the data you put into it, and data conversion is often one of the largest cost and risk items in implementation. Ask each vendor what they migrate (master data only vs. full transaction history), how they validate conversions, and what testing is included. In many cases, keeping read-only access to the legacy system for historical lookups is more cost-effective than migrating many years of transactional data.

Finally, remember that choosing an ERP is not just about software features. It's about finding a long-term partner for your business. The right vendor will understand specialty contracting and actively support your success from go-live through ongoing optimization.

If you’re currently evaluating construction ERP systems, the AscenteVMS Software Group team can help you validate fit using your real workflows. From job costing/WIP, billing, service dispatch, inventory, reporting, and field mobility we've been helping specialty contractors for over 40 years. Contact us to request an ERP evaluation checklist and schedule a role-based “day-in-the-life” walkthrough.

Things to remember when evaluating ERP solutions

Things to remember when evaluating ERP solutions

Things to remember when evaluating ERP solutions

Byventus

March 11, 2026

Looking for a Modern Construction ERP is critical for the growing specialty contractor. This article...

Client Success at AscenteVMS Software Group

AscenteVMS Software Group Team

The Team Behind Industry-Leading Client Success

 

How AscenteVMS Client Success protects workflows, builds confidence, and helps clients keep business moving.

When most people think of “support,” they picture a ticket number, a troubleshooting guide, or someone walking them through a fix over the phone. They think in terms of systems, screens, and step-by-step instructions. At AscenteVMS, support means protecting the system your business depends on. When something isn’t working as it should, it’s not just a technical inconvenience; it’s affecting your schedule, your team, your customers, and your bottom line.

We are your Client Success team, and we are much more than a help desk. We don’t just resolve issues; we advocate for the people using the system every day. We listen carefully. We ask the extra question. We consider how a fix today impacts your process tomorrow. Real support is not only about maintaining software. It’s about giving your team the knowledge and confidence to make sound decisions every day.

Protecting Your Workflow

In the trades, there isn’t much room for error.

  • A scheduling misstep delays service and impacts customer trust.
  • A payroll issue affects technician morale.
  • An estimating miscalculation erodes profit margins.
  • An accounting discrepancy complicates month-end close.

When you choose to work with our team, you entrust us with systems that directly influence your revenue, your team, and your reputation. We understand the weight of that responsibility. So when you contact support, we're not just resolving a technical issue. We are looking at what that issue means for your day-to-day operations.

How We Approach Support

Our philosphy is simple, but intentional.

  1. We take ownership. Behind every ticket you submit is a real person trying to get their job done: a dispatcher managing a packed schedule, someone in accounting reconciling accounts, or an owner watching margins closely. We keep that perspective front and center.
  2. We explain the “why,” not just the “how.” We want your team to feel confident in the system. When you understand why something happened and how to prevent it next time, you’re in control. Our goal isn’t to create dependency. It’s to build capability.
  3. We look for patterns. If we see the same types of questions or corrections coming up, that tells us something. Instead of putting out the same fire twice, we aim to smooth the process so it doesn’t spark again. Support, to us, means clear communication, cleaner processes, and a system that works the way it should.

 

Meet the Team: The People Behind the Impact.

Our approach to support matters, but what truly makes a difference is the people behind it. Each member of our team brings distinct strengths, perspectives, and experience. Together, that depth allows us to support your business from every angle.

  • Linda – The Data Detective (35 Years)

    Linda brings deep accounting expertise and unmatched historical knowledge of Ventus. She doesn’t just know how the system works; she understands why it was designed that way. Her superpower is analysis. When something complex surfaces, Linda becomes an investigator, tracing it back through setup, process, and configuration to ensure it’s resolved correctly. She’ll pick up the phone, walk through the details, test scenarios, and follow up with clear answers so you can stay focused on running your business.

  • Roxann – The Financial Strategist (10 Years)

    Roxann combines precision with patience. She doesn’t just give answers; she makes sure they make sense. Whether she’s reviewing reconciliations, explaining posting logic, providing system training, or walking through workflows, she takes the time to break things down clearly. Her superpower is clarity. After speaking with Roxann, you will leave not only with a fix, but with a stronger understanding of your financial processes within the system.

  • Lori – The Relationship Builder (6 Years)

    Lori has a natural ability to make you feel heard and understood, building trust from the very first conversation. She pairs that connection with efficiency, keeping cases moving without unnecessary back-and-forth. She knows that when you contact support, you need clarity and resolution. Her superpower is connection. Through consistency, responsiveness, and genuine commitment, she ensures you feel supported every step of the way.

  • Sonja – The Problem Solver (3 Years)

    Sonja doesn’t settle for surface-level fixes. She digs in, asks thoughtful questions, tests thoroughly, and works issues through to full resolution. Her training style is engaging and practical, dedicated to helping you absorb and apply what you’re learning rather than just receiving information. Sonja’s superpower is persistence. Paired with her kind, affirming approach, you can trust that when Sonja is involved, nothing will be overlooked.

  • Shadi – The Systems Thinker (3 Years)

    Shadi is focused on efficiency and resourcefulness. When faced with something unfamiliar, he researches thoroughly and uses every available tool to fully comprehend the issue before delivering a solution. With expertise in Ascente and Traverse databases, he goes beyond standard fixes to build reports, automations, and integrations that extend the platform’s capabilities. His superpower is optimization. He connects business needs to the underlying data and workflows, creating solutions that are not just correct, but streamlined and time-saving.

  • Kymmie – The Facilitator (1 Year)

    Kymmie brings energy, organization, and a strong commitment to efficiency to the team. As a natural planner, she ensures people stay aligned, internally and with clients, so nothing slips through the cracks. She views support not just as issue resolution, but as an opportunity to improve processes, enhance communication, and elevate team performance. Her superpower is alignment, keeping teams coordinated and focused on what matters most.

Together, this team blends experience, technical depth, persistence, efficiency, and genuine care. That combination is what allows us to provide steady, informed guidance when decisions matter most.

What's Next

When you work with our Client Success team, you can expect transparency. You can expect follow-through. You can expect a steady partner. We will continue to share insights, provide practical guidance, and help you get the most out of your system. But at the core, our commitment remains consistent: When you reach out, you’re connecting with a team that understands what’s at stake and stands alongside you to keep your business moving forward.

Client Success at AscenteVMS Software Group

Client Success at AscenteVMS Software Group

Client Success at AscenteVMS Software Group

Byventus

March 20, 2026

Looking for a Modern Construction ERP is critical for the growing specialty contractor. This article...
Things to remember when evaluating ERP solutions

Things to remember when evaluating ERP solutions

Byventus

March 11, 2026

Looking for a Modern Construction ERP is critical for the growing specialty contractor. This article...

Back-Up Much?

The importance of backing up your data.

The Importance of System Back-Ups

 

We all get busy, but when was the last time you thought about backing up your System?  This is a practicle guide to back-ups

“Most businesses don’t think about backups until something goes wrong. By then, the damage is already done. A system failure isn’t just a technical issue; it can mean lost job data, delayed billing, disrupted schedules, and hours (or days) of operational downtime.

At AscenteVMS, we’ve seen firsthand that the real risk isn’t just losing data. It’s not knowing how quickly you can recover. Backups are not just an IT function; they are a critical part of protecting your business operations.

A Quick Reality Check

Most businesses assume their backups are working because:

  • The system shows no errors
  • Backups are scheduled and running
  • No one has reported an issue

In practice, those assumptions often go untested.

The real question is not “Do you have backups?”
It’s “Have you proven they will work when you need them?”

What Is a Backup?

A backup is simply a copy of your data stored somewhere safe. If something happens to your original files, you can use the backup to restore them.

This could be as simple as copying files to a USB drive or as advanced as automated systems that continuously store and update your data. The key difference is reliability. Manual backups are easy to forget, while automated systems ensure consistency.

Why Backups Are Important

Data loss doesn’t just affect systems. It affects operations.

Common risks include:

  • Hardware failure
  • Accidental deletion
  • Cybersecurity incidents (such as ransomware)
  • Natural disasters or physical damage

Without a reliable backup, recovery can be slow, incomplete, or impossible. For your business, that means:

  • Lost productivity
  • Delayed billing and cash flow
  • Disrupted customer service

Backups are not just about protecting data. They protect business continuity.

The 3-2-1 Rule

A widely accepted best practice is the 3-2-1 rule:

  • 3 copies of your data
  • 2 different types of storage
  • 1 copy stored offsite

This ensures that if one system fails or even an entire location becomes unavailable, you still have access to your data.

For most businesses, relying on a single server or location creates unnecessary risk.

Where to Store Backups

Backups can be stored in several ways:

  • Local backups (on-site servers or devices)
  • Cloud backups (offsite, accessible remotely)
  • Hybrid approaches (a combination of both)

Local backups allow for quick recovery, but they can still be vulnerable to physical damage or theft. Cloud backups provide protection against those risks but may take longer to restore depending on data size and connection speed. A layered approach is the most effective for all businesses.

Understanding Databases

In systems like AscenteVMS, much of your critical information such as projects, service schedules, customer data, and financial data is stored in a database.

Databases continuously update as your team works. Because of this, backups must capture not just files, but the state of your data at specific points in time.

How Database Backups Work

Most systems rely on automated backups that run on a schedule or continuously in the background.

Rather than saving one large file, backups often capture incremental changes throughout the day. This allows systems to:

  • Reduce storage requirements
  • Improve recovery speed
  • Minimize data loss between backups

The goal is not just to save data but to make recovery precise and efficient.

For your business, this means faster recovery with less disruption to daily operations.

Point-in-Time Recovery

Point-in-time recovery allows you to restore your system to a specific moment such as a moment in time before an error or issue occurred.

This is especially important in situations like:

  • Accidental data deletion
  • Corrupted records
  • System errors

Instead of reverting to “yesterday’s backup,” you can restore to the exact point before the problem.

For your business, this means avoiding the loss of an entire day’s work, transactions, or scheduling data.

Automating Backups

Manual backups are unreliable. They depend on someone remembering to run them, which then introduces risk.

Automated backups:

  • Run consistently
  • Reduce human error
  • Ensure data is always being protected

For most businesses, automation is not an option, but it is an essential workflow.

Testing Your Backups

A backup is only useful if it works.

Regular testing ensures:

  • Data can actually be restored
  • Systems function properly after recovery
  • Recovery times meet business needs

 

A Real-World Example

We’ve seen multiple situations where businesses attempted to restore from their backups only to find that the backups contained no meaningful data, resulting in significant data loss.

In both cases, the backup systems appeared to be functioning normally. There were no obvious errors or alerts. There were no obvious errors or alerts. The issue wasn’t discovered until the business needed the data during active operations, and, by then, it was too late.

This is a common and costly misconception: a backup running successfully does not guarantee that your data is actually protected.

The only way to be confident is to test your backups and verify that a full restore works as expected.

Keeping Backups Secure

Backups should be protected just like your primary systems.

Key considerations include:

  • Encryption
  • Access controls
  • Secure storage locations

This is especially important in protecting against ransomware and unauthorized access.

A Simple Way to Evaluate Your Backup Strategy

If you’re unsure about your current setup, consider the following:

  • Do you know where your backups are stored?
  • Have you tested a full restore in the past 6–12 months?
  • How long would it take to fully recover your system in the event of a failure?
  • Would your team know what to do during a failure?

If any of these answers are unclear, your backup strategy may need attention.

In a nutshell…

Backups are only valuable if they are reliable, accessible, and tested. Having a backup system in place is not enough. You need to know that it will work when it matters most.

In our experience, the biggest misconception is that having backups means you’re protected. In reality, untested backups are one of the most common points of failure.

If you’re unsure how your backups are configured, where your data is stored, or how long recovery would take, it’s worth reviewing now. Not after a disruption.

Because when something goes wrong, recovery time is what matters most.

Back-Up Much?

Back-Up Much?

Back-Up Much?

Byventus

March 30, 2026

Looking for a Modern Construction ERP is critical for the growing specialty contractor. This article...
Client Success at AscenteVMS Software Group

Client Success at AscenteVMS Software Group

Byventus

March 20, 2026

Looking for a Modern Construction ERP is critical for the growing specialty contractor. This article...
Things to remember when evaluating ERP solutions

Things to remember when evaluating ERP solutions

Byventus

March 11, 2026

Looking for a Modern Construction ERP is critical for the growing specialty contractor. This article...

Quotes
Formerly known as Vertical Market Software, Ventus has been by our side for over two decades, providing a robust, industry-specific enterprise solution that has scaled with our growth. From real-time job cost tracking and inventory distribution to dispatch, work order management, and accounting tools - the Ventus platform keeps our behind-the-scenes operations efficient and customer-focused
Petro Towery
PEI Distributor

You're in good hands with our experienced team

Ventus Software is the trusted leader in enterprise software for the construction and specialty contracting industry. For more than three decades, contractors have relied on us to optimize operations, improve communication between field and office, and unlock real-time insights through intuitive reporting. Backed by deep industry expertise and shaped by customer-driven innovation, our solutions meet the unique demands of Petroleum Equipment, HVAC/Mechanical, Electrical, Plumbing, Roofing, and other specialty service markets.

It's easy to get started. Contact us today.