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Commission Tracker in Your Day: Checking Your Payout After Sync

1 min read

๐Ÿ”‘ For: Field Workers  |  Requires: Commission Tracker enabled

๐Ÿ“ฑ In Your Day

Real-world moments where PriceRight Pro does the work for you. This is a scenario walkthrough โ€” not a setup guide. For setup, see Check Your Commission Tally โ†’


The moment #

You close a job. Your manager assigns the commission, marks it closed on their end, and that’s it โ€” you’re waiting. You don’t get a notification. You don’t get an email. You check in the next time you export an estimate and see what updated.

For most field workers without a commission tracker, this means asking. Texting your manager. Waiting for a reply. Getting a number you can’t verify and can’t track over time.

With Commission Tracker, the payout is there when you sync.


What happens #

You’ve exported an estimate โ€” or you export one you built today. The export syncs your data back to your manager and pulls the latest commission records down to your device. You open My Commission. The sync label at the top reads: “As of last sync: [date and time].” That’s when the data was last pulled.

If your manager marked a job closed since your last sync, it appears in the list now. You see the job name, the amount, the rate, the basis. The monthly summary at the top updates โ€” Jobs Closed, Revenue, Est. Payout. You know exactly where you stand for the month without asking anyone.


Why the sync timing matters #

Commission data only updates when you export an estimate. If you haven’t exported anything since your manager closed a job, the new payout won’t show yet. The sync label tells you when the data is from โ€” if it shows yesterday’s date, export something to pull a fresh update.

This is by design: the export is what triggers the two-way sync. Building estimates and exporting them regularly keeps your commission data current.


What this changes #

Over time, your commission history builds into a record you can navigate month by month. You can see which months were strong, which jobs paid the most, and how your rate and basis break down across different types of work. That’s information most field workers never have โ€” not because it doesn’t exist, but because no one ever put it in front of them.


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