How to Set Up Jobber for Contractors: Step-by-Step Configuration Guide

🕒 Estimated read time: 22 minutes  |  Last updated: February 2026


Setting up Jobber correctly from the start is the difference between a platform that transforms how your contracting business runs and one that becomes expensive shelf software. Jobber is field service management software built for residential home service contractors — it handles scheduling, dispatch, quoting, invoicing, and automated client communication in a single platform. This guide walks through how to set up Jobber for contractors step by step — all 12 configuration steps, in the order that produces the fastest operational improvement, with the “why” behind each setting so you understand what you’re building, not just what to click.

💡 The short answer: Setting up Jobber for contractors correctly takes 6–8 hours across 12 steps. Start with the services list, scheduling board, and crew mobile app — these three produce immediate operational improvement and can be done in under two hours. Everything else (communication templates, payments, QuickBooks sync, job forms, online booking) can be layered in while the business is already running on the platform. Don’t wait for a perfect setup to go live.

No Jobber account yet? The 14-day free trial gives full Grow plan access — no credit card required. Start the trial and follow this guide step by step.

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✅ Key Takeaways

  • Don’t wait for a perfect setup before going live. The services list, scheduling board, and crew mobile app are the three highest-priority steps — get those working first and build everything else around a running business. All three can be done in under two hours.
  • Requests, Quotes, and Jobs are three distinct things in Jobber’s workflow. Understanding how they connect before you start configuring prevents the most common setup mistake: booking jobs in the wrong stage and creating a disorganized workflow that’s hard to untangle later.
  • Job Forms are the most-skipped high-value feature. Digital completion checklists, photo documentation, and client signatures in the mobile app eliminate verbal reporting calls and give you a documented record of every visit. Available on Connect and Grow plans.
  • Automated client communication templates are configured once and run forever. The hour spent building booking confirmations, reminders, on-my-way messages, and review requests is recovered within the first week and repeats indefinitely on every single job.
  • Jobber Payments must be connected before the first real invoice is sent — not after you notice clients aren’t paying. An invoice with an embedded payment link converts at dramatically higher rates than one that requires a check or a manual transfer.
  • Map your QBO accounts correctly during the QuickBooks sync setup. This is the one configuration decision that, if done wrong, creates accounting errors that compound over months. Take the extra 15 minutes to map every service to the right income account.
  • Crew adoption is the real implementation challenge — not the software configuration. The most common reason Jobber implementations fail is crew resistance to the mobile app, not technical issues. Address it proactively with a structured two-day onboarding approach.

⚠ FTC Disclosure

This article contains affiliate links to Jobber. If you start a trial or purchase a subscription through our links, Kore Komfort Solutions may earn a commission at no additional cost to you. This does not influence our editorial content. All configuration instructions are based on publicly available Jobber Help Center documentation. Features and interface details change periodically — verify current information at help.getjobber.com. Independent reviews available at Capterra and G2.


Setup Overview: The Jobber Workflow and Why It Matters

Before touching any settings, it’s worth spending five minutes understanding how Jobber’s workflow is structured — because every configuration decision feeds into this sequence. The Jobber workflow runs: Request → Quote → Job → Invoice → Payment. You don’t have to use every stage — many contractors skip directly from Quote to Job, or from Job straight to Invoice — but understanding all five stages prevents the most common setup mistake: configuring the platform around only the stages you currently use, then discovering the rest of the workflow doesn’t connect cleanly when your business grows.

What Each Stage Does

Request is the optional intake stage. It’s where a client submits a service inquiry — either online through your booking page or entered internally when someone calls. Requests can be converted to a Quote (if pricing needs to be determined first) or directly to a Job (if the scope is already known). This is useful as a lead pipeline stage and for businesses that offer online booking.

Quote is the pricing proposal. It gets sent to the client, they approve it online, and the approved quote converts to a scheduled Job. Quotes support deposits — when a client approves a quote with a deposit configured, they pay the deposit immediately at approval before any work is scheduled.

Job is the scheduled work. It can be a one-off job (single visit, one invoice at the end) or a recurring job (repeating schedule, invoiced on a frequency you set). The Job is what appears on the dispatch board and in the crew’s mobile app.

Invoice is generated from the completed Job, either automatically on completion or manually by the crew member in the field. The invoice carries the line items from the Job or Quote and is sent to the client with an embedded payment link.

Payment is recorded when the client pays, either via Jobber Payments (card, ACH) or manually logged (cash, check). Payment triggers the automated review request if configured.

The Setup Priority Order

Not all setup steps produce equal value immediately. These are the three that change daily operations the fastest — prioritize them if time is limited in week one:

  1. Services list — every quote, job, and invoice you ever send pulls from it
  2. Scheduling board and crew mobile app — eliminates the morning phone call cascade within the first week
  3. Automated client communication templates — eliminates hours of routine client outreach permanently; configure this in week one even if other steps are deferred

Everything else — job forms, QBO sync, online booking, custom fields, advanced reporting — is valuable and should be configured, but can wait until the business is already running on the platform. See the full list in What to Skip for Now below.

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What to Skip for Now: Jobber Configuration That Can Wait 30 Days

One of the most common ways Jobber implementations stall is setup burnout — trying to configure everything before going live and running out of energy before the platform is actually running. Here is what you can safely defer to week two, three, or beyond without degrading the core operational benefit:

🕑 Safely Defer to Later

Custom fields — allow you to store additional structured information on clients, jobs, or properties. Useful, but not critical in week one. Add them after you know what information your team actually needs to track.

Advanced reporting and dashboards — Jobber’s reporting suite (revenue by service, job profitability, team performance) is valuable for business analysis but has zero impact on operational execution. Set up after 30 days when you have real data to look at.

Expense tracking — logging job-level expenses for job costing. Useful for margin analysis (Grow plan feature), but configuring it during initial setup before the crew is comfortable with the mobile app adds complexity without immediate return.

Tags and segments — client tagging for marketing and segmentation. Valuable for email campaigns and seasonal outreach, but not a day-one operational priority.

App marketplace integrations — Jobber integrates with CompanyCam, Mailchimp, Gusto, and other tools. These add genuine value but should be connected after the core platform is running cleanly, not during initial configuration.

Franchise features, API access, and developer tools — irrelevant for the vast majority of residential home service businesses. Do not explore these during initial Jobber setup.

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Step 1: Start Your Trial and Configure Your Business Profile

Time: 20–30 minutes  |  All plans

Your business profile is the information that appears on every quote, invoice, and client-facing communication Jobber sends. Getting this right at setup means you never have to hunt down a document to fix a typo on your company name or phone number.

Account Creation

Visit Jobber’s trial page and enter your name, email, business name, and the type of service business you run. Jobber uses your industry selection to pre-configure relevant default settings — you can adjust any of them. No credit card is required for the trial. You’ll get full Grow plan access for 14 days.

Business Profile Settings

Navigate to Settings > Company Details and complete every field: company name exactly as it should appear on client documents; business address; primary phone; reply-to email; website URL; and logo (PNG or JPG, minimum 200×200px). The most critical setting in this section is time zone — set it correctly before creating any jobs. A wrong time zone misconfigures every scheduled appointment silently and is painful to diagnose and fix after the fact.

⚠ Setup mistake to avoid: Don’t skip the logo upload because “it can wait.” Your logo appears on every quote and invoice from the first job forward. Sending a logo-free quote to your first real client on the new platform sets the wrong tone. Take the 5 minutes now.

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Step 2: Build Your Services and Pricing List

Time: 30–45 minutes  |  All plans

Your services list is the line-item library that populates every quote and invoice you ever send. A well-built services list means building a quote takes two minutes — you’re selecting from a pre-configured library rather than typing service names, prices, and descriptions from scratch on every job. This is one of the highest-leverage setup steps and worth doing carefully.

Accessing Services

Navigate to Settings > Services (some accounts label this Products and Services). Click Add Service for each service type your business offers.

What to Complete for Each Service

For every service entry: service name as it should appear on client documents (specific enough to be meaningful — “HVAC Spring Tune-Up” not “Tune-Up”); description of what the service includes from the client’s perspective (one to three sentences that set expectations and reduce scope questions); default price for the most common version of this service (you can override on individual quotes); unit type (per job, per hour, per square foot, per unit); and taxable checkbox based on your jurisdiction (services often tax-exempt, materials often taxable — confirm with your accountant).

Services List Strategy

Create a separate entry for every distinct service, including closely related variants at different price points. “Lawn Mowing – Standard Lot” and “Lawn Mowing – Large Lot” as separate entries is more useful than a single entry you manually adjust every time. Also create entries for materials, add-ons, and disposal fees you commonly charge separately. The goal: build most quotes entirely by selecting from this list, with minimal manual entry. If you find yourself typing the same line item repeatedly on jobs, it belongs in the services list.

⚠ Setup mistake to avoid: Building too few services because it “feels faster.” Twenty well-configured services that cover your real work save 10 minutes per quote, every quote, for the life of the account. Three generic entries save nothing.

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Step 3: Import Your Existing Clients

Time: 30–60 minutes depending on list size  |  All plans

Importing your client base before you start scheduling connects your service history to your new workflow. Every job created from this point forward links to a client record, and property notes accumulate over time into a persistent knowledge base about each account.

CSV Import

Navigate to Clients > Import Clients and download Jobber’s CSV template. Required fields: client first name, last name or company name, and at least one of email or phone. Recommended: property address, billing address if different, phone type, and notes. Copy your existing list into Jobber’s template format column by column, save as CSV, and upload. For lists under 30 clients, manual entry via Clients > New Client is often faster than CSV formatting.

Property Notes: Start Them Now

As you enter or import clients, add any property-specific information you currently carry in your head or on paper: gate codes, parking instructions, animals on property, access quirks, preferred contact methods, notes from previous visits. This is the information that generates crew calls at 7 AM. In the client record, it’s accessible from the mobile app on every job at that address — permanently, without a call.

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Step 4: Configure Scheduling, Dispatch, Job Types, and Requests

Time: 45–60 minutes  |  Route optimization: Connect plan and above

The dispatch board is the operational center of Jobber — the shared view of who is doing what, where, and when. This step covers four closely related configuration areas: work schedule, job types, dispatch view, and the Requests workflow that feeds work into the system.

Work Schedule Settings

Navigate to Settings > Work Schedule. Set your standard working days and hours. This determines the available time slots on the dispatch board and in online booking. Configure your actual hours — not optimistic ones. The board only shows slots within these hours by default.

Job Duration Defaults

Under Settings > Services, each service can have a default duration. When you schedule a job using that service type, Jobber pre-fills the time block accordingly. Set realistic defaults — a 90-minute job should have a 90-minute default. Underestimated durations create scheduling conflicts and a dispatch board that becomes meaningless by noon.

One-Off Jobs vs. Recurring Jobs

Jobber distinguishes between two fundamental job types — and understanding which to use when is critical for contractors who do both repair/installation work and ongoing maintenance services.

One-off jobs have a single visit or a set of visits for a specific project, followed by one final invoice. Use these for: HVAC repairs, bathroom remodels, one-time cleanups, installations, anything with a defined beginning and end.

Recurring jobs have a repeating schedule — weekly, biweekly, monthly, or a custom frequency — and invoice on a cadence you set (per visit, monthly, quarterly). Use these for: lawn maintenance, HVAC maintenance agreements, pest control accounts, recurring cleaning clients, anything billed on a schedule. Configure your most common recurring service types during setup — set the visit frequency, the invoice frequency, and the default line items. Jobber then auto-populates the schedule forward without manual re-entry every cycle.

Dispatch Board Views

The dispatch board can be viewed by day, week, or month, filtered by crew member. Spend five minutes setting your default view. For most residential contractors with one to three crews, the day view filtered by crew member is the most actionable. Route optimization on Connect and above appears here as well — ensure all job addresses are complete before running optimization.

⚠ Setup mistake to avoid: Not configuring recurring jobs during setup and defaulting to one-off jobs for every maintenance account. This works short-term but creates a manual re-booking burden every cycle and loses the recurring revenue reporting that makes Jobber valuable for businesses with maintenance agreements.

The Requests Workflow — Use It or Skip It?

Requests are the optional first step in the Jobber workflow and the most commonly misunderstood feature at setup. A Request represents a client inquiry before any quoting or scheduling has occurred — it’s the lead intake stage. Requests arrive in two ways: submitted by clients online through your booking page, or entered internally when a client calls before you’ve quoted.

From a Request, you convert to either a Quote (to price the job first) or directly to a Job (if scope and price are already known). Requests that don’t proceed to work can be declined — keeping a clean record of what leads came in and what happened to each.

Use Requests if your business uses online booking, tracks leads, or runs an intake-and-quote workflow where every new job gets priced before scheduling. Skip Requests and go directly to Quotes or Jobs if you quote on-site, book recurring clients directly, or prefer the simpler two-stage workflow. Many contractors use both paths simultaneously — Requests for new clients through online booking, direct Job creation for existing clients by phone.

If you’ll be using Requests, navigate to Settings > Online Booking > Request Form and configure the questions clients answer when submitting: service type, description, preferred timing, property details. More information at Request stage means less back-and-forth before quoting.

⚠ Setup mistake to avoid: Ignoring the Requests workflow entirely and later discovering you have no clean record of leads that didn’t convert. Even if you skip it initially, understanding what it does prevents confusion when clients submit online requests that arrive in Jobber without a corresponding job on the dispatch board.

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Step 5: Set Up Job Forms

Time: 45–60 minutes  |  Connect and Grow plans

🔒 Connect plan and above

Job Forms are digital checklists and inspection forms that crew members complete in the Jobber mobile app during or after a job. They are the most-skipped high-value feature in Jobber — most contractors overlook them during setup and then discover later that they eliminate entire categories of verbal reporting, client disputes, and documentation liability.

What Job Forms Can Capture

A Job Form is a structured field collection assigned to a specific job type or service. Fields can include: yes/no checkboxes for inspection items, text fields for notes, number fields for measurements or readings, photo capture fields (before-and-after photos, condition documentation), dropdown selections, and client signature capture for work authorization or completion sign-off.

The Most Valuable Job Form Use Cases for Contractors

Pre-service inspection checklist: HVAC tune-up items to inspect and record (filter condition, refrigerant pressure, coil condition, capacitor readings). Completed before work begins — creates a documented baseline and reduces liability for pre-existing conditions.

Completion checklist: Items the crew confirms were done on a standard service call. “Area cleaned up,” “Gate secured,” “Client notified of any issues found.” Completion checklists answer the most common client complaint — “they didn’t do everything” — with documented field data.

Before-and-after photo form: A Job Form with two photo fields — “Condition at arrival” and “Condition at completion” — creates automatic visual documentation of every job without the crew needing to remember to take photos separately.

Client sign-off form: A signature field the client signs on the crew member’s phone when work is complete. For higher-value jobs, this is the cleanest dispute prevention tool available.

Creating a Job Form

Navigate to Settings > Job Forms and click New Form. Name the form by the service type it’s for. Add fields using the field builder. Assign the form to a specific service type so it automatically appears on every job using that service — crew members will see it in their mobile app as a required or optional completion step. Build at least one form for your highest-volume service type during initial setup. More forms can be added progressively as the team gets comfortable with the workflow.

⚠ Setup mistake to avoid: Building a 20-item Job Form and assigning it to every job type before the crew has used the mobile app for a week. Start with one simple form (3–5 fields maximum) for your most common service. Expand after the crew is comfortable with the mobile app workflow.

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Step 6: Add Team Members and Set Up the Mobile App

Time: 30 minutes + crew onboarding time  |  All plans

Team member setup and mobile app deployment together produce the single most visible operational change from Jobber implementation. Once the crew is on the app, they see their schedule without calling, log arrival and completion without calling, and access property notes without calling. The morning phone call cascade stops within the first week.

Adding Team Members

Navigate to Team > Add Team Member. For each crew member enter name, email address (used for their Jobber login invitation), role, and phone number. Assign the Worker role to field crew in almost all cases — they need to see their schedule and complete jobs, not access your financials. Admin role gives full account access. After saving, Jobber sends the team member an email invitation to create their password.

Installing the Jobber Mobile App

The Jobber mobile app is available for iOS and Android — search “Jobber” in the App Store or Google Play. Each crew member installs it and logs in with the email and password they created when accepting their team invitation. Have everyone installed before their first day on the platform — not the morning of.

The Four-Step Mobile App Walkthrough

Before the crew uses the app on a real job, walk through these four actions with each person. This takes five minutes in person or two minutes as a voice message:

  1. Find today’s jobs — the home screen shows today’s assigned jobs in order
  2. Check in and start the job — tap the job, tap “On My Way” (fires the automated client message), then “Start” at arrival
  3. Find property notes — tap the job, scroll to the property details section
  4. Mark complete and invoice — tap “Complete Job,” review line items, tap “Invoice Client”

Four taps covers the entire daily workflow for the vast majority of residential service jobs. Crew members who know these four actions are functional on the platform from day one.

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Step 7: Configure Automated Client Communication Templates

Time: 60–90 minutes  |  Full automation: Connect and Grow plans

📅 Highest-leverage setup step — don’t rush this one

Automated client communication is the feature that most transforms the daily experience of running a home service business on Jobber. Every template you configure here runs permanently without further attention. The hour you spend on this step is recovered within the first week of operation and repeats indefinitely on every job you ever run on the platform. Navigate to Settings > Client Communications.

💬 The 8-Template Communication Sequence

1. Booking Confirmation (trigger: job created — all plans)
Sent immediately when a job is booked. Include the job date, time window, service address, and a link to the client hub where they can view details. Tone: warm and professional. This is often the first communication from your business after booking — it sets the quality expectation for every interaction that follows.

2. Appointment Reminder (trigger: 24 hours before job start — Connect and above)
A day-before reminder with scheduling information plus any prep instructions: “Please have pets secured,” “Please ensure the exterior unit is accessible.” Reduces no-shows and last-minute access problems.

3. On My Way (trigger: crew marks En Route in app — all plans)
Fires when the crew taps “On My Way” in the mobile app. Includes the crew member’s name and approximate arrival. Clients who receive this message almost never call to ask “where are you?” — which is one of the highest-volume interruption calls in most home service businesses.

4. Invoice Delivery (trigger: invoice sent — all plans)
The email or text delivering the invoice. Include a clear subject line with the job address and amount, a brief thank-you, and — critically — the Jobber Payments link. Subject line formula: “Invoice #[number] for [service] at [address] — [amount].” This subject line ensures the email doesn’t get filtered and is immediately identifiable when the client looks for it.

5. Invoice Follow-Up — Day 3 (trigger: invoice unpaid 3 days — Connect and above)
Friendly reminder: “Just a quick follow-up on your invoice for [service] — you can pay here: [link].” No accusation. Many clients who didn’t pay on day one genuinely forgot and pay immediately on this reminder.

6. Invoice Follow-Up — Day 7 (trigger: invoice unpaid 7 days — Connect and above)
More direct: “Your invoice of $[amount] for [service] is now 7 days past the send date. Payment can be made here: [link]. Contact us if there’s an issue.” Professional. Clear. Still not adversarial.

7. Review Request (trigger: invoice paid — Connect and above)
Sent automatically at the moment of peak client satisfaction — they just paid, the job is done, the work is present in their mind. “Thanks for your payment — if you have a moment, a quick review means a lot to us: [Google Business Profile link].” The optimal moment to ask. This is your automated review generation system.

8. Quote Follow-Up (trigger: quote pending 3 and 7 days — Grow plan)
Automated follow-up on pending quotes: “Just checking in on the quote for [service] — happy to answer questions. Approve here: [link].” Systematically pursues every pending estimate without the owner needing to remember who hasn’t responded.

Template Tone and Length

Keep every template short — two to four sentences for texts, three to six sentences for emails. Use the client’s first name (Jobber inserts it automatically with the {{client_first_name}} variable). Match the tone you’d use with a client you’ve worked with before: professional, warm, direct. Test every template by sending yourself a preview before the platform goes live.

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Step 8: Configure Quote and Invoice Templates

Time: 30 minutes  |  All plans

Quote and invoice templates determine what every financial document you send looks like and what terms are embedded. Configure these once; they apply to every document the platform produces.

Quote Template (Settings > Quotes)

Key settings: default message in the email body when a quote is sent (include your name and contact for questions); quote expiry in days (30 days is standard — expiry creates urgency and protects you from honoring a price quoted months ago when material costs have changed); deposit settings (configure the deposit percentage if you require one — 25–50% is standard; clients who approve online are prompted to pay the deposit immediately); and signature requirement for higher-value jobs (digital signature collected at approval).

Invoice Template (Settings > Invoices)

Key settings: payment terms (Due on Receipt is standard for residential home services — work is complete, payment is expected promptly); late fee percentage and grace period (1.5% per month after 30 days is common and defensible if disclosed on every invoice — configure it here to have it appear automatically); footer text for contractor license number, standard disclosures, or a brief thank-you; and invoice number prefix for cross-referencing with QuickBooks or client conversations.

⚠ Setup mistake to avoid: Leaving payment terms blank. “Due on Receipt” needs to be explicitly set — if this field is left at default, invoices may show no due date, which communicates no urgency. Set it during template configuration so it appears on every invoice you ever send.

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Step 9: Set Up Jobber Payments

Time: 20–30 minutes setup + 1–2 business days bank verification  |  All plans

Jobber Payments embeds a payment link into every invoice you send — clients click and pay by credit card, debit, or ACH in under two minutes. Collection rates on invoices with embedded payment links are materially higher than on invoices without them. Set this up before you send your first invoice, not after you notice clients aren’t paying.

Connecting Your Bank Account

Navigate to Settings > Jobber Payments and click Get Started. The application collects your business name, EIN or SSN, business address, and bank account information for deposit routing. It takes about 10 minutes and verifies within one to two business days. Note: if you started your Jobber trial from the mobile app rather than from Jobber.com, Payments won’t be available until after you subscribe to a paid plan. Trial accounts started from the website have Payments available during the trial period.

Processing Fees

Jobber Payments fees (verify current rates at getjobber.com): approximately 2.9% + $0.30 for card-present transactions, 3.1% + $0.30 for card-not-present (invoices paid online), and 1% for ACH bank transfers. ACH is the lowest-cost option for larger invoices — worth promoting prominently for jobs over $500. These rates are competitive with standalone processors, and the elimination of manual reconciliation work has real value beyond the fee comparison.

Tap-to-Pay on Mobile

Jobber supports tap-to-pay via the mobile app on compatible iPhones — clients tap their card or phone to the crew member’s device at job completion. Enable under Settings > Jobber Payments > In-Person Payments. Useful for clients who prefer to pay in person.

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Step 10: Connect QuickBooks Online (Optional)

Time: 30 minutes  |  Connect and Grow plans

🔒 Connect plan and above

If your business uses QuickBooks Online for accounting, connecting it to Jobber eliminates double-entry of every invoice and payment from this point forward. Invoices sync when sent, payments sync when received, clients sync as QBO customers. Once configured, it runs in the background requiring no ongoing maintenance.

Connecting the Accounts

Navigate to Settings > Integrations > QuickBooks Online, click Connect to QuickBooks, log into your QBO account when the authorization window opens, and click Authorize. Jobber will then walk you through account mapping.

Account Mapping — The Critical Step

Jobber will display each service from your services list and ask you to map it to a QBO income account. Map every service — labor services to a “Services Revenue” or “Labor Revenue” account, materials to a “Materials” or “Product Sales” account. A correctly mapped QBO connection produces clean books. A poorly mapped one — or an unmapped one where everything defaults to a single account — produces a mess that costs real money at year-end to untangle.

The sync is one-way from Jobber to QBO. Changes made in Jobber push to QBO; changes made in QBO do not push back. Always make edits in Jobber, not in QBO. For a complete technical walkthrough, see our dedicated article: How to Connect Jobber to QuickBooks Online.

⚠ Setup mistake to avoid: Skipping the QBO mapping step and letting everything default to one income account. This doesn’t break anything immediately — but at year-end, your accountant will spend billable hours sorting out which revenue came from which service type. Map it correctly during setup.

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Step 11: Set Up Online Booking (Optional)

Time: 30–45 minutes  |  Connect and Grow plans

🔒 Connect plan and above

Online booking allows clients to request appointments through a booking page on your website or a standalone Jobber booking link, without calling. Submitted requests appear in Jobber as pending jobs for you to confirm. This reduces inbound phone volume for routine service requests and captures submissions outside business hours.

Navigate to Settings > Online Booking. Configure which services appear, your available time slots (drawn from work schedule settings), your service area, and any questions clients must answer at booking (property type, access instructions, photo upload, describe the issue). Set whether requests are auto-confirmed or require manual approval.

Add the generated booking URL to your website’s “Book Now” button, your Google Business Profile, and your social media profiles. Any client who submits creates a pending job in Jobber automatically — no missed requests, no callbacks to log an inquiry that came in at 11 PM.

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Step 12: Run a Test Job End-to-End

Time: 30 minutes  |  All plans

The final step in setting up Jobber for contractors is running a complete test job using your own name as a fake client and a personal email you can check. This step verifies every automated message fires correctly, every sync works, and the crew mobile app experience is functional. Finding a misconfigured communication template on a test job takes five minutes to fix. Finding it on your best client’s first invoice takes an apology and a corrected document.

✅ End-to-End Test Job Checklist

  1. Create a test client with your name and personal email
  2. Submit a test Request (if you’ll use the Requests workflow) and convert to Quote
  3. Send a Quote — check your email for delivery and formatting
  4. Approve the Quote as the client — go through deposit payment if configured
  5. Confirm the approved Quote created a Job on the dispatch board
  6. Open the job in the Jobber mobile app on a crew device — confirm details are correct and property notes are visible
  7. Complete any assigned Job Form fields
  8. Mark the job En Route — confirm the “on my way” message arrives
  9. Mark the job Complete — invoice the client from the mobile app
  10. Check email for invoice delivery with payment link
  11. Click the payment link and pay using a card
  12. Confirm payment appears in Jobber billing dashboard
  13. Confirm review request message arrives after payment
  14. Check QBO sync if connected — verify invoice and payment appear in the correct income accounts
  15. Delete the test client and job after successful verification

If everything on this checklist works, the platform is ready for real clients. Fix any gaps on the test job — not on a real client account.

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Common Jobber Setup Mistakes (And How to Avoid Them)

These are the six configuration errors that appear most frequently when contractors set up Jobber — and that are most likely to cause the platform to underperform relative to its potential. Review this list before going live.

⚠ The Six Most Common Jobber Setup Mistakes

Mistake 1: Wrong time zone
Set during account creation and easy to overlook. A wrong time zone misconfigures every scheduled appointment silently — jobs appear at the wrong time in the mobile app, automated messages fire at the wrong times, and the dispatch board is confusing. Fix immediately in Settings > Company Details if you suspect this happened.

Mistake 2: Not setting job duration defaults
Leaving duration defaults blank means every new job is created as a zero-duration time block on the dispatch board. It looks like all your jobs are scheduled at the same time. Add realistic durations to every service in your services list — this takes 15 minutes and makes the dispatch board immediately functional.

Mistake 3: Skipping the communication templates entirely
The most common omission. Contractors who configure only the scheduling board and skip communication templates get modest value from Jobber. The platform produces its transformational operational improvement when the full automated communication sequence is running. Don’t skip this step.

Mistake 4: Skipping the end-to-end test job
Going live without testing the full workflow. The first real client job is not the right time to discover that the on-my-way message is going to the wrong number, the QBO sync isn’t mapping income correctly, or the invoice template is missing payment terms. Test on a fake client. Fix before launch.

Mistake 5: Not mapping QBO accounts during integration setup
Leaving all services mapped to a single default income account. Works fine in the moment; creates year-end accounting problems that cost real money to untangle. Map every service to the correct income account during the integration setup.

Mistake 6: Going live before the crew has used the mobile app on a practice job
The crew’s first encounter with the mobile app being a real client’s job creates anxiety, errors, and resistance. Run the crew through the four-step mobile walkthrough on a test job first. Five minutes of practice prevents most of the friction that causes crew resistance to the new system.

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Your First Week on Jobber

Once you’ve completed the Jobber setup for contractors above, the transition from your previous system works best as a parallel-run rather than a hard cutover. Run Jobber alongside the existing process for two to three days while the crew gets comfortable with the mobile app, then cut over fully to Jobber as the single source of truth for scheduling and billing.

Days 1–2: Crew onboarding. Have every crew member install the Jobber app, log in, and complete the four-step mobile walkthrough. Schedule one or two low-stakes jobs in Jobber and run through the full workflow supervised. Confirm every crew member can find their schedule, access property notes, mark jobs complete, and generate an invoice without assistance.

Days 3–4: Full transition. Stop entering jobs anywhere other than Jobber. All new bookings go into the scheduling board. All invoices come from Jobber. Any jobs in the old system that haven’t been invoiced get entered into Jobber and billed from there to bring the queue current.

End of week 1: Audit. Check: Are all jobs on the dispatch board? Did automated messages fire correctly? Did invoice follow-ups go out on unpaid invoices? Did QBO sync cleanly? Fix any gaps while the setup is fresh. By week two, the system runs without active management.

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Getting Crew Buy-In: The Real Jobber Implementation Challenge

The most common reason Jobber setups fail for contractors is not technical — it’s crew resistance to the mobile app. This is the conversation most implementation guides skip. Addressing it proactively takes 20 minutes and prevents the most frustrating failure mode: a well-configured platform that the crew simply doesn’t use.

Why Crew Members Resist

Crew resistance usually has one of three root causes: unfamiliarity with smartphones or apps in general; concern that digital time-tracking and GPS represent surveillance; or a preference for the existing system — even if that system is “call the boss” — because it’s familiar. None of these is unreasonable, and none is fixed by simply announcing that the new system is being used starting Monday.

The Approach That Works

Show the benefit from the crew’s perspective, not yours. The benefit to the crew is: they don’t have to call you in the morning to find out where they’re going. Their schedule is in their pocket. They can see the job details without asking. That’s the sell — less calling, not more monitoring.

Don’t frame it as “I need you to use this app.” Frame it as “This tells you everything you need to know about your day so you don’t have to wait for me.” The crew member who currently calls you three times before 9 AM is not doing it because they enjoy it.

Handle the GPS/surveillance concern directly. If a crew member raises it, acknowledge it rather than deflecting. “Yes, Jobber can show me where the truck is. I’m using it to make sure jobs are getting done on time, not to track your lunch break.” Transparency on this point prevents resentment later.

The “I Don’t Know How to Use It” Crew Member

For a crew member who is genuinely uncomfortable with smartphone apps, the four-step walkthrough needs to happen in person, slowly, with them driving the phone. Watching a demo is not the same as tapping through the workflow themselves. Find 15 minutes before a job to walk through it together on a real device. Most crew members who say they can’t figure it out are crew members who haven’t been walked through the four taps — once they’ve done it themselves, the resistance typically evaporates.

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Which Jobber Plan Do You Actually Need?

Use the 14-day Jobber trial on the full Grow plan to evaluate which features you actually use before committing. The right plan for your Jobber setup depends almost entirely on whether you have crew members and which automation features matter most to your operation. Here is how most residential home service businesses land:

👔 Jobber Plan Decision Guide

Core — $39/month
Right for: Solo operators who primarily need scheduling, digital invoicing, client records, and payment collection. No crew to dispatch, no automated follow-up sequence needed beyond basics.
Missing: Route optimization, GPS tracking, automated client reminders and follow-ups, QBO sync, quote follow-ups, job forms, recurring job billing. If any of those matter to your operation, Core is not enough.

Connect Team — $169/month (up to 5 users)
Right for: Businesses with one or more crew members needing route optimization, the full automated communication sequence, GPS location tracking, QuickBooks Online sync, job forms, and recurring job management. This is where most residential home service businesses with employees land.
Missing: Job costing, two-way SMS, optional line items on quotes, custom automation builder. If you’re not actively managing margins by job, Connect covers most real operational needs.

Grow Team — $349/month (up to 10 users)
Right for: Businesses actively managing job profitability (job costing), using two-way SMS for client communication, or building custom automated workflows beyond the standard templates.
Upgrade trigger: You want to see job cost vs. revenue on each job, or you need automations the Connect templates can’t build.

Plus — $599/month (up to 15 users)
Right for: Multi-crew operations needing advanced reporting, marketing tools, dedicated onboarding specialists, and API access. Less common among residential home service businesses.

For a complete plan comparison, see our dedicated article: Jobber Pricing Breakdown: Which Plan Is Actually Worth It?

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Printable Jobber Setup Checklist for Contractors

Use this Jobber setup checklist to track your configuration progress step by step. Copy it, print it, or screenshot it — work through the steps in order and check off each item when complete. Plan requirements are noted inline so you know what’s available on your current plan.

📋 Jobber Setup Checklist

STEP 1 — Business Profile (20–30 min)

☐ Company name, phone, email, address entered
☐ Logo uploaded
☐ Time zone set correctly
☐ Currency confirmed

STEP 2 — Services List (30–45 min)

☐ All services entered with name, description, default price, unit type
☐ Taxable flag set correctly on each service
☐ Common materials/add-ons entered as separate line items
☐ Default job duration set for each service

STEP 3 — Clients (30–60 min)

☐ Existing client list imported or entered manually
☐ Property notes added for key accounts (gate codes, access details, pet warnings)
☐ Billing addresses verified where different from property address

STEP 4 — Scheduling and Job Types (30–45 min)

☐ Work schedule days and hours configured
☐ One-off job defaults set for primary services
☐ Recurring job templates created for maintenance services
☐ Dispatch board default view set
☐ Route optimization verified (Connect plan: all addresses complete)

STEP 4B — Requests Workflow (15 min)

☐ Decision made: use Requests stage or go direct to Quote/Job
☐ Request form questions configured if using online booking

STEP 5 — Job Forms (45–60 min, Connect+)

☐ Job Form created for highest-volume service type
☐ Fields: inspection checkboxes, photo capture, client signature
☐ Form assigned to the correct service type
☐ Tested in mobile app on a practice job

STEP 6 — Team and Mobile App (30 min + crew time)

☐ All crew members added with Worker role
☐ Invitation emails accepted and passwords created
☐ Jobber app installed on every crew device
☐ Four-step mobile walkthrough completed with every crew member

STEP 7 — Communication Templates (60–90 min)

☐ Booking confirmation configured and tested
☐ Appointment reminder (24 hours before) configured (Connect+)
☐ On-my-way message configured and tested
☐ Invoice delivery email/text configured with payment link
☐ Invoice follow-up Day 3 configured (Connect+)
☐ Invoice follow-up Day 7 configured (Connect+)
☐ Review request on payment configured (Connect+)
☐ Quote follow-up Day 3 and Day 7 configured (Grow+)

STEP 8 — Quote and Invoice Templates (30 min)

☐ Quote expiry days set (30 days recommended)
☐ Deposit percentage configured (25–50%)
☐ Invoice payment terms set to “Due on Receipt”
☐ Late fee percentage and grace period configured
☐ Contractor license number added to invoice footer

STEP 9 — Jobber Payments (20–30 min, +1-2 days verify)

☐ Payments application submitted
☐ Bank account connected and verified
☐ Tap-to-pay enabled on crew devices (if using)
☐ Test payment processed successfully

STEP 10 — QuickBooks Online (30 min, Connect+)

☐ QBO authorization connected
☐ Every service mapped to correct QBO income account
☐ Payment methods mapped
☐ Test invoice synced and verified in QBO

STEP 11 — Online Booking (30–45 min, Connect+)

☐ Services and availability configured
☐ Service area set
☐ Request form questions added
☐ Booking link added to website and Google Business Profile

STEP 12 — End-to-End Test Job (30 min)

☐ Test client created
☐ Request submitted and converted (if using Request workflow)
☐ Quote sent and approved with deposit
☐ Job appeared on dispatch board
☐ Job Form completed in mobile app
☐ En route and on-my-way message confirmed
☐ Job completed and invoiced from mobile app
☐ Invoice delivered with payment link
☐ Payment received and confirmed in Jobber
☐ Review request arrived after payment
☐ QBO sync verified
☐ Test client and job deleted

✅ Setup complete. You’re live on Jobber.

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Six to eight hours of setup. A fundamentally different business on the other side.

Full Grow plan access — scheduling, crew app, job forms, automated communications, field invoicing, digital payments, QBO sync.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to set up Jobber for contractors?

Setting up Jobber for contractors takes six to eight hours for a complete configuration covering all 12 steps in this guide. The three highest-impact steps — services list, scheduling board, and crew mobile app — are functional within the first two hours and produce immediate operational improvement. The remaining configuration (communication templates, job forms, QBO sync, online booking) can be layered in over the first two weeks while the business is already running on the platform. Don’t wait for a perfect Jobber setup to go live.

Which Jobber plan should I start with?

Start the 14-day trial on the full Grow plan — you get access to every feature at no cost during the trial, regardless of which plan you’ll ultimately choose. After evaluating real usage, most businesses with crew members land on Connect Team ($169/month) for route optimization, automated client communications, job forms, and QuickBooks sync. Solo operators often find Core ($39/month) sufficient. Businesses actively managing job-level profitability use Grow ($349/month). See our Jobber Pricing Breakdown for a complete plan comparison.

What is the difference between a Request and a Job in Jobber?

A Request is the optional intake stage — it represents a client inquiry before any quoting or scheduling has occurred. Requests can be submitted by clients online or created internally when a client calls. From a Request, you convert to a Quote (to price the job first) or directly to a Job (if scope and price are already known). A Job is the scheduled work. Many contractors use Requests for new client inquiries and go directly to Jobs for existing clients they book by phone. Both workflows are supported simultaneously.

What are Jobber Job Forms and do I need them?

Job Forms are digital checklists and inspection forms crew members complete in the Jobber mobile app. They can include checkboxes, text fields, photo capture, and client signature. Common uses: HVAC tune-up inspection checklists, completion verification checklists, before-and-after photo capture, and client sign-off on completed work. They are available on Connect and Grow plans. They are not required — but for businesses where documentation of what was done matters (both for liability and for reducing client disputes), they are one of the highest-value features in the platform.

Can I import my existing client list into Jobber?

Yes. Jobber accepts CSV imports via Settings > Import Clients. Required fields are client name and at least one contact method (email or phone). Recommended: property address, notes, tags. Jobber provides a CSV template showing the expected column format. For lists under 30 clients, manual entry is often faster than CSV formatting. Jobber’s support team assists with imports during the onboarding period for accounts that need help with file formatting.

How do I connect Jobber to QuickBooks Online?

Navigate to Settings > Integrations > QuickBooks Online, click Connect, and authorize the connection from your QBO account. Then map your Jobber services to the appropriate QBO income accounts — this is the critical step that ensures revenue is categorized correctly when invoices sync. After mapping, invoices and payments sync automatically from Jobber to QBO. The sync is one-way; always make edits in Jobber. For a full technical walkthrough, see our dedicated article: How to Connect Jobber to QuickBooks Online.

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⚠ FTC Disclosure (Repeated for Compliance)

This article contains affiliate links to Jobber. Kore Komfort Solutions may receive compensation if you purchase a subscription through our links. All configuration instructions are based on publicly available Jobber Help Center documentation. Platform features and interface details change periodically — verify current feature availability at help.getjobber.com.

Mike Warner
Author: Mike Warner

About the Founder Kore Komfort Solutions is an Army veteran-owned digital platform led by a 30-year veteran of the construction and remodeling trades. After three decades of swinging hammers and managing crews across the United States, I’ve shifted my focus from the job site to the back office. Our New Mission: To help residential contractors move from "chaos" to "profit." We provide honest, field-tested software reviews, operational playbooks, and insights into the AI revolution—empowering the next generation of trade business owners to build companies that last.

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