Why Documentation Matters More Than People Think
The single biggest accelerator on a residential restoration claim is whether the scope arrives in a format the adjuster can settle without a callback. Sounds like a small thing. It isn't โ it's the difference between a claim that closes in 2 weeks and one that drags through 3 rounds of supplements over 3 months.
Our standard documentation package on every Hawthorne job: photos of every wet surface before equipment goes down, moisture readings logged on a building diagram (so the adjuster sees WHERE the readings were taken, not just the numbers), Xactimate scope at carrier-standard pricing for the NJ market with line items tied to IICRC S500 protocols, equipment runtime logs (air movers + dehumidifiers, hours each), final clearance moisture readings showing every wet substrate returned to baseline.
This documentation is what makes the difference between scopes that close cleanly and scopes that get challenged. Adjusters who see clean documentation regularly come to recognize the source and approve faster. Adjusters who see vague or incomplete scopes push back, request supplements, and slow the entire project. We invested in the documentation discipline because the carrier relationship is what determines whether we can keep doing this work at scale โ short-cuts on documentation hurt the claim AND the next claim AND the one after.