What is Job Sequencing?
Well executed job sequencing is essential to efficient landscape operations, especially maintenance. After each visit, a customer expects an attractive, complete job; hence, you need an organized, sequential approach to achieving a quality service.
Job sequencing is the arrangement of the task to be performed or processed in a particular order. Simply put, it’s the best order to perform the work on jobs. Sequencing of job-site tasks is often neglected. Often, we leave this critical part to chance or to each crew’s way of doing things, which isn’t always the best. Don’t leave this to chance!
It’s essential to identify and create an efficient workflow.
Well-defined, consistently executed job sequencing is where the most gain in profit can be achieved.
The basic questions to ask are:
Take mowing, for example. If there’s excess turf growth, wet conditions or equipment problems, a crew might run out of time.
While the mowing might be completed, the crew could leave the job without having done a complete service or having seen the whole property.
Effective sequencing can minimize the impact of these occurrences by providing an organized approach to servicing a job site.
Following are the main areas to consider when arriving at a job site and performing the work efficiently.
- “Who does what and in what order?”
- “How can we perform the tasks in the safest and most efficient manner?”
Take mowing, for example. If there’s excess turf growth, wet conditions or equipment problems, a crew might run out of time.
While the mowing might be completed, the crew could leave the job without having done a complete service or having seen the whole property.
Effective sequencing can minimize the impact of these occurrences by providing an organized approach to servicing a job site.
Following are the main areas to consider when arriving at a job site and performing the work efficiently.
- Set up every job when you first secure it.
- Designate where the crew should park.
- Provide a site map showing boundaries, areas of focus, the order to perform the tasks, directions, parking spots and trash bins.
- Know where to unload and load equipment and material.
- Know entry points to projects.
- Know pedestrian and vehicular traffic patterns, lunch spots, office locations and rest areas.
- Be aware of safety considerations and mark them with cones or signage.
- Be aware of weather conditions. Is the ground too wet or frozen?
- Be aware of accessibility for people and vehicles.
- Be aware of special conditions, such as construction activities or other working trades.
- How are your crews servicing the job sites?
- What are they missing?
- Where are they doing double work?
- Where are they covering the same ground twice?
- Where can you improve the sequencing process?
- What equipment could speed up things?

