Construction rate book and back-costing software.
Inoscope helps builders, repair teams and reinstatement networks turn invoices, quotes, completed-job costs and reviewer decisions into account-specific pricing evidence for a better construction rate book.
Inoscope turns job context into scoped, priced, approval-ready work records for builders, repair teams, reinstatement companies, franchise networks and QS teams.
Back-costing feedback loop from real jobs
Contractor invoice rate review
No cross-customer rate sharing
Buyer pain
Construction pricing calibration is difficult when rates are updated long after the quote. Supplier bills, contractor invoices, variations and job outcomes often sit apart from the pricing record that caused them, so quote leakage and margin leakage stay hidden.
Workflow before Inoscope
Teams quote the job, complete the work, collect invoices, back-cost later and manually decide whether a rate should change. The reasoning is rarely reusable for the next assessment.
Workflow with Inoscope
Inoscope connects claim evidence, repair scope, review, quote, variation, invoice, back-cost and rate book feedback. Approved decisions and completed-job costs become pricing evidence for future assessments.
Accepted inputs
Supplier invoices, contractor invoices, past quotes, approved prices, completed-job costs, variations, rate tables, margin rules and reviewer edits can all support calibration.
Outputs
Outputs include rate calibration evidence, approved pricing history, reviewer notes, rate book signals, back-costing comparisons and future assessment logic.
Approval workflow
Rate updates should be reviewed. Inoscope keeps reviewer decisions and approval context connected to the price so teams can see why a rate or assumption changed.
Rate calibration
No cross-customer rate sharing. Your rate book, invoices, margins and approved pricing history remain account-specific and calibrated to your business.
How this differs from estimating software
Estimating software helps build a price. Inoscope keeps the pricing record behind that price connected to evidence, reviewer decisions, invoices and rate feedback so the next job can use better account-specific logic.
Leakage visibility
Most estimating tools stop at the quote. Inoscope follows the price through approval, variation, invoice and rate review so teams can see where pricing changed, why cost moved and what should improve next time.
Example job
A completed repair is compared against final supplier bills, contractor invoices and approved variations. Inoscope keeps the back-costing evidence beside the original pricing record so the next similar assessment can use better company-specific rate logic.
Built for review, not blind automation.
Will the team still review the price?
Yes. Inoscope is built for review and approval. It prepares the scoped and priced record, then your estimator, project manager, branch lead or QS reviewer checks the logic and approves the outcome.
What if our rates are different?
Inoscope is designed around company-specific rates, margins, supplier pricing, contractor invoices and approved pricing history. The point is to calibrate pricing to your business, not blend it with another customer's rate book.
Straight answers for pricing teams.
Does Inoscope replace estimators?
No. Inoscope prepares the pricing record so experienced people can review, adjust and approve. It reduces manual estimate build-up; it does not remove expert judgment.
Can Inoscope use our own rates?
Yes. Inoscope can use company-specific rates, supplier pricing, contractor invoices, past quotes, approved prices and completed-job costs to support rate calibration.
What does Inoscope create?
It creates scoped line items, quantity notes, assumptions, pricing records, evidence trails, review-ready assessments and approved pricing history.