Manage Your Projects Everything you need to control what happens inside a project — update details, manage participants, adjust settings, and understand project roles. How Projects Relate to Subcontractors Summary In BuilderPal, subcontractors are directly tied to each project . Each one acts as a trade-specific workspace that connects planning, communication, documents, and bidding — all inside a single job. This is what lets you break a complex build into clean, manageable scopes without losing structure. Subcontractors Live Inside Projects Every subcontractor belongs to a specific project. They are not global company records or random contacts — they are project-based workspaces created for that job only . For example, on a renovation project like: 16 Ave Farm House Renovation You might create subcontractors for: • Plumber • Electrician • Concrete Contractor • Drywall Installer • HVAC Tech Each one is tied only to that project and its scope of work. They Structure Work by Trade Subcontractors organize your project by scope, not just by name. This allows you to: Assign actions by trade Upload trade-specific documents Structure bid packages by scope Track progress by subcontractor Keep communication clean and separated Instead of one giant task list, each subcontractor holds its own slice of the project. They Exist Before Hiring Anyone You don’t need to have a real contractor yet. Subcontractors can be created early so you can: Start planning scopes Assign actions Upload documents Build bid packages Organize responsibilities All before a real person or company is involved. This means you can structure your entire project before awarding a single job . They Connect Actions to Responsibility Subcontractors aren’t just labels. They define who the work is intended for. When you assign actions to a subcontractor, those actions become part of that trade’s scope. Once you later award a contact, everything already assigned moves with that subcontractor automatically. This keeps your planning intact even as real people get involved later. They Power the Bidding Flow Subcontractors are central to BuilderPal’s bidding process. Each one can be used to: Create bid packages Send bid requests Compare estimates Award jobs Manage post-award communication Once awarded, the subcontractor workspace becomes the contractor’s operational area for that job. They Control Document Flow Each subcontractor has its own document section. This allows you to: Keep plans isolated by trade Control access per subcontractor Share only what they need Prevent cross-trade confusion Documents stay grouped under the correct scope instead of floating loosely across the project. They Influence Scheduling Because subcontractors hold actions and assigned responsibilities, they naturally feed into: Scheduling Dependencies Workflow planning Timeline coordination You’re timing scopes , not just individual people — which makes changes easier when crews change or availability shifts. How Everything Ties Together Think of it like this: The Project is the container. Inside it: Subcontractors define scopes Actions define work Documents define information Bids define pricing Awarded contacts define the people Everything flows through the subcontractor structure. Related Articles Create a Subcontractor Award Contact Trades & Cost Breakdown Edit Project Details Summary Update your project settings, including status, assigned manager, address, and adding actions or documents to a project. This guide will show you how to customize project configurations and attach files as the job progresses. Prerequisites Role or permission needed: Admin (GC), Admin (SUB), Admin (SHORTCUT), Team Project Manager, or Team Business Manager Setup required: Log in to BuilderPal and have an active project selected Steps Access the Projects Section and Open a Project From the main dashboard, click Projects . Select a project from the list Update Project Status and Assigned Manager Click the current project status (e.g., In Progress ). Select a new status (e.g., Planning ). Click Assigned Manager . Select a manager (e.g., Porter Dietrich ). Click Settings . Update the manager role as needed (e.g., Team Administrator ). Click Save to apply the updates. Edit the Project Address Click the project address (e.g., 1333 South Park Street, Halifax, NS B3J 2K9 Canada ). Click Save to apply changes. Add an Action Click View all actions . Click Add actions to your project . Select Scheduled Work . Upload a Project Document Click Upload Document . Select Add file from project documents . Confirm to attach the document. Tips Pro tip: Update notification settings in Settings to control email alerts for changes such as new actions or uploaded documents. Time saver: Use Job Chat to add actions and documents without navigating multiple menus. Related Articles ● Learn The Project Dashboard ● Manage Project Participants ● Navigate Your Projects ● Organize Your Projects ● Project Access Explained ● How to Create a New Project Project Access Explained Summary This article explains how project access works in BuilderPal—who can see which projects, how team boundaries affect visibility, and how General Contractors and Subcontractors collaborate without ever sharing full project workspaces. Understanding these rules ensures your team knows exactly what each person can see and do inside BuilderPal. Prerequisites You understand your team role (Admin, PM, Supervisor, etc.). You have access to at least one project. How Project Access Works Project access is determined by two separate systems: Your Role — defines what you can do inside a project Your Project Access — defines which projects you can open or see These systems work together, but they are not the same. A role does not grant visibility into every project—only into projects your team owns or ones you’ve been added to. 1. Projects Belong to Teams Every project in BuilderPal is owned by a team , not an individual. Your GC organization owns GC-created projects Each subcontractor organization owns the subcontractor project automatically created when they are awarded work Internal Projects belong to your team Personal projects (My Tasks Workspace) belong only to the individual user Because each organization owns their own projects: Project access never crosses team boundaries unless shared through an Action. 2. Access Inside Your Own Team Inside your company, your role determines visibility across your team’s projects. Team Administrator Can see every project your team owns Can see all actions inside those projects Can manage roles, participants, settings, and financials Project Manager Can see all projects owned by your team Can view and manage all tasks, schedules, and documents Supervisors and Team Members These roles can see: Projects they are added to Actions that are assigned to them Documents they have permission to view or upload They cannot view projects they have not been invited into. 3. Cross-Team Access (GC ↔ Subcontractor) When you hire a subcontractor and award a bid: A GC Project belongs to your team A Subcontractor Project belongs to the subcontractor’s organization Even though these two projects are related: What the GC Cannot See The subcontractor’s project dashboard Their internal actions, schedules, or documents Their financials, budgets, or estimates Their Site Office or Reports Their participants list What the GC Can See Only items shared through Actions , such as: Punch Lists RFIs Change Orders Purchase Orders & Bills Submitted documents Status updates This ensures clean collaboration without exposing internal project data. 4. How Information Flows Between Teams Projects are private. Actions are shared. Actions act as the “bridge” between GC and subcontractor teams. Each team can see: The actions assigned to them The comments and files inside those actions PO/Bill submissions Linked estimate/budget values after they are submitted Each team cannot see: Each other’s project workspaces Each other’s internal tasks or schedules Any private documents not shared through an action Any financials belonging to the other team This mirrors real construction workflows—each company maintains its own internal job folder while collaborating through structured requests and deliverables. 5. Subcontractor Projects When a subcontractor is awarded work, they receive a full private project , including: Their own estimate & budget Their own schedule and tasks Their own documents Their own financial center Their own Site Office Their own reports The GC cannot open or browse this project. GC visibility into Subcontractor work: ✔ Assigned actions ✔ Submitted POs/Bills (through the action thread) ✔ Uploaded files within those actions ✔ Status updates ❌ Not their project contents 6. Upstream vs Downstream Assignments Assignment direction controls visibility: GC → Subcontractor (Downstream) GC sees everything related to the assigned action Subcontractor sees only that action—not the GC project Subs cannot assign tasks back upstream to the GC Subcontractor → GC (Upstream) Subcontractors cannot originate upstream assignments They can only respond inside actions the GC created This prevents upstream task creation and keeps responsibilities clear. 7. My Tasks Workspace vs Assigned Work My Tasks Workspace is a private personal project that belongs only to you. It does not belong to your team, and even Admins cannot open it unless you invite them. Inside My Tasks: You see only the tasks you create yourself Only participants you manually invite can access it It does not show all tasks assigned to you across BuilderPal It does not inherit any team-level visibility rules It functions as your own personal workspace inside BuilderPal To see tasks assigned to you across all projects, use your To-Do List , not My Tasks. FAQ Can Admins see all projects? Admins can see all projects owned by their own team , but cannot access subcontractor-owned projects or personal My Tasks projects unless invited. Can subcontractors see my GC project? No. Subcontractors only see actions assigned to them, not your full project workspace. Do POs and Bills sync between GC and Sub projects? Yes—because they are Actions. The action thread manages visibility, not the project itself. Can subcontractors assign actions to the GC? No. Work only flows downstream from GC → Sub. Why can’t I see a project someone mentioned? You must either: be added as a participant, or be part of the team that owns that project, or Related Articles Manage Project Participants Upstream vs Downstream Assignments Sharing & Visibility Rules Roles & Permissions Overview Subcontractor Project Permissions & Visibility Project Settings Reference Summary This reference covers the fields and options available in the Project Settings modal of BuilderPal, allowing users to edit core project information like name, manager, description, and color. Key Details ● Definition/description: Project Settings is the modal accessed from the dashboard for updating project metadata, manager, and appearance without affecting tasks or documents. ● Field or option meanings: Fields control project identification, leadership, notes, and visual tagging; see table for details. ● Role requirements: Editable by admins and project managers; view-only for other team roles. Table or List of Values Item Description Notes Assigned Manager The user responsible for overseeing the project. Dropdown of team members; changing sends notification. Example: "Michael George @michaelgeorgeco". Project Name The primary name of the project. Required; used in lists and headers. Example: "Public Project". Description / Project Notes Additional details or notes about the project. Optional text field for internal reference. Example: "Reno project notes". Color A color tag for visual identification in lists. Dropdown of colors; helps with quick scanning. Example: Purple square. Delete Project Button to permanently remove the project. Use with caution; deletes all associated data. No example (destructive action). Related Articles Workflow / Tutorial: Edit Project Details Concept Overview: Project Lifecycle Overview Troubleshooting / FAQ: Dashboard Data Not Updating Manage Project Participants Summary This tutorial covers how to add team members to a project by opening the participants window, searching for users, and saving changes. It helps ensure the right people have access for collaboration and task assignment. Prerequisites ● Role or permission needed: Admin (GC), Admin (SUB), Admin (SHORTCUT), Team Project Manager, or Team Business Manager. ● Any setup required: Log in to BuilderPal and open an active project from the Projects menu. Steps Open your Project from the Projects menu and click on the participants located on the right, beneath Job Chat. 2. Opening the Participants window will show all team members currently on the Project. Searching and selecting team members will then add them to the Project, then close the window. 3. Click "Save" to add the newly selected members to the Project. Confirmation “You’ll know it worked when the participant list updates with the new members, and they receive an invitation or notification email.” Tips ● Pro tip or best practice: Review the team list after saving to confirm roles and access levels are correct for security. ● Shortcut or time saver: Use the search field to quickly find existing company members instead of typing full emails. Related Articles ● Concept Overview: Roles & Permissions ● Reference: Project Access Explained ● Troubleshooting: Participant Not Receiving Invite Sharing & Visibility Rules Summary Sharing & Visibility Rules define who can see what inside BuilderPal—across projects, documents, tasks, and communication. BuilderPal keeps each team’s internal work private while surfacing only the information required for collaboration between General Contractors (GCs) and Subcontractors. Why It Matters The problem: Construction teams need structured collaboration, not oversharing. GCs must coordinate multiple trades, while subcontractors must protect their internal workflows and documents. The benefit: BuilderPal creates a clean separation between teams while automatically surfacing the information needed to work together—reducing confusion, preventing oversharing, and keeping every team in control of its own work. How It Works 1. Project Ownership BuilderPal uses project ownership to determine what each team can see. GC-Owned Projects The GC’s team can see: All GC-owned projects All tasks, documents, schedules, and job chats within those projects All subcontractor surface-level documents (not the sub’s full project) Subcontractor-Owned Projects Created automatically when the GC awards a subcontract. GC teams: Cannot open the subcontractor’s project Only see surfaced information relevant to the subcontracted scope Cannot see the sub’s schedule, internal tasks, or documents not uploaded by the sub Subcontractor teams: Do not see the GC’s full project Only see the tasks and documents that the GC assigns or shares 2. What Subcontractors Can See Subs can see: Tasks assigned to them by the GC Tasks created inside their subcontractor project Files the GC shares downward Their private GC↔Sub job chat The optional general project chat (if they choose to join) Subs cannot see: The GC’s project Other subcontractors GC internal schedules, documents, or communication The GC’s team members unless shared on an action 3. What the GC Can See From Subcontractors GCs cannot access the subcontractor’s actual project. Instead, BuilderPal surfaces the subcontractor’s uploads into: A. GC Project → Subcontractors Page → Documents Module Shows: Files uploaded by the subcontractor into their own project Files the GC has shared with them B. GC Project → Documents → Subcontractors Folder One folder per subcontractor, containing: All documents the sub uploaded (surfaced) Any GC-shared documents GCs cannot see: The subcontractor’s internal tasks The subcontractor’s project schedule The subcontractor’s internal documents unless uploaded through their project 4. Document Sharing Rules When Subs Upload Documents Subs upload into their subcontractor project , not into the GC’s folders. BuilderPal then automatically mirrors their documents upstream into: GC Project → Subcontractors module GC Project → Documents → Subcontractors folder Subs never upload into: “Shared From Contractor” (this is read-only for GC-shared files) GC project folders When GCs Share Documents GC files shared downward appear in the subcontractor’s project in: Shared From Contractor (read-only) 5. Schedule Visibility Subcontractors See: Only tasks assigned to them Tasks they’ve created inside their subcontractor project Subs do not see : GC’s full schedule Other trades GC sequencing unless manually exported and shared GC Sees: All GC tasks All tasks assigned to subcontractors Any sub-created tasks that fall within their subcontractor project scope 6. Job Chat Visibility Each subcontractor has: A. A private GC ↔ Sub chat channel Exclusive to the GC team and that subcontractor’s team Used for scope-specific questions, updates, files B. A general project chat channel (optional for everyone) No one is auto-added GC team and subs may join if they choose Subs cannot access: GC-only channels Other subcontractor channels 7. Task & Activity Visibility Subcontractors Can See: Tasks assigned by the GC Tasks they create themselves GCs Can See: All GC tasks Tasks assigned to subcontractors Tasks subcontractors create as part of their subcontracted work GCs cannot see : Internal subcontractor tasks inside the subcontractor project unless surfaced 8. My Tasks Workspace Visibility The My Tasks Workspace is personal to each user. Belongs to the user, not the team GC Admins cannot see anyone else’s My Tasks Workspace Subcontractors cannot see GC workspaces Only tasks assigned to you or created by you appear here It functions as a personal organizational dashboard—completely private unless you choose to invite someone. Real-World Example A GC awards a plumbing subcontract. BuilderPal creates a Plumber Subcontractor Project (owned by the plumber). The GC assigns tasks to the plumber. The plumber uploads drawings → they surface automatically into the GC’s subcontractor folders. The GC shares updated site drawings → they appear in the plumber’s Shared From Contractor folder. Both teams communicate in the private GC↔Plumber chat channel. No team sees information unrelated to their scope. When to Use This Article Use these rules when you need to understand: Why subcontractors cannot see the full project Why GC cannot open subcontractor projects Where subcontractor files show up for the GC How tasks and schedules stay separated yet coordinated How job chat channels are structured Related Articles Project Access Explained How Projects Relate to Subcontractors Permissions & Participants in Actions Attaching Documents