One of the biggest challenges in workshop scheduling isn't deciding when work should happen.
It's deciding where it should happen.
As businesses grow, scheduling becomes increasingly dependent on physical resources:
These resources often become the real bottleneck in production. You might have the labour available to complete a job, but if the paint booth is already booked or the CNC machine is occupied, work can't proceed.
That's why we've introduced Work Areas.
Work Areas allow you to define the physical locations, spaces and resources where work is performed within your business.
A Work Area can represent:
Once configured, jobs and tasks can be assigned to Work Areas — giving your team visibility into where work is planned to occur.
Most scheduling systems focus purely on people and dates. But in many fabrication, manufacturing and field service businesses, physical resources are equally important.
Consider a fabrication workshop with:
Without visibility of those resources, it's easy to overbook capacity, create bottlenecks or discover scheduling conflicts too late.
Work Areas help solve this by making resource allocation visible during the scheduling process — before conflicts become costly problems.
Production managers often need quick answers to questions like:
Work Areas provide a clearer view of how work is distributed across your operation — so you can answer these questions at a glance.
As job volume increases, understanding capacity becomes increasingly important. By scheduling work against specific Work Areas, businesses can:
The result is a more predictable and manageable production schedule.
Every business operates differently. That's why Work Areas are completely flexible.
Workshop-based businesses
Field & multi-site businesses
You decide what makes sense for your operation.
Work Areas are available now and can be configured to reflect the way your business works. Whether you're managing a busy fabrication workshop, coordinating field teams, or trying to improve visibility across production resources, Work Areas provide a new level of scheduling control inside WorkGuru.
If your team has ever asked, "Where is this job being done?" — Work Areas are built for you.
Work Areas are configurable locations, spaces or resources used to organise and schedule work inside WorkGuru. They help businesses track where work is being performed, not just when it is scheduled.
A Work Area can represent:
Many businesses schedule jobs based on available staff and due dates, but physical resources are often the real constraint:
No. Employees represent people. Work Areas represent physical locations, equipment or resources where work occurs. A job can be assigned to both a team member and a Work Area at the same time.
Yes. Many businesses use Work Areas to represent critical production equipment such as CNC routers, laser cutters, press brakes, paint booths, welding stations and assembly areas — providing better visibility into machine utilisation and scheduling.
Yes. Businesses operating across multiple workshops, warehouses or sites can create Work Areas for each location, helping teams understand where work is scheduled across the entire operation.
Every business is different, which is why Work Areas are designed to be flexible. Below are some common ways WorkGuru customers might use Work Areas to organise and schedule work.
Many businesses begin with just a handful of Work Areas representing their most important resources:
As scheduling requirements become more sophisticated, additional Work Areas can be added to reflect the way work flows through the business.
The goal isn't to model every square metre of your operation.
It's to provide visibility into the locations, equipment and resources that have the biggest impact on scheduling, capacity and productivity.