Hard Hat AI
Built by builders. Powered by AI. Train like a superintendent. Hard Hat AI was built on the jobsite. So we built the tools. Then we built the training.
Win with AI tools built for the jobsite.
👷‍♂️ Field-tested courses.
đź§ Smart agents.
đź› Real results.
👇 Join the training that’s changing the game. We’re Shawn and Catherine — a builder and a strategist who got tired of watching good supers burn out doing work that AI could handle. Now we’re giving it all back to the field. Let me know if you want to add a call-to-act
09/26/2025
Punchlists don’t need a war room—just structure. Here’s how I turn raw notes into an owner-clean punchlist in minutes with ChatGPT.
Paste this (table output):
Turn these notes into a punchlist table.
Columns:
Item | Location/Room | Trade | Priority (H/M/L) | Owner-Critical (Y/N) | Due Date | Status (Open/Done) | Notes/Photos
Group by room/area and sort Owner-Critical items to the top.
Keep it concise and field-ready.
NOTES:
[Paste your raw notes here]
Auto-assign to subs (WhatsApp/Email):
Create a message to [Trade / Company] listing their punchlist items with
Location, Item, Due Date. Ask for photo verification on completion and
to reply “DONE + photo” using this filename format:
[Project]-[Room]-[Trade]-[Item]-YYYYMMDD.jpg
Tone: professional, concise.
Daily focus list (for standup):
From the table, filter Owner-Critical = Y and Priority = H due in the next 72 hours.
Output a short “Today’s Focus” list grouped by trade with checkboxes.
Closeout package:
Generate an owner-facing summary: total items, % complete by trade,
remaining Owner-Critical items, and ETA to 100%. Bullet format.
Avoid these mistakes
One giant list → Group by room/area
No accountability → Trade-tag + due date
No evidence → Photo verification + naming convention
Want my Punchlist Master Sheet + pre-written sub messages?
Comment PUNCH or DM me “PUNCH.”
09/25/2025
Toolbox talks don’t need 30 minutes and a lecture voice. They need clarity and sign-offs. Here’s how I knock them out in 2 minutes with ChatGPT and get on with the build.
Paste this (universal talk template)
Create a toolbox talk / JHA for [TASK] at [LOCATION] on [DATE].
Audience: mixed-trade crew (English + Spanish). Include bullet sections: Scope, Hazards, Required PPE, Controls/Procedures, Permits/LOTO, Housekeeping, Emergency plan (address + supervisor phone),and a sign-off line for each worker (Name, Company, Time).Keep it short, respectful, jobsite-ready.
Common tasks (copy/paste one line into [TASK]
Ladder work & elevated platforms
Silica dust (cutting concrete/CMU)
Hot work (permit required)
Trenching & excavation
Interior demo with live utilities
Roof work / fall protection
Need it bilingual? Add this:
Provide the talk in English, then Spanish. Keep construction terms accurate.
Sign-in sheet (table output)
Generate a sign-in table with columns:
# | Name | Company | Task | Time | Supervisor Initials
What to avoid
Paragraph walls → Use bullets
“Be careful” → List the control (guardrails, spotter, wet cut, vacuum)
No emergency info → Add site address + lead’s phone
09/24/2025
Learn it today. Put it to work tomorrow.
Here’s the 30-minute starter that turns ChatGPT into a real jobsite partner—no tech talk.
Framework: Train → Task → Check
Train: give project context (tenant, city, phase, constraints)
Task: tell it the sections you want
Check: 1 pass, send, then save the prompt as a template
Copy/Paste Starters (use these today)
1) 7-Day Look-Ahead (Scheduling) – 10 min
Create a 7-day superintendent look-ahead for [Project, City].
Include: inspections (by day), deliveries (item + ETA), crew needs by trade,
hold points, and 1 risk per day with mitigation. Bullet format, field-ready.
2) Scope of Work (Trade-Ready) – 10 min
Write a Scope of Work for [Trade] on [Project, City].
Sections: General Conditions, Schedule, Hold Points/Inspections, Coordination,
Materials/Standards, Code/ADA notes, Submittals, Rough-in Tasks, Closeout,
As-Builts, Punchlist responsibility, Manpower/Equipment, Exclusions,
Plan References (sheet + detail tags). Headings + bullets. Professional.
3) Punchlist (Owner-Clean) – 10 min
Turn these notes into a punchlist table with: Item, Location/Room, Trade,
Priority (H/M/L), Owner-Critical (Y/N), Due Date, Status (Open/Done), Notes/Photos.
Group by room/area.
Common mistakes (and fixes)
“Write a report” → List the sections you want
No plan refs → add sheet/detail tags (A-102, E1.01…)
No deadline → include a Needed-By date to drive decisions
09/23/2025
Paperwork eats your evenings. It shouldn’t.
Here are 3 fast wins supers are automating with ChatGPT—no tech talk.
1) 7-Day Look-Ahead (Scheduling)
Create a 7-day superintendent look-ahead for [Project, City].
Include: inspections (by day), deliveries (item+ETA), crew needs by trade,
hold points, and 1 risk per day with mitigation. Bullet format, field-ready.
2) Scope of Work (Trade-Ready)
Write a Scope of Work for [Trade] on [Project, City].
Sections: General Conditions, Schedule, Hold Points/Inspections, Coordination,
Materials/Standards, Code/ADA notes, Submittals, Rough-in Tasks, Closeout,
As-Builts, Punchlist responsibility, Manpower/Equipment, Exclusions,
Plan References (sheet + detail tags). Headings + bullets. Professional.
3) Punchlist (Owner-Clean Closeout)
Turn these notes into a punchlist table with: Item, Location/Room, Trade,
Priority (H/M/L), Owner-Critical (Y/N), Due Date, Status (Open/Done), Notes/Photos.
Group by room/area.
Avoid these time-killers
Vague asks → List the sections you want
No plan refs → Add sheet/detail tags (A-102, E1.01, etc.)
No deadline → Include a Needed-By date to drive decisions
09/22/2025
Want your boss to notice? Ship clear, short, decision-ready reports—fast.
What bosses actually care about:
Inspections: result + next step
Risks/Holds: what blocks the schedule
Tomorrow’s Plan: who/what/where, by trade
Copy/paste prompt (Daily Report)
Write a superintendent daily report for [Project] in [City]. Weather [temp/conditions]. Sections (bullet format): work completed by trade, inspections (result + next steps), deliveries, manpower (trade + headcount), issues/RFIs (with sheet refs) delays/mitigation, safety notes, photos taken, and tomorrow’s plan by trade.
Keep it concise, professional, inspector-ready.
Subject lines that get opened
[Project] — Daily Update [MM/DD] (Inspections + Tomorrow)
[Project] — Risks/Holds & Plan for [MM/DD]
3 mistakes to avoid
Paragraph walls → Use bullets
“Please advise” → Ask for a decision
No sheet refs → Add them (A-102 / E1.01, etc.)
09/21/2025
Still the last one out? that’s not a badge of honor—it’s a broken process. here’s the 10-minute nightly close that gets you home on time.
Train → Task → Check
Train with project, city, scope, and today’s highlights
Task with exact sections you want
Check once, send, save the prompt as a template
copy/paste starters
Daily Report (10 min)
Write a superintendent daily report for [Project] in [City]. Weather [temp/conditions].
Sections (bullet format): work completed by trade, inspections (result + next steps), deliveries, manpower (trade + headcount), issues/RFIs (with sheet refs),
delays/mitigation, safety notes, and tomorrow’s plan. Field-ready and concise.
Owner/Inspector Email (2–3 min)
Write a status email for [Project] summarizing today’s inspections, deliveries,
manpower by trade, open issues/RFIs (with sheet refs), and tomorrow’s plan.
Add next steps and a subject line.
Punchlist (5 min)
Turn these notes into a punchlist grouped by room/area with trade tags,
location, pass/fail checkbox, owner-critical flag, and due dates.
Avoid these mistakes
“Write a report” (too vague) → list the sections
No sheet refs → slows decisions
No needed-by date → drift
09/20/2025
You don’t burn out swinging a hammer—you burn out typing at 9PM.
Here’s how I cut the admin without cutting quality.
Framework: Train → Task → Check
Train ChatGPT with project, city, scope, and today’s highlights
Task it with the exact sections you need
Check once, send, and save the prompt as a template
Copy/Paste starters
1) Daily Report (10 minutes max)
Write a superintendent daily report for [Project] in [City]. Weather [temp/conditions].
Sections (bullet format): work completed by trade, inspections (result + next steps),
deliveries, manpower (trade + headcount), issues/RFIs (with sheet refs),
delays/mitigation, safety notes, and tomorrow’s plan. Field-ready and concise.
2) RFI (decision-ready)
Subject: RFI- # # # – [Issue] at [Location] (Needed by [DATE])
Refs: [Sheet/Detail refs]
Request: Confirm [model/spec] + electrical/mechanical requirements.
Options: A) ____ (pros/cons) B) ____ (pros/cons)
Please approve A or B by [DATE] to hold schedule.
3) Punchlist (owner-clean)
Turn these notes into a punchlist grouped by room/area with trade tags,
location, pass/fail checkbox, owner-critical flag, and due dates.
Avoid these time-killers
“Write a report.” → List sections
No sheet refs → forces hunting
No Needed-By → decisions drift
09/19/2025
First fast win with AI? Emails.
Status updates, inspection requests, vendor follow-ups—done in minutes without sounding robotic.
Use this structure: Context → Sections → Send
Context: project, city, who it’s to, today’s highlights
Sections: bullet points you want (inspections, deliveries, manpower, next steps)
Send: quick edit, subject line, done
Copy/Paste Starters
1) Owner/PM Daily Update
Write a professional status email to [Owner/PM] for [Project, City] dated [DATE].
Include bullet sections: inspections (result + next steps), deliveries, manpower by trade,
open issues/RFIs (with sheet refs), delays/mitigation, and tomorrow’s plan.
Tone: direct, concise, field-ready. Include a clear subject line.
2) Inspector Scheduling (with Needed-By)
Draft an inspection request email to [Authority/Inspector] for [inspection type] on [Project].
Provide preferred dates/times, scope area, plan/sheet refs, access notes, and a Needed-By date tied to [power/CO].
Professional tone + subject line.
3) Vendor Price/ETA Check
Write a vendor email requesting price and lead time for [item/qty] delivered to [address].
Include Needed-By date, alternates if OOS, and a “reply with” checklist (price, lead time, freight, cut sheets).
Keep it short and clear.
Subject lines that get opened
[Project] — Daily Update [MM/DD]
Action Required: [Inspection] on [Date] (Needed-By [Date])
Lead-Time Check: [Item] Needed by [Date]
Avoid these mistakes
Paragraph walls → Use bullets
No Needed-By date → Add one
Vague asks → List what you need in a checklist
09/18/2025
Old-school grit. New-school tool.
ChatGPT is a power tool—use it like a drill: set the bit (context), set the depth (format), pull the trigger (prompt), check the cut (quick edit).
Three 60-second drills
1) Daily Report
Write a superintendent daily report for [Project] in [City]. Weather [temp/conditions].
Sections (bullet format): work completed by trade, inspections (result + next steps),
deliveries, manpower (trade + headcount), issues/RFIs (with sheet refs),
delays/mitigation, safety notes, and tomorrow’s plan. Field-ready and concise.
2) RFI (decision-ready)
Subject: RFI- # # # – [Issue] at [Location] (Needed by [DATE])
Refs: [Sheet/Detail refs].
Request: Confirm [model/spec] + electrical/mechanical requirements.
Options: A) ____ (pros/cons), B) ____ (pros/cons).
Please approve A or B by [DATE] to hold schedule.
3) Punchlist (owner-clean)
Turn these notes into a punchlist grouped by room/area with trade tags,
location, pass/fail checkbox, owner-critical flag, and due dates.
Power-tool safety rules
Don’t say “write a report.” List the sections.
Always include sheet refs for clarity.
Add a Needed-By date or decisions drift.
09/17/2025
RFIs that get answers—fast.
If you’ve ever sent an RFI and waited a week, it’s usually because it didn’t ask for a decision or missed the sheet refs. Here’s the field-tested formula.
3 rules to get a same-day answer
Cite the plans (sheet + detail).
Ask for a decision with a Needed-By date.
Offer 2 options with quick pros/cons (time/cost).
Copy/Paste Starters
A) Discrepancy RFI (elevation vs electrical)
Subject: RFI- # # # – Elevation vs Electrical at Expo Line (Needed by [DATE])
Issue: A-102 elevation shows [equipment/model]; E1.01 shows [table/no receptacle] at the same location.
Refs: A-102, Detail 3/A801; E1.01.
Request: Confirm correct equipment model and required electrical (voltage/phase/amps + NEMA plug).
Options:
A) Install receptacle and maintain E1.01 layout. (Pros: no millwork change; Cons: add branch circuit)
B) Install equipment per A-102 and revise E-sheets accordingly. (Pros: matches elevation; Cons: electrical revision)
Please approve Option A or B by [DATE] to hold [rough-in/trim] schedule.
B) Substitution RFI (lead time problem)
Subject: RFI- # # # – Proposed Substitution for [Model] due to lead time (Needed by [DATE])
Request: Approve [ALT MODEL] in place of [SPEC MODEL].
Attachments: Cut sheet + electrical/mechanical data.
Impacts: No change to clearances/codes; electrical identical.
Schedule: Alt is in stock; spec unit is [X] weeks out.
Please approve by [DATE] to avoid delay to [milestone].
C) Coordination RFI (roof curb / equipment schedule)
Subject: RFI- # # # – RTU Model vs Curb Size Coordination (Needed by [DATE])
Issue: M2.01 shows [RTU model]; equipment schedule M5.01 lists [different model]; curb detail [D #/M6.01] conflicts.
Request: Confirm final model + curb size and whether a curb adapter is required.
What not to do
“Please advise.” (Too vague)
No refs. (Forces them to hunt)
No Needed-By. (You’ll wait forever)
09/16/2025
Supers: It’s not the work—it’s the paperwork.
Burnout stops when the admin stops. Here’s the playbook I use so reports, RFIs, and emails take minutes—not your night.
Framework: Train → Task → Check
Train with project, city, scope, today’s highlights
Task with the exact sections you want
Check once, send, and save the prompt as a template
Copy/Paste starters
1) Daily Report
Write a superintendent daily report for [Project] in [City]. Weather [temp/conditions].
Sections (bullet format): work completed by trade, inspections (result + next steps),
deliveries, manpower (trade + headcount), issues/RFIs (with sheet refs),
delays/mitigation, safety notes, and tomorrow’s plan. Field-ready and concise.
2) RFI (plan discrepancy)
Draft an RFI for mismatch between A-102 elevation and E1.01 receptacle at the expo line.
Request model confirmation and circuit/amp/voltage, include two resolution options (pros/cons),
and ask for approval by [date]. Tone: concise, professional.
3) Punchlist
Turn these notes into a punchlist grouped by room/area with trade tags,
location, pass/fail checkbox, owner-critical flag, and due dates.
4) Owner/Inspector Email
Write a status email for [Project] summarizing: inspections, deliveries,
manpower by trade, open issues/RFIs, and tomorrow’s plan. Add clear next steps and a subject line.
3 mistakes to avoid
“Write a report” (too vague) → List sections
No sheet refs → cite them for clarity
No Needed-By date → decisions drift
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