When to use this template
A work order template is the right starting point when you do not yet have a CMMS, when you need a printable form for contractors who do not have software access, or when you want a standardised layout before importing data into Maintoro. It works equally well for SMB manufacturing, property management, retail facility maintenance, hotel engineering teams, and small healthcare clinics — anywhere maintenance work needs to be tracked but the team has not yet committed to a digital CMMS.
If you are already running spreadsheets that work for your team, this template is not necessarily an upgrade — it is a more structured starting point if you are starting from scratch or rebuilding your maintenance documentation.
How to use it step-by-step
Each work order on the template captures the full lifecycle of a maintenance event:
Best practices and common mistakes
The most common spreadsheet-based work order mistake is filling everything in at end-of-shift from memory rather than in real time. End-of-shift filling produces inconsistent data, missing details, and audit-trail gaps that cause problems during compliance reviews. The discipline of creating the work order at the moment of need (not at end of shift) and updating it during execution (not after the fact) is what separates good maintenance documentation from useless paperwork.
A second common mistake is treating the "description" field as optional. The description is the most valuable field for future technicians who will reference the asset history — vague descriptions like "fixed it" or "checked the motor" provide no value six months later when the same problem recurs. Specific descriptions ("replaced left bearing on conveyor 3, verified end-play 0.05mm, set torque 18 Nm") build institutional maintenance knowledge over time.
Industry-specific use cases
Manufacturing teams use work orders to track production-line equipment maintenance, asset history per machine, and cost-per-asset analysis for capital-replacement decisions. Property management teams track tenant-reported issues, contractor coordination, and SLA response times. Hotel engineering teams track guest-room maintenance, common-area systems, and brand-PQA audit evidence. Each industry adapts the basic work order template — but the core fields (asset, priority, technician, description, completion) stay consistent.
For SMB teams across these industries, the work order is the foundational unit of maintenance management. A team that consistently captures every maintenance event in structured work orders has the data to optimise; a team that does not has only anecdotes.
Migrating from this template to a real CMMS
When the team grows past 5 maintenance users or starts running into spreadsheet concurrent-edit problems, the natural next step is upgrading to a CMMS like Maintoro. The migration is straightforward: export the work order spreadsheet as CSV, import into Maintoro asset and work-order records, and continue from where you are without losing history. Most SMB teams complete this migration in 1–3 weeks self-serve, and Maintoro's Free plan (2 users, 50 assets, 100 work orders per month) supports indefinite small-team use after migration.
FAQ
Common questions about using this work order template: