Speaker 0: Great.
Speaker 1: Alright. That's that's pretty good for us. The bank. Following First Liberty Landon 30 other banks. Betterment. I did log in to our parent. The goal is log in to our parent n8n see it is a struggle, though, because a lot of them right now, they're set up on, API connections Mhmm. Which can be unstable if some for some reason they come become disconnected and they're reconnected. Yeah. And then they require FAFE codes, and then Chris is not available, so then I, you know, move on. My Gray. Of course. Which I'm working on getting that solved. My idea right now is to get a literal just a phone for Ashton Drake, where all the bank codes just go through this phone. So in case I get in a car crash or I somehow get fired, can just get the phone or the iPad or whatever. Something like that. Actual phone? Yes. If you tried doing a Zoom number, the shared Zoom number Do it. Try it. To work. But that didn't work with a couple of our banks. They did not accept the Zoom number. So it could not Beau post Zoom number from a First, which is what has a lot of our full accounts. Okay. I have one for a solution, other ideas. We might have one.
Speaker 3: Yeah. We we signed up, got approved for this website on Twilio. Buying numbers. I think they're more official numbers than the Zoom numbers Yardi. They're, like, actual phone numbers. You can buy that same area code, the 405 number,
Speaker 0: approved for all the text RLS, all this stuff.
Speaker 3: Okay. You don't have to have a physical phone. It just moves on and have a base on Twilio. Okay. So if you wanted to do that That would be a much better idea, Dan. So that way,
Speaker 1: my goal would be everybody has access.
Speaker 3: We Sean also integrate the file from our stuff too if we do a Twilio number. Okay. I don't know if we'd really need it. To integrate if it's just, like, you're getting, like, n8n codes DocuSign into things. But That's true. Yeah. It's either, you know, or that's how Diane and Lawson get
Speaker 1: bank statements, because they n8n confirm with her period that yesterday that not all the bank statements come through to our Perry, so we still have to log in every month. And go download those. SOAP SOAP could I do is there too? WSDL,
Speaker 3: that's what I have right now because of the the full, like, grading done three already right now. Should probably I'm just having I I don't think that Yardi data connect API will let right back in the system. I think it's a really only API, which isn't a problem. Like, there's definitely work around. I'm just saying for for API integration itself, that unless we find something else because Yardi might have other API connections that let us write. It's just not an actual Gutter Deep Connect. So maybe we can talk to Charles and see, okay. Do you guys have any the right API to let us actually run back in the system where it's a purely read only. So
Speaker 1: But Yeah. Because Yardi is our accounting software. Yes. Whereas our Perry is just our treasury software that I can see on my checking accounts and
Speaker 0: not nice. Still because let me get this email. And
Speaker 1: maybe the workflow is it does a daily bank That would be amazing. That would be my ultimate goal.
Speaker 0: Yeah. I'm I'm I'm sure that I'm sure that's something that we can achieve a 100%. Would have to do if if
Speaker 3: Yardi does not have the right API? Because it's just been a couple of tier. It's basically an AI vision, like a computer. Not like open source or anything. It follows commands. So, basically, it would open, like, a browser this is a browser window. And it would manually click things and add things
Speaker 0: a running on the back? It it can run on the back. I mean, it's used we if if Landon had logged in to to your
Speaker 3: log in to have an access. Maybe it wouldn't be. It sounds like it's just ours. Right? They just need an account with access. That's all it needs. So what I thought here is, like, for certain phases. Obviously, phase one is trigger and identify all the accounts where I can Second phase would be the AI WSDL the bank statement PDF because So that shouldn't be an issue at all. And then phase three is to to automate the URL thing. Bank screen and then pass with the top tier. And Facebook's actually filing reports, update your traffic, all the Excel stuff. At the back will be super easy. That's all just direct integration. That's the problem at all. n8n
Speaker 0: SOAP, like, the first thing is just be, like, collecting all the data it needs. Like,
Speaker 3: Landon collection because it wants to SOAP the database and it can autogulate. It can audit everything. Mhmm. So it'll be, like, firing the workflow know, Beau pull the master tracking sheet. We can parse the tracking sheet. Build around the queues and then build build the account loops. This is all just like in our workflows. It'll be easy. Phase two is when I actually reads them, instead of the easy two because if it takes all the main segments down as a PDF or database, it was you'll analyze it and read it.
Speaker 1: Some of them are scanned.
Speaker 2: That
Speaker 3: talked there's not really much information on there. SOAP should be alright. And, I mean, it's really a good number to start. I think it'll it'll be good for that for that. And obviously, it'll be all about the structural data. And phase three is the big phase of this process where we're it's gonna be the biggest not issue for us, but it's gonna require us to work. Because instead of now having our the structured workflow to do it right back into our we're gonna have to use the AI agent Landon, but just because about it. We wanna limit agents as much as possible, but this means it's gonna be bad. Right. Because puppets here is you know, our retirement of our open cloud basically just controls the whole computer. Hey. Go do this and then navigate the whole page. Puppeteer is still hard coded. So if you look, like, right here, if you look at this workflows tab, basically, if you right click this and click inspect, the workflows tab has its own URL. And SOAP, like, like, this right here is the workflows tab. And Papadero knows that this cover right here is from the workflows tab. So you basically create the navigation Sean the volunteer, and you can only follow that. So let's just have three round of softwares. Exactly. But but they can see it. Somebody has to call it structured. So we can't just go rogue into your system and check out this account information. It has to follow what we tell it to. And that's the good thing about Otter. We've we've been
Speaker 0: we
Speaker 3: But, I mean, there are hundreds of thousands of combinations that we have up to years. So I'm I'm pretty confident that'll work. If there's no right API into Yardi. It's more of like a automation Sean, like, KI. For majority of what happens with, like, the puppeteer stuff because really, it's just, like, the sentence falling in the list. So
Speaker 1: Yeah. I mean, assuming only AI would need it would be say, the tenant submitted one of the fat payment and was to pay multiple invoices. You're gonna have to think
Speaker 0: did that apply to or is that what we say Is that human review going to help because I don't have lot. Yeah. And the only the only real yeah. I would
Speaker 3: come in this phase three. Because I see phase two as the AI has to read it. But the I'm gonna set if we do Beau going with this, I would set it back up called Stage Hand. Stage chain SOAP also the guy at engineering. So Gray, I'm a tear off a pill like I was saying. So Gray this workflow about to move someone over here, and it kind of changes up to it would it would cost up to you. Right? It's not very often that happens, but, like, if you already have an update and then lose we're finished building up on our monthly maintenance but Stagehan is a backup sort of partnership breaks. It'll notify Sean, and Stagehan is an AI machine which is gonna read the page. Kinda navigate onto your back in the right spot. So it's like if this workflow tab moved, over here for some reason and I'm just like, I don't wanna do it because it's a very big station. It's gone, finds the workflows tab, and then gets that code back to So it's just it's like, how am I gonna fall back in case it breaks?
Speaker 0: Like it's his manager. Yeah. Literally. Literally. Exactly. And so it's it's
Speaker 3: Yeah. So we're still just conceptually just
Speaker 0: a
Speaker 3: a force on the credit. Like, they didn't try to be trying to be in college or anything. Literally. Yeah. I was in spreadsheet modeling classes on how to even this is definitely, more capable of the feature, I'd say. So So yeah. So, like, phase three, like, I'm not a tier to log into Yardi LPA. It would use a coach to activate the bank recs. It would slide into
Speaker 0: the
Speaker 3: match and clear transactions, verify the difference of Beau, If the difference is zero, post the rec, then the difference is not zero. That's what you can flag. Because we don't want it to, like, try and fix things. It doesn't have to fix
Speaker 0: Right. I figured I'll just give you the basic and
Speaker 1: let's get that working. Yes. And then if we can somehow build in a it sees that the loan payment's missing. Mhmm. Can we train it to go ahead and post that? And then I don't know. Yeah. Yeah. No. Absolutely. I'm sure.
Speaker 3: So that's what phase three would be. And then like I said, stage Sean then the application fall Beau. If you want me to send this to you, I'm can't. I don't know if you wanna read it or if you really care, but this is just my whole process that I have just to kinda show you to visualize it.
Speaker 0: No. I'm good if you wanna keep it. Awesome. Alright. Cool. Yeah. So that's
Speaker 3: how we're some fake scores applied, and obviously, even puppeteer print the record report from Yardi, like you're talking about. And then from then, it's just HTTP request, just mobile. Kind of embedded in our workflow, and then we're getting, you know, saving back and forth to Box. That's easy. Update tracking spreadsheet is super easy. And then move to next account. Just that's the keyword or just log accounts. It just once that process is done, this loops to the next one and keeps going up to the goal. And then you want, we can have it Sean to some email to your Gmail. I don't know if you want Beau, but Yeah. That's perfect. So, yeah, usually, there's some, like, always I send a summary email on them. Have every single thing it did. So you know if it messed up somewhere exactly where it messed up. Hey. I did this. There's something. SOAP that's good. And then, obviously, this is all Sean with me. We have the Elevate Sandbox access. We we And
Speaker 1: Oh, wait. That's an asterisk right now. No. Wait. Elise, did I give you guys usernames? No. You already
Speaker 3: done it, but I think didn't you get Yardi?
Speaker 0: You got Spectrum. No. Spectrum. Oh, the Molina Yardi. Okay. SOAP
Speaker 3: Yeah. Just probably give it to me. Yes.
Speaker 1: So even I don't have full admin access, which you guys need? Full admin? I mean Is this like, you know, at least for right now and then The only thing you have
Speaker 0: Okay.
Speaker 7: Yeah. Unless they have, like, different roles for, like, API level things. But we'll know that probably when we get the diarization or your from them. And even even if we don't, then we'll just ask them questions, and we might do, like, one one more meeting with Yardi. Just SOAP, like, answer some things. We, some questions we have, and then to verify, like, can actually get an account set up that works for everything.
Speaker 0: I'll just do it with the account access for now.
Speaker 1: Uh-huh. Although I have admin access, but everything here should be Tailscale.
Speaker 0: To the account. Okay. Cool. It just kinda limits
Speaker 1: You know, you can't delete anything.
Speaker 7: Yeah. So if they have it set up to where, like, we just need that level of access, then great. I just know some softwares, they just like, you need to have admins, like, you know, that you can do some of that stuff. And SOAP of them are like, oh, you n8n need this role.
Speaker 0: Yeah. I'm not sure if they're figuring out who goes in right and you already
Speaker 7: I think we can write n8n Yardi. We just need to, like, like, talk to them again about it. Because like I said, like, with them being private with all that information, I can't just go Google it. But what from what I have, like, from the research I have done, it says that we can, like, write and read in there. Beau, like I said, we have to meet with them to see, like, what all the blacks we need. They're probably mad because we canceled.
Speaker 1: One of our modules. There you are. Boy. Which one is it? Debt manager. It was going to be able to manage all of our loans n8n amortization schedules Landon be able to post the
Speaker 0: current, you know, monthly entries
Speaker 1: for us. Okay. I think we can spit out reports. That's where Jeremy figured Gray. Maybe we don't need that. That's where you guys come in. Or if that's where Clark can come in and some sort of other direction. Because it was gonna be 45,000 thousand dollars a year. Like, none single module.
Speaker 0: Yeah. What is it? Yes.
Speaker 7: That's actually crazy. I they really admit what matters. 40,000 a year just for one for one thing. n8n It's not even like they're automating everything for you. It's SOAP even just one piece. What? That's crazy.
Speaker 6: It was gonna take months to
Speaker 0: That's so crazy.
Speaker 7: We've still got everybody in the studio instead.
Speaker 0: Things to do as well. So
Speaker 3: well, I mean, that's that's what we have for the, for this, if if we can't get right API. If we can, obviously, they have to look way different. Okay. The process n8n more efficient.
Speaker 7: It'll be less prone to break. Yes. So and this is
Speaker 3: you know, bumps your longevity a lot. It's probably about 885% gonna be accurate down the line, which is which is good. I mean, it's saved a lot of time. It's still being 85% accurate.
Speaker 2: You know.
Speaker 1: Don't know why they wouldn't want to allow this. That would make me want to stay with them.
Speaker 3: Yeah. They
Speaker 1: module they cover.
Speaker 7: For, yes, like, Beau bus. Something like that. I haven't done it yet. It's very new, and it's not
Speaker 0: very great. Gray it's not connected to many things. No. And it's only,
Speaker 7: for for that, it basically is, like, just, like, ask it questions about, like, things I mean, your guys' account. So I it'll actually actually do anything.
Speaker 4: Right now, at least. So I'm not really sure why they did that.
Speaker 7: What, like, like saying that they did something? Yeah. It's like all these companies know they need to be using AI, and they know that, like, they should have a Sean. And then they try to do something, and it's just, like, SOAP. Yeah. Try to do that. Yeah.
Speaker 6: Yes. SOAP
Speaker 0: Did
Speaker 3: a test on the, is that Amber? Amber.
Speaker 8: The
Speaker 0: And it came back
Speaker 3: at 2,194,000.000. So only 4,000 mulch over this attendance. And so it it It's really also drawn and makes categories like discipline on how much each of them should cost. And it takes all the action grades like I had school with data. And and compiles it and analyzes it and thinks like this should cost this. And it puts it off here. And so in in less than ten minutes, we're able to hit the contract value by only $4,000 difference. And and that
Speaker 7: what I've told you on, the Procore. You need to pull Murph full number. It might be, like,
Speaker 2: 1 point or 2,194,000.000. It might be, like, on the dot. You just gave, like, a common number. So
Speaker 7: because all of our all of our like, that's our call code. All that stuff is actually poked into Procore, so it can pull the actual information. So I got our building and testing. It can basically reference, live Beau.
Speaker 3: And then we're gonna go like a PDF and, like, a pleasure to review it because this is obviously
Speaker 0: It was
Speaker 1: Now I do think they'd call and understand, you know, SOAP
Speaker 0: more current pricing and whatnot if it's just going on historical? SOAP
Speaker 3: Basically have a like a construction database that has all the costs and materials and labor around the
Speaker 8: world just by region. And so once a quarter,
Speaker 3: they'll update the RSC and stuff. So it's unfamiliar or something Ashley Gray who used that. Tiffany didn't want that. She wanted just historical stuff. And so I wanna have that implemented. Beau, But I but I can't. Jason said the same thing. He was like, I don't think we need it.
Speaker 8: Yeah. So I'm not sure. I think it's
Speaker 0: Yeah.
Speaker 3: Long it takes. All SOAP of lines like aluminum software systems comes out. And it gives them the confidence score so
Speaker 7: if it's, like, green, it's, like, a 100%. If it's yellow, it's probably really high, but it's not a hundred. And then if it's red, it's like, okay. Probably check it, but it'll probably inaccurate. It's still just, like, if I give it a check. You know? Yeah.
Speaker 2: It's like, if there's stuff on here that actually guys never had before, like, like, new things.
Speaker 3: The AI will actually go to the Internet and look at a fine price
Speaker 9: items.
Speaker 3: And then I I agree is where we're just gonna get an end of the flex and make sure all the
Speaker 7: Yeah. It's got a lot of stuff on there. Yeah, we're just gonna try to make the confidence on each of the things just improve, improve, improve, improve. You know? And, hopefully, you'll be seeing Ashton of Gray. But the yellow is still, like I said, really accurate. It just like, it could be ninety n8n.
Speaker 5: It wouldn't be you know? If it's not a lot or two zero And we might we might change that to Beau, like,
Speaker 7: little bit lower because probably, like, 80 or 80.
Speaker 1: Extra one, like,
Speaker 0: six.
Speaker 3: Mhmm. Yeah. So she's gonna review this, and then if it's
Speaker 7: good, then we're gonna finish up the rest of this of phases.
Speaker 5: Up here. Oh, yeah. It's pretty cool so far.
Speaker 1: That is amazing. Yeah. So sorry for the apartment, but
Speaker 9: I think that
Speaker 3: not many people are also in the farming, I think, of this one. But Tiffany said that she does all this helping out a lot Realtime. By automating this. So I think I I think that's definitely the one who does a lot of this.
Speaker 7: Yeah. And then, like, there's so many plenty of work that we can't do just yet with AI. It's like, Gray. Your focus is gonna shift from, like, all this crappy manual stuff to, like, stuff that you need to actually be spending your time on that maybe it's getting, like, piled up because you had to do this manual stuff. You know what I mean? Yeah. So because that's still where I conceptually don't
Speaker 1: fully understand what can think I do take from me because I feel like a lot of my stuff is specific or particular or you know, just based on all my historical knowledge that I'm not understanding how to communicate that or even
Speaker 7: Yeah. We'll we'll just kinda go through everything one by one, you know. Just try to tackle it. And then, like, if we can't automate the whole task we'll try to do part of it. You know? Oh, milestone that popped up today, logged in on Monday, found
Speaker 1: out that, Denver and Jeremy canceled
Speaker 0: Monday. Yeah. We're gonna we're gonna remake that. Okay. Thank you. Because I was just mad because nobody communicated that that was made
Speaker 1: Sean. Beau use it in accounting. It's great for us in doing process and communication in in the department. It has helped reduce more errors.
Speaker 0: Okay. Yeah. Why are we doing something? Just Yeah. No. You find it.
Speaker 1: In Monday when it said, hey, your subscription's ending in September.
Speaker 7: Oh, September? Okay. You guys You have the time. Okay.
Speaker 1: So, yes, I'm building out building some sort of at least an in or out process.
Speaker 7: Dashboard to Yeah. Yeah. Help us track the things that are tracking in there. Of course. Yeah. I I think, like, when we talk to them, we also went through, like, okay. What shoppers are you guys doing for that you, like, still eat? And Realtime, like ask me, but I guess I still use Monday.
Speaker 5: Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I I know that everybody still uses it,
Speaker 7: it was one of those things I was like, I think we can just remake this, and it shouldn't be an issue. Because, like, everybody's gonna have an account anyways, and we Sean just make it a Sean. Just like how Monday had it. So, I'm glad that it they're not, like, canceling canceling right this second Beau, like, we could get to building it Landon then you know, it could get put on, like, the back burner for a little bit or something. And then we also something to think about is, like, integrating everything from their to, from other to that.
Speaker 8: So if you guys wanna keep track of all your stuff, of Procore,
Speaker 3: that you currently have going on. You don't have to remake that. So
Speaker 7: those are just all things we'll have to think of, but yeah. It's gonna be Some of the automations from those ports. Like, one of them is WSDL
Speaker 1: in checks at Regent Bank. Well, so she's depositor, so now she needs to communicate what she deposits so that another person can record it. The same person should not deposit Landon Procore.
Speaker 5: They deposit in the system. So we just have a board Spectrum that she
Speaker 1: can list all of the check information that she posted on Monday, assign it SOAP whoever's supposed to record it, and then that person's It's simple, but Oh, yeah. That might be like a
Speaker 7: potential for improvement, like you said. Because, like, with our stuff, it's not like we're gonna be able to just like, hook it into your Monday. Whereas if we build it and it does the exact same thing as Monday, we could hook into it. So so there's just that. I just didn't know if it could hook into Monday. A 100%. Yeah. Yeah. I can't hook into Monday exactly, but it could just replicate it. And then now you're saving. I mean, I think Monday costs per year It was a lot. I don't know. For enterprise, anything costs a ton of money.
Speaker 1: I DMSA didn't know. Procore, it was just a cost per
Speaker 0: user. Mhmm. And then I guess they switched
Speaker 3: Yeah. Golden jar 98% of what my
Speaker 9: Yeah.
Speaker 0: Why? Why? SOAP Prosper is an extremely old job.
Speaker 1: That went over budget in the very beginning. Yeah. So the budget is 2,650,000.00.
Speaker 3: That's a lot of money. That's very wrong. Is it actually 2.65?
Speaker 7: Or was that wrong on his thing?
Speaker 3: Because this is an ad at old firm you guys'
Speaker 7: I can go on Procore too. I I have the Yardi WSDL. Does I guess, would incorporate change orders. Come through, or is it based off the over set. They're right. Preachers were not in touch. This was just a problem.
Speaker 1: Job. That or if you pull any of the McKinney jobs,
Speaker 0: disaster. Gray, Bob. Well, it's always gonna be a hard one.
Speaker 1: Your yours is running off the Procore? Yes. Spectrum.
Speaker 5: Okay. You said he's getting rid of Spectrum? That's his
Speaker 1: idea. I don't like No. I don't think so. I don't think so. You guys have had a bunch of too far? He was he was basically just summarizing saying he wants to splash everything. That he can, which I Beau, but
Speaker 7: That's what you wanna do, but there's certain things that he he wanna keep, though.
Speaker 0: Yeah. And it's also, SOAP, like, there are people who
Speaker 3: pay a lot of money for something that can replicate this like, for cheaper. It's like, to some extent, it's only certain features that family, but some you don't wanna have to replicate software that works great already. Like, if something's buggy or broken or something, you wanna definitely try and make it better so solution. But if it works seamlessly, there's no reason to fix it. Yeah. Or if it's just like,
Speaker 7: it's something that you could easily just put together, like, Monday, that you are using, and it's gonna save you thousands and thousands of dollars. You know? That's a little different as well. Especially if you can put it into one software where it just works everything together. Like, that's what makes it to Beau. Is it all just working in Landon? Instead of you having to, like, check different places based
Speaker 1: One option previously was getting rid of Spectrum because you already have a construction manager.
Speaker 5: Module. n8n
Speaker 7: Get access to a lot of stuff and
Speaker 3: throw a little off break.
Speaker 1: Thing is telling me 4.6 is the revised contract. Also, the net cost,
Speaker 0: and I know that's not gonna be in pro form. For
Speaker 5: six. This one is does yours have a job number?
Speaker 9: Yes. It's running off of Well, there's a project ID.
Speaker 7: It has the yeah. So it gets the that's procoreproject.edu. No. That was right. The the one at the bottom.
Speaker 5: Okay. So there's Oh, no. This Spectrum says the
Speaker 1: dash one project is $2,300,000. 2,300,000.0. It says 2.6. It's got the other calculations on there. And that is so I don't know what Unless something is broken between pro
Speaker 7: What was the what were the different like, you said there's, like, an original Yeah. Wait.
Speaker 6: Procore is just needed cost, whereas
Speaker 0: fee. Cost of almost $2.06.
Speaker 1: Okay. That's projected. That would be the original.
Speaker 3: I think we just I think this is the original projector.
Speaker 8: Unless it's Joe's number, right? It actually be the robbers.
Speaker 7: I'm sure we'll have to make changes and everything's, of course, very beta.
Speaker 1: Prosper was an interesting one to choose. Haslet or
Speaker 9: We've we've been testing with the Round Rock project.
Speaker 0: And then I ran that,
Speaker 8: Once we just finished our fate, I don't
Speaker 3: that the Android would which I've shown you.
Speaker 5: What we're gonna see it's on face through. Right?
Speaker 0: This is a dash
Speaker 3: like Tiffany will on the inside. Yeah. We just we don't really have this set up SOAP, like,
Speaker 7: be super pretty yet. This is kind of just something that we can interact with. To, like, visually see what it's, like, producing right now.
Speaker 5: Yeah. It'll be it'll be better.
Speaker 0: See if they bills all this? Yeah. Yeah. So this is just billed for
Speaker 7: right now, internal testing, but it'll get turned over into actual deployment for you guys once we are ready for that.
Speaker 5: See if possible. SOAP
Speaker 3: Massing where it got the 2.61.
Speaker 0: It could be right.
Speaker 1: I mean Well, then it it might be going off of something else that we need to
Speaker 7: change. You know? So
Speaker 5: there's there's so many different things that we gotta look into.
Speaker 3: Pretty prosperous looking at the actual subcontractor contracts, AGSI. So real dollar amount they've committed to pay. SOAP But here much.
Speaker 1: That's weird. It's still showing me a projected
Speaker 9: A what? She's Spectrum right now. $2.02 $5.08 9. 2589. We just got it back, so we'll review it and see what it says right here.
Speaker 7: $18,000,000. This is way too low. Actually, $1.07. No. That's that that that's gotta be wrong because it's gotta be missing something if it's if it's that far off. Because the other one, whenever we checked it, the one that you used it, it was pulling it from phase three. So maybe that pulling it from phase three as well because the one that you did before that, it was, like, a it was a similar gap in the money. We did a test before he came in here, and, you know, obviously, there's different phases of workflows. And part of it, if pulls, like, an additional, like,
Speaker 5: all of the information gathered in phase three, and then it hands off
Speaker 7: phase four, and that's what there's, like, comparison. So And that's, say, you get, like, the more accurate results. So, like,
Speaker 5: we have a a one that we did earlier, and it only pulled from phase three.
Speaker 7: And the number was, like, lower than what the the credit Yardi was suggesting. And then that's how I got really close to the the 2.19 after we fixed it. So What was it? It shows general's pinning.
Speaker 3: And the landscaping is ending.
Speaker 7: Landon then also, to me,
Speaker 3: I think I don't know. I think he's probably just a a you can say this one was gonna be bad. To begin with, just every plan.
Speaker 5: Yeah. Oh, yeah. It's obviously, like, all we're doing is just constantly tweaking things. And it's like,
Speaker 7: It's just always we're always tweaking all of them the information because I Yeah. It it also did They do the phase three thing? Yeah. Okay. Let's see. It makes sense. Now it's gonna Sean, like, 8,000,000. 2,000,000. What did she say? Did she did she say $2.06 as a projected $2.06.
Speaker 3: Obviously being $300,000 off high on all historical match data, things of that thing. And I'll be honest, it's not.
Speaker 7: And I wonder where things as well. Like, I don't know. I can't remember if this project And we'll need to talk we're about to talk about Tiffany to, like includes a go work on the permits design fees and assurance service, geotech testing. WSDL
Speaker 1: That's normally not in Procore, but That's normally in the jobs. Overall contract, but that's on the development side. This is the It was not it was not extracted from the problems. This is
Speaker 3: a standard project over in.
Speaker 0: Does that seem like an accurate number? It depends on the job
Speaker 1: So some permit fees, if it's, you know, no home or whatever, super low, but we're finding that permit fees in other fancier cities. One recently, I can't remember what job, but apparently, to get the bill of increment, it's gonna be $300,000.
Speaker 7: Probably what? No way.
Speaker 5: Insane. So it wildly changes, and so that's where
Speaker 0: the development directors have to be calling in, like, really
Speaker 5: digging in in that city or that county
Speaker 1: What
Speaker 3: Yeah. And I think that one thing here that this does that we do tweak, but I
Speaker 5: like, RLS
Speaker 3: somebody in Texas, I think it takes, like, all the counties in Texas, averages of out of the
Speaker 5: counties.
Speaker 3: Instead of maybe looking for that county's data. I'm sure building that in El Paso is way different.
Speaker 8: There's nothing. It's
Speaker 0: never actually slept there. Beau, anyways,
Speaker 1: So you just need me to give you the username for your Yeah. Yeah. Let's start with that.
Speaker 3: And we'll talk to some time Charles and see if we can get that right. Because I and if we can't, like I said, my idea of thoughts here is still gonna be released out. I that we can do the entire homage with that and go really well. I'm not concerned about the size of it. But, obviously, just for seamless integration, I think I've always tried having this, you know, got positive treatment screening. Yeah. So if we can do that, that's ideal. But if not,
Speaker 5: Yeah. All of it is
Speaker 1: analyze the GL, analyze the amortization schedule, figure what the current portion of watching the entry is supposed to be, and postdate. n8n
Speaker 0: Yes. Does
Speaker 1: API, due to AGC, agree to what is in Spectrum? SOAP.
Speaker 0: Okay. Whatever you see. Work on this and see what
Speaker 3: we'll do that. I'm not gonna take you any day, take a week. We'll try and get with him and then try and figure out if he even has a lot of APIs. If we do, I'll show him that back with you. And then, And they'll respond on that. He should've talked to
Speaker 1: you now that I'm cc'd and I just need to literally Gray, permission Okay. To talk to them. Just cc me.
Speaker 5: Okay. Perfect. And
Speaker 1: can even tell him, I've given another username. Just
Speaker 0: Yes. Alright. Perfect.
Speaker 1: Gray. And I'm meeting with Jeremy tomorrow Beau I'm gonna have my super, super GreenStephens of here's everything on my wish list to automate. Mhmm. It's a lot. And for me, I'm DMSA, you know, this is first big right thing, is testing How quick is this gonna go? How accurate is it? And, Realtime it can be implemented. That'll help me determine, okay, what's the next on the list. But I wanna go through with him to make sure he agrees on working on just this one specific whole area or working on specific
Speaker 8: person, which I've wanted mine.
Speaker 1: But, well, it's just AP. SOAP, automating, can it see the inbox get the invoice into Yardi, can it put it to the right workflow and code that
Speaker 0: Code it initially and correctly.
Speaker 1: And then fix things. Of course, you know, it's not easy. SOAP I truly just cannot stand. I cannot stand the performers, like, just lazy. I can't do it. I understand. Hey. Your video is really good.
Speaker 5: You. It was really good. It actually becomes slow. More like that.
Speaker 7: You were like, Julie, just yes. You said word, giving, like, some nuances and stuff too. And, like, we're telling us, like, Beau. This this code means this or, like, there was, like, two letters for, like, that was a something like that.
Speaker 5: Yeah. You did really, really good. I know it's just enough to be Right? Yes.
Speaker 7: Yeah. Of course. Perfect. To
Speaker 1: consider. And you even went through, like, the box holders and stuff too Beau, like,
Speaker 7: that stuff's really, really important. Simple. And, you know, once you're in there, you really SOAP SOAP