BDB Project Tools is BDB's field-service operations platform — live, in production, used by contractors today. BDFIQ is BDB's accounting platform — launching at v1. Together: jobs, estimates, invoices, receipts, and labor hours flow from PT directly into BDFIQ. No QBO sync layer between them. No duplicate customer creation. No Undeposited Funds trap. One company, two surfaces, one set of data.
Join the WaitlistTwo BDB products. One data model underneath. Built so the people in the truck and the people at the desk are looking at the same numbers.
Everything that happens before the books need to know about it:
Everything the books need to be honest, complete, and CPA-ready:
Six clean data flows. No CSV exports. No copy-paste. No third-party iPaaS service in the middle.
A new job in PT creates the matching job record in BDFIQ. Customer link, service-line tag, location segment, and any custom segment all carry over. No duplicate customer ever created on the books side.
Estimates created in PT carry Materials / Labor / Subcontractors as three separate line groups. BDFIQ uses the same three buckets natively, so the estimated cost structure becomes the budget against which actuals are measured.
An invoice sent from PT lands in BDFIQ AR with the original line items intact — not flattened into one "From Project Tools" total. Customer payment terms, due date, and Stripe payment intent all preserved.
PT's mobile receipt capture (photo → AI categorize) becomes a categorized expense entry in BDFIQ with the job link intact. Materials and subcontractor receipts hit the right cost track from the start.
Timekeeper hours from PT flow into BDFIQ as labor cost entries — burdened with the correct wage + tax + benefit multipliers. Posts to the Labor bucket on the matching job's cost record. No second time-tracking entry needed.
The customer record lives once, viewable in both surfaces. Edit in PT, the change reflects in BDFIQ. No duplicate "John Smith (PT)" and "John Smith - Customer 0042" living in different systems.
Almost every field-service platform on the market today has a "QuickBooks integration." Housecall Pro, Jobber, ServiceTitan, FieldEdge, Workiz — all of them. On the demo, it looks clean. In production, here's what happens:
A small contractor uses one of the major field-service tools and QBO Plus. They run 80 jobs a quarter. They have a recurring Friday-afternoon ritual: pull invoices from the field tool, pull AR aging from QBO, find the gaps, manually create the missing entries, manually clear Undeposited Funds.
With QBO as the middleman: 4–6 hours a week on reconciliation between the two systems. By month-end, somebody (usually their bookkeeper) spends another full day reconciling Undeposited Funds and chasing duplicate customers. That's roughly 25 hours a month maintaining an integration that "just works."
With PT + BDFIQ: No sync layer because both products read the same data. An invoice is an invoice in both surfaces. A payment is a payment. The customer is the customer. The reconciliation ritual goes from 25 hours a month to roughly zero.
The integration problem gets worse the bigger you scale. Three jobs a week, you might tolerate the friction. Thirty jobs a week, the integration cost becomes a full part-time job for somebody.
Most BDB customers today are in the trades: HVAC, plumbing, electrical, roofing, remodel, general contracting, multi-trade service companies. They use BDB Project Tools to run the field side — estimates, scheduling, dispatch, time tracking, receipt capture, customer comms. The question they've all been asking is the same one: "What about the books side?"
BDFIQ is the answer. Not because it bolts onto PT — but because it was built alongside PT, on the same data model, by the same team. The PT + BDFIQ pair is what differentiates BDB from a generic accounting platform plus a generic field-service tool. A QBO + Jobber pair will always have a sync layer between them, with its drift, its duplicates, and its monthly reconciliation tax. A PT + BDFIQ pair doesn't, because there's no sync to break.
For contractors, the value of the pair compounds: 3-track job costing in PT becomes 3-track job costing in BDFIQ on the same job. Subcontractor receipts captured in the field land in the Subcontractor bucket on the books. Labor hours from Timekeeper flow into burdened labor cost on the right job. Side-by-side segment P&L by service line answers "which trade is making us money" in one screen. Multi-entity consolidation handles the contractor who's also a real-estate LLC owner with two rental properties on the side.
None of that requires a separate sync product. None of that requires an iPaaS subscription. None of that requires a part-time bookkeeper to babysit the integration. The closed loop is built in.
BDFIQ stands alone as a real cloud accounting platform. Multi-tenant SaaS with double-entry books, AR, AP, payroll integration on the roadmap, 3-track job costing, segment P&L, multi-entity consolidation, and CSV import with AI-assisted categorization on BDB's servers.
If you also run BDB Project Tools, the PT + BDFIQ pair is the closed loop described above. If you don't, BDFIQ is still a QBO alternative for service businesses, multi-location operators, real-estate LLC owners, and small contractors who want segment-level visibility without the QBO Advanced tier upgrade.
Field ops in PT. Books in BDFIQ. One company, two surfaces, one set of numbers. Join the waitlist.
Join the Waitlist