A Monday with SkyBadge
Roster photos become filed records, every expiration is watched, and the chief sees readiness at a glance. Here is one ordinary Monday, for the three people who use it.
07:40 — The coordinator
Coffee still warm
The board shows who needs what, with the fix already suggested. Then Friday's defensive tactics class: eight signatures on a paper sign-in sheet.
One photo from a phone. SkyBadge reads every row, matches it to the roster, and flags anything unclear for a human decision — never guessed. The coordinator checks the matches and taps one button: File 8 records. Thirty seconds, not thirty minutes.
Want the full walkthrough? That's the 15-minute demo →
11:15 — An officer
One text from the patrol car
Officer Delgado's CPR certification expires in 45 days. He does not find out from a memo on a corkboard. He gets a text.
SkyBadge: Your CPR cert expires in 45 days. Next class is Feb 10, 0800, at the range classroom. Reply YES to reserve a seat. Reply STOP to opt out anytime.
YES
SkyBadge: You're confirmed for CPR on Feb 10. Your coordinator has been notified.
Done. No login, no form, no phone tag. When he wants the full picture, he signs in and sees his own records — and only his own.

16:30 — The chief
One look before the council meeting
The council meets at five. One look: a readiness percentage, a square per officer — green, amber, red — and a short list of who needs what, fix already suggested.
Department readiness
0%
Want the full walkthrough? That's the 15-minute demo →
See it moving
Years of history in a binder? Bring it.
Photograph the binder, page by page — SkyBadge reads each one, your coordinator confirms, and the history files itself.
Old system instead of paper? Upload its export — spreadsheet, Excel, or PDF report — and SkyBadge proposes how the columns line up before a person confirms. Either way, nobody retypes anything.
Their software stores what your people type. SkyBadge does the typing.
Book a 15-minute demo