IT Brief Ireland explores how construction claims are shaped long before disputes arise, and how better site data capture is changing the outcome.
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Scopey Onsite, a Longford based AI company, has raised €623,000 to date and is building a WhatsApp powered solution that helps construction teams capture site events in real time, protecting margin and strengthening commercial position.

Scopey Onsite has been featured in the Business Post following its pivot into the construction sector and continued growth since rebranding last year.
Founded in 2022 by Jenna Farrell, Mark Keogh, Gillian Laging and Daragh O’Shea, the company has raised €623,000 to date and is supported by Enterprise Ireland. The funding is supporting the move from paid pilot projects to full commercial launch.
Scopey Onsite was built to solve a problem that exists on almost every construction project: change happens constantly, but documentation often lags behind.
As highlighted in the article, contractors may be entitled to additional time or payment when disruption, variation or delay occurs. However, entitlement depends on having clear, timely records. Without structured documentation, commercial teams are left reconstructing events after the fact, often under strict contractual notice periods.
Scopey Onsite addresses this by using AI within WhatsApp to turn everyday communication into structured, timestamped records aligned to commercial and contractual requirements. Instead of asking site teams to adopt new systems, Scopey works within the tools they already use.
The company originally began outside construction, but strong industry feedback led to a strategic pivot. Since then, Scopey has been working closely with construction companies, running paid pilots and refining the product alongside commercial teams and site supervisors.
The long term ambition is clear: to become the standard way construction companies capture and manage site evidence.
You can read the full Business Post article here:
[Link to Business Post Article]