Before you book
- ✓Confirm the exact version of documents delivery you want handled.
- ✓Check whether anything needs to be bought, moved, or prepped before the visit.
- ✓Take one minute to write down the real scope in the app so the booking stays clean.
- ✓When you need pick up and deliver up to 5 documents within a 10-mile radius but do not want to block off your whole day.
Prep the space
- ✓Confirm "Documents Must Be Ready for Pickup" before the visit if it affects your booking.
- ✓Confirm "Document Pickup and Delivery Only" before the visit if it affects your booking.
- ✓Move clutter or obstacles out of the work area before arrival.
- ✓Double-check any requirement related to documents must be ready for pickup.
Day-of checklist
- ✓Open the Taskquatch app and book Documents Delivery.
- ✓Choose a time that works and add details about access, tools, or the exact area.
- ✓A vetted neighbor shows up for the scoped task and you pay in the app when you are satisfied.
- ✓Keep any follow-up or paired tasks in mind if the project is really two jobs, not one.
After the visit
- ✓Walk through the result while the details are still fresh.
- ✓Decide whether a paired specialty would finish the broader project cleanly.
- ✓Save the task notes that worked so rebooking next time is faster.
Common questions
What should I do before booking documents delivery in Nashville?
Clarify the exact scope, set out anything the task needs, and note any access or timing constraints. That keeps the visit efficient and the fixed price accurate.
How do I prepare for documents delivery?
Prepare the space, materials, and decision points before the visit starts. The cleaner the setup is, the smoother the appointment goes.
Can I book documents delivery for the same week?
Often yes. Taskquatch is built for local neighborhood help, which makes same-week booking realistic for many specialties.
What if my documents delivery task is slightly bigger than expected?
The best approach is to describe the scope clearly up front so you book the right task type and avoid turning a scoped visit into an open-ended project.