Freelancers, does your employer ask you to use time tracking software?

Artem Galenko
8 replies
If yes, please, specify which one! Thank you

Replies

Eugene Lorenc
Some of employers especially if they represent particular companies usually ask to use their own "home-made" time trackers. As you may think, I always felt privacy discomfort related to that trackers.
Wilfred Springer
I'm using https://www.temponia.com/. Very simple, not that expensive, excellent support and — and this is the reason why I picked it — Xero integration. It doesn't look as nice as the competition, but a lot more flexible and helpful than the competition nonetheless.
John Datserakis
We're not asked to track time, but I started using https://wakatime.com personally at home and it has been awesome to see how many hours I've put in over a weekend or whatever. It integrates really nicely with VS Code too - after setting it up the first time I don't even notice it running.
Ebrahim-Khalil Hassen
I hardly ever (maybe never) bill per hour/day so I have no need for time tracking from a client perspective. I however track my time for two reasons. First, I am able to work out what my hourly rate actually is, but this is for my internal usage. Second, always valuable to go through the process on a project and understand what worked and what did not. Excellent way to turn your learning about a project into processes. In terms of software, I have successfully used Toggl, and currently testing a more automated way to track with Painless Time Tracker https://painlesstracker.com/
Nisha Garg
The employer usually ask to complete the task and does not actually want the timeline tracker. All they want is quality work within the defined timeline.
Artem Galenko
@nishagarg what about payperhour situation?
Nisha Garg
@unrealartemg I haven't yet tried payperhour however, with upwork, I use their desktop app for time tracking.