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Taming the Time Card
While doing some
research online, I came across this article
published by Richard Brenner of Chaco Canyon
Consulting.
There are some valuable points made here, so
I wanted to include it for my readers.
Enjoy.
Filling out time cards may seem maddeningly
trivial, but the data they collect can be
critically important to project managers.
Why is it so important? And what does an
effective, yet minimally intrusive time
reporting system look like?
At some point, most of us have been required
to submit time cards. To most professionals
the task often seems maddeningly trivial,
especially when the card is due in ten
minutes, we’ve forgotten how we actually
spent our time for a few days, and the whole
thing is just a piece of fiction.
In accounting or law, where time spent
determines client billing, time reporting is
obviously necessary. For many other
professions, expended-effort data seems to
have no real purpose. But expended-effort
data can be an indispensable management tool
for project-oriented organizations.
Why is this data so important? Projects are
supposed to end. Often there’s much more
project work to be done than people to do
it, which creates pressure to complete
successfully any existing projects. That’s
one reason why project sponsors always ask,
“When will it be done?”
To answer such questions, project managers
need to know roughly how long each task
should take, and how much effort has been
expended so far. They estimate the former
and measure the latter.
Management would rather estimate than guess
time to completion. Lacking historical
effort data, estimates cannot be based on
data; lacking current effort data, actuals
are little more than hunches. By tracking
the time of project team members, project
managers can control projects better because
they can base their estimates on real data.
If your organization is project-oriented,
and you don’t yet collect expended-effort
data, you might consider starting. But
whether a system is in place, or you’re
considering one, take care that it meets
your needs without burdening or insulting
professionals. A well-designed system can be
minimally intrusive and still yield useful
data.
Here are some criteria for a time card
system that doesn’t put the corporate
culture at risk:
- Gather
effort data only from the people who
work on projects.
- Include
all overtime.
- Don’t
bother with supervisor’s signatures. Any
professional inept enough to get caught
lying that way is not to be trusted with
important project work.
- Collect
data weekly. This helps keep people
fairly current.
- Don’t
try to account for 100% of a person’s
time — focus on the time spent on
project work.
- Put the
system on the Intranet. Make it easy to
use from anywhere.
- Provide
a separate account for each project
task, so you can compare actuals with
estimates.
- Pick a
minimum resolution: 15 minutes or more.
Any finer than that is fiction.
- Report
all work done, no matter where — even at
home or on travel.
- If
people understand the need for the data
you collect — and if you use that data —
your time reporting system will be a
tool, not a target.
Copyright
© 2005 Richard Brenner, Chaco Canyon
Consulting, www.ChacoCanyon.com
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