

Traditional, non-automated approaches for recording employees’ working time and attendance, typically using paper timesheets, spreadsheets, or basic desktop tools. These methods are highlighted in the context as inefficient and error-prone compared to modern cloud-based time tracking systems, especially for payroll, compliance, and enforcing attendance/time-off policies.
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Category: Time-tracking overview resources
Tags: overview, reference
Manual time tracking refers to traditional, non-automated methods where employees record their working time and attendance themselves. Common tools include paper timesheets, basic spreadsheets, and physical or desktop-based time cards. Managers later collect and review these records to calculate payroll and bill clients, and to check attendance and time-off.
These approaches are generally considered less efficient and more error-prone than modern, cloud-based or automatic time-tracking systems, especially for payroll accuracy, compliance, and enforcing attendance and time-off policies.
The source focuses mainly on drawbacks and comparison to automated tools. Any potential benefits (such as simplicity or low setup cost) are not explicitly described in the provided content.
Time theft risk
Employees may record more hours than they actually worked, intentionally or unintentionally. Examples include:
Buddy punching
One employee records time on behalf of another, typically by:
Error-prone records
Manual entry increases the chances of:
Inefficiency for payroll and billing
Because all data must be collected and processed by hand, it can:
Weaker support for compliance and policy enforcement
Manual systems make it harder to consistently enforce: