Time tracking has an image problem, and it is earned. Too many tools treat measurement as a way to watch people, capturing keystrokes and screenshots in the name of "productivity." That builds resentment, not results.
We think tracking time is genuinely useful — but only when it serves the person doing the work first.
The same data can be a trust-builder or a weapon, depending on who it is for and what it is used for. WebWork is designed around a simple test: does this help the team understand and improve its own work? Where the honest answer is no, the feature doesn't belong.
What you measure tells your team what you value. Choose carefully.
For distributed teams especially, a shared, accurate picture of where time goes replaces guesswork and late-night status pings. It makes async work possible, helps set realistic deadlines, and surfaces when someone is quietly drowning.
Trust is reciprocal. If a team can see how its time is spent, that visibility should be open to the people being measured too — not a one-way mirror. Built that way, time tracking stops feeling like surveillance and starts feeling like a shared map. That is the version worth building.
WebWork AI builds intelligent software for how teams work today — time tracking, security, and AI software reviews. Learn more about the company.