The Timing app can be trained to categorize your hours according to the type of program you are using and the keywords inside a document. A dashboard summarizes how you spend your time and the rhythms of your work, and you can decide what constitutes ‘productive’ time at the keyboard to generate a score. You might rate social-media sites, for example, as a poor use of time compared with time spent using Microsoft Word. I can add notes to these time logs; this is important because tasks such as writing can vary depending on context — writing a journal article takes more time than writing an e-mail, and it’s important to know the difference to plan appropriately.
Keeping an eye on your productivity score can help you to stay honest to your goals and arrange your days. My own analysis tells me that I am most productive before lunch, so I make sure that I schedule difficult tasks in the morning. You can also generate reports to inform your planning processes and share them with your colleagues.
My typical working week is just over 44 hours. About half of that time is spent teaching, with the rest equally divided between service work, research, passion projects and FAT (my cheeky term for invisible work; no prizes for guessing what FAT stands for, but you can find out on my blog). Passion work is work I do for me. I don’t believe in donating extra hours to my employer, so I make sure all my university duties fit into the 37.5 hours a week stated in my contract. I also like to record podcasts and write articles like this one, which are not strictly part of my job. When a previous employer made noises about wanting to take my blog name and content when I left, my Timing data helped to show that I owned the intellectual property. I departed with my ‘Thesis Whisperer’ baby in my arms, but the experience made me realize that my career is more than the job I happen to have at any given time and that I need to protect my assets.
Pre-game analysis
When planning a big project, I like to do an analysis with the US Navy’s Program Evaluation and Review Technique (PERT).
PERT considers three variables — most likely (Tm), optimistic (To) and pessimistic (Tp) time to completion of a task — which you can estimate using your time-sheet data. I do this manually, but Timing can also generate spreadsheets showing how many hours I spent on particular projects, which enables me to compile and compare data from week to week. You can then plug your numbers into the following formulas to estimate the amount of time that you should set aside to complete the task:
PERT time estimate = (To + 4Tm + Tp) / 6
Standard deviation = (Tp − To) / 6
You will be shocked by how quickly your calendar fills up when you plan with PERT! Yet for many academics, keeping time sheets is a non-starter. Perhaps they feel that it undermines the autonomy and flexibility we all value about academia. But really, it’s the opposite: if you know how long typical tasks really take, then you can slot them into your week instead of using the weekend as a work buffer.
And it’s better that we do this rather than our employers. To be clear, I am fiercely against the idea of universities tracking our time for us — in management’s hands, detailed time-on-task data can be used as a stick to drive performance. But for researchers, time-tracking software can lead to greater productivity and clarity around your work practices and habits.
As the saying goes, what gets measured gets managed — and maybe you get your weekends back.
doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-023-00866-9
Извор: Спрингер Натуре


Without these data, you can’t make realistic plans to get things done. The inevitable consequence is work creeping into every part of your life, including the weekends. Life becomes like an episode of the US psychological television drama Severance, where you never, ever clock out.
Власник сајта: HR2RENT - део слагалице који Вам недостаје