Creative work is notoriously hard to quantify, which is exactly why designers tend to lose track of billable hours. A logo project that was scoped for 8 hours turns into 14 once you count client feedback rounds, asset revisions, and export formatting. Without accurate records, that extra time goes uncompensated and unlearned — the next estimate will have the same gap.
The solution is a time management tool for designers that fits naturally into a creative workflow. The best options let you log time by project and task type, separate client-facing work from internal rounds, and generate reports that show exactly where hours went.
What Makes a Time Tracker Work for Creative Teams
Designers have specific needs that generic corporate tools don’t address:
- Task-level granularity: “Design” is too broad. You need to distinguish concepting, production, revision, and QA — each of which has different productivity patterns and estimation implications.
- Low friction entry: A tool that takes more than 15 seconds to log a task will get skipped. Timers, keyboard shortcuts, and mobile logging all matter.
- Client-ready reporting: When a client questions an invoice, you need to show time by phase — not a spreadsheet that requires explanation.
- Integration with project tools: Design teams live in Figma, Notion, or Asana. Time tracking that connects to these tools means less context-switching.
Tracking Time Across a Dev-Design Collaboration
Many design projects involve developer handoffs — UI components, specs, prototype builds. When designers and developers are both logging hours on the same deliverable, shared visibility matters. Developer time tracking tools that use the same project structure as design tools give project managers a single view of where the product is and whether it’s on budget.
Leave and Availability Affect Creative Output
A creative team’s delivery capacity depends on who is actually available. When a senior designer takes a week off mid-sprint, the timeline needs to adjust — and project leads need to know before it becomes a missed deadline. actiPLANS handles absence management alongside time tracking so availability is always visible, and project timelines reflect reality rather than assumptions.
Starting Small, Scaling Fast
You don’t need to roll out time tracking across an entire agency at once. Start with one active client project, track at the task level for a month, and compare logged hours against your original estimate. The data you collect in that first month will improve every scope and proposal you write afterward.