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Subject:Re: Accounting for TW time From:"Dana Worley" <dana -at- campbellsci -dot- com> To:"TECHWR-L" <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- raycomm -dot- com> Date:Thu, 24 Jan 2002 10:05:46 -0700
As a full-time employee, I am required to fill out a time card weekly.
On the time card, I record time in/time out for each day, and the
percent of time that I spent on any particular task. All of our projects
are given an accounting code, whether they are engineering or
marketing related. In a given day, I may charge to customer support,
training, development on a project (help files), or testing a project.
Our company has right around 200 people. Everyone in the
company fills out a time card (well, maybe the execs are exempt
from this...). Accounting uses this information to determine how
much a project costs to complete, and I know that my manager
looks at the card to determine where I am spending my time.
> __Are you a lone TW or TW working in a group?
My situation is a bit different than some on this list. I am part of the
software support group -- there are 5 of us. I am the only one in the
group that does any tech writing, but I also do other things as well
(training, some CS, hardware & software testing...). We have a few
other tech writers who do the marketing stuff, but I don't work
closely with them (other than to review their work).
> __What is your geographical locale?
UT
> __Any other comments?
I started working in 1981, and at every job I have ever had, I have
had to account for my time. I worked about 8 years for the Georgia
Tech Research Institute. GTRI did contract missile defense work for
the US Army. We were required to report our time towards a project
or to OH. The remainder of my jobs have been at private companies
and time reports were used to track project costs.
Dana W.
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