I’m an accountant &
I didn’t know
I was working for free 1 week per year
I’m an accountant & I didn’t know
I was working for free 1 week per year

By Cynthia Harris

Advertorial last updated:
10 December 2025

Advertorial last updated: 10 December 2025

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I’ve always been good with numbers, which is how I ended up in accounting. Imagine how dumb I felt when I realized I’ve been miscalculating my own time by a whole week every year!
This is how it went down.
A short history of me vs. time tracking (I lost)
I never particularly enjoyed tracking time but I made peace with it. A necessary evil of the job – is what accountants say. At first, I was eager to track every minute like my paycheck depended on it (it actually did).
My accounting software came with a timer, perfect. Except I always forgot to turn it off.
I figured I’d rather lose a couple bucks than my sanity over the stupid stopwatch. So I decided to zone in on the work and let the future-me worry about what to put on the invoice. (Spoiler – the future-me was NOT happy)
My timesheet: a work of fiction
Without the timer, I needed to come up with what to put in my timesheet. Come Friday, and I’d get crippling anxiety knowing how much time I’d waste on guessing what I did all week.
I tried going through my calendar, emails, and calls to reconstruct my billable hours.
It took forever but at least there was a record.
The problem was, I spend a lot of time working in documents and files. To estimate those, I only had my memory and gut feeling.
The app that changed everything
I was desperate and ranting about time tracking at the office (we all do).
“I wish there was a browser history but for all I did on my computer,” I said to my colleague.
If this isn’t proof that your phone is listening…
Because the next day I get an ad for this app that tracks time in all programs. Definitely everything an accountant uses:
• Emails,
• Documents,
• Browsertabs,
• Desktop software,
• Phone calls even!
Best part – there’s no timer. I log on and it’s already recording in the background.
Memtime shows exactly what I did and for how long
The truth hits harder than a tax deadline
I didn’t open my activity list until it was time to send an invoice. Here’s what the app revealed:
• Half my Zoom meetings ran 5-10 minutes longer than scheduled
• Even simple tax returns took 20+ minutes, not the 15 I swore they did
• Ambush requests stole 10+ minutes a day – and I never tracked them

All these sneaky extra minutes added up into one brutal equation:
Just 15 minutes a day = 60 hours a year = more than a week of billable time!
A week I was unknowingly giving away for free.
Calculate how much you’re underbilling
Here’s a simple calculator you can use to estimate how much time you’re underbilling per year.
All from not tracking the small stuff like extra time in calls or email.
Currency
0 15 30 45 60 75 90 105 120

Selected: 15 min/day

Hint: Think of all the quick emails, incoming calls, and meetings running longer than planned. How much time are you underreporting every day?

Your results:
⏱️
Time saved per year
60 hours
💰
Revenue reclaimed per year
$6,000
Get your time & revenue back ⏳
Check how much billable time you’re missing out on
The lesson: your memory is not a timekeeping tool
If you charge by the hour, here’s the truth:
• Do NOT estimate your time
• Do NOT trust your memory
• Do NOT ignore the “small stuff”

Every minute counts. Get a system that backs you up. Your future self (and your bank account) will thank you.
P.S. The app I used is called Memtime, here’s how it tracks your time automatically.
Video on how to connect MOCO and Memtime
Learn more