Aug 19, 2024
A Deloitte study of over 800 employers revealed an average of 31
unplanned overtime hours each week per company.
In some situations, it might make sense to let employees
work overtime for a few pay periods. For example, if you don’t need an
additional employee long-term, it may be cheaper to build overtime into your
labor budget. What we’re talking about here is unplanned overtime. This is
unnecessary overtime that isn’t justified by increased revenue to offset the
expense.
Even a few hours of time-and-a-half can sink a labor budget
for a small workforce if it happens frequently. But here’s the rub – managers
are busy with competing priorities. Keeping customers satisfied and projects on
track can leave little time for policing overtime.
Automated timekeeping is the first line of defense. Schedule
enforcement tools increase control and time and labor reports seal the
deal.
Enforce Schedules to Prevent Payroll Surprises
Careful shift planning only works if employees follow the
schedule. If employees exceed authorized hours, it throws everything off
balance. Schedule enforcement is the answer.
This is how it works. Employees clock in with a hardware
clock, web portal or mobile app. The system tracks punches in real time and
creates digital timecards. When a manager builds a schedule, they set max hours
alerts for each employee and clock lockout for out-of-schedule punches. That
means an employee can’t clock in 20 minutes early before a shift or punch in
before the full duration of an unpaid break. (This helps with meals/breaks
compliance as well.)
With clock lockout, if an employee attempts to punch in
early, the clock won’t start tracking hours. The clocking portal will display a
message telling the employee to wait until their shift starts.
Once you’ve defined max hours, if an employee is nearing the
end of authorized hours, the system sends the manager an alert BEFORE the
employee moves into time-and-a-half. This gives the manager a chance to adjust
staffing to prevent expensive overtime. The manager can have the employee punch
out and then pull up the scheduling module to see which team members have fewer
hours for the pay period.
Use Metrics and Reporting to Make Decisions
Automated timekeeping systems generate reports which give
you detailed 360° time and labor insights.
With automated daily reports, leadership and managers can
make informed decisions and spot trends in the early stages. For example, you
can see:
·
Hours worked for all teams, shifts and locations
·
Which teams, managers, or individual employees accrue the
most overtime
·
Employees that exceed authorized hours
·
Requested and approved PTO to use for shift planning and
FMLA compliance
Reporting can help you know whether job bidding is based on
solid numbers and if there is adequate staffing to provide excellent customer
service.
Case Study: Steel Processor Saves Money With Custom Time and
Labor Reports
A 200-employee steel processing company based in Texas and
Indiana needed daily and real-time reports to track multiple metrics which
included:
·
Employees who worked over 8 hours in a day
·
Employees who worked 40+ hours each week for time-and-a-half
overtime calculations
·
Employees who clocked in/out at times which differed from
authorized schedule
When the company found a time and labor solution with custom
reports, they could see where the problems were and adjust staffing, policies
and job bidding to prevent unplanned overtime, schedule creep and employee
hours theft.
As a result, they reduced costs without layoffs or
production slowdowns.
Interested in automated time and labor to help you save
money? Call Teresa Kearney today at 610-310-7615 or reach out by email at
teresa@panaceapayroll.com!
To learn exactly how much you can save with automated time and labor, try our Time and Attendance ROI Calculator.
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