Disclaimer: I realize this is a subjective question, but I'm interested in hearing people's opinions!
I work for a medium sized web design/development shop (40 employees). We bill our clients at an hourly rate and have time tracking software that allows us to time how long we spend on a work item. That time is saved and invoiced, so there is a 1:1 correlation between tracked time and billed time.
This presents a few issues. One, if a project is misquoted (and the client can't afford or won't agree to pay more), the employee often has to work off the clock, since all tracked time is billable. We can make exceptions, by opening work tickets that will be billed at $0/hr, but this can be a tedious process and it's sometimes difficult to get that time approved since it's essentially overhead at that point. Each employee has a target, or minimum, amount of time they must track/bill each week. As un-tracked time increases, so does the amount of time an employee must spend in the office to hit their target. This is counterproductive to the type of environment we're trying create. We want to encourage collaboration and avoid burn out. However at the same time, we want to remain profitable, so we can't absorb too many overages as a company either.
What do you all suggest? Any comments / observations are appreciated; I realize this type of question is going to get some open ended responses.
Main points that we're trying to hit:
- How should we be billing clients (hourly at flat rate, hourly at adjustable rates, other)?
- Should there be a 1:1 correlation between trackable time and billable time?
- How can we maintain a culture of colaboration while also maintaining reasonaly high billable/trackable targets?
- Subpoint to the above: is 38 hours a week too high of a trackable and/or billable target?
- How to make this process easily maintainable / not a huge burden on the employees (software or process recommendations welcome)?
The main problem is that as our services and the scope of our projects expand, it's becomming too difficult to maintain our current paradigm. We don't have a great solution for how to handle going over budget on an item, getting help from a team (or non-team) member, brainstorming with others, handling unforseens, etc.
I'll keep an eye on both the comments as well as the responses; if there's anything I can elaborate on, please ask in a comment and I'll try to address it.
Thanks all!