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Projector's time approval interface is designed to make time approvals as fast as possible. This page walks you through the process of moving time cards from submitted to approved. Before we get into the details of actually approving time cards, you should first analyze how you like to approve time and set up a search query to match. For example, do you like to approve time person by person? Perhaps project by project? Perhaps you don't care about groupings at all and just want to approve all time cards for a week at once. Once you've decided how you like to approve time, set up a search and save it to your favorites. Now whenever you to get your approvals done, you can do it as fast as possible.

When doing your approvals you can also view how a set of approvals will affect your project budgets. Want to make sure that your

Trying to configure your time approval or figure out who your time approvers are? See Configure Time Approval.


Tip
titleAdditional Resources

Projector Fundamentals: Time and Cost Management webinar is a great resource to learn about Time Approval Workflows and Permissions in Projector.

Permissions and Settings

To approve time, you must be a time approver. Time approvers are determined by the project the time was submitted against. To learn who time approvers are, see our Configure Time Approval how-to.

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Budget TypeDescriptionExample
Contract TermsThe only contract type that provides alerts are Not to Exceed ones.Engagement has a cap of $10k. Approving these time cards will result in $10,001 of billable time. An alert is thrown.

Engagement Budget

Engagement budgets look at all time cards entered against all project under it. Budget alerts are thrown when you consume a certain percentage of your budget. Alerts are only shown if the Send E-mail Alert checkbox is ticked for a threshold. Of the two threshold types, Projector uses the Actuals to Date vs. Budget at Completion method.Engagement has a budget of 100 hours. Your installation is configured to alert you when 80% of those hours are consumed. Approving these time cards will result in 81 hours. An alert is thrown.


Project Budget for active baseline

Project budgets look at all time cards entered against the project for these time cards. Budget alerts are thrown when you consume a certain percentage of your budget. Only the active baseline is checked. Alerts are only shown if the Send E-mail Alert checkbox is ticked for a threshold. Of the two threshold types, Projector uses the Actuals to Date vs. Budget at Completion method.Project has a budget of 100 hours. Your installation is configured to alert you when 80% of those hours are consumed. Approving these time cards will result in 81 hours. An alert is thrown.
Sub-Project Budget for active baseline

Project budgets can be broken down into more granular buckets. For example, create a budget for each resource working on this project. Then time-phase that budget for each month. Alerts are limited to the smallest bucket defined. In our example, you only receive a budget alert when a time bucket is exceeded. Not when the resource's bucket for all time periods is exceeded.

Budget alerts are thrown when you completely consume the budget. Only the active baseline is checked.

Jim is budgeted 20 hours for last week. Approving these time cards will result in 21 hours. An alert is thrown.
Task BudgetTask budgets are driven by hours only. An alert is thrown when the task budgeted hours are completely consumed.Jim is budgeted 20 hours to complete a task. Approving these time cards will result in 21 hours. An alert is thrown.

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