How to track working time without Excel or paper
Why Excel and paper fall short for clock-ins, and how to move to digital time tracking with fewer errors.
Many small businesses started recording working time with whatever they already had: an Excel sheet, a printed template or a notebook in the workplace. That can seem enough at first, but problems appear when there are shifts, absences, several people clocking in at once or an inspection requesting a specific period.
Tracking working time without Excel or paper is not about using a more complex tool for its own sake. It is about reducing missed records, avoiding manual reconstruction and keeping information ready when it is needed.
If you are considering the change, you can also read our guide to mandatory digital time tracking in Spain in 2026.
Why Excel and paper fall short
Paper fails because someone has to fill it in at the right moment and keep it safe. Excel adds some structure, but it is still easy to edit data without context, lose versions or work with different files by location.
The problem grows with split shifts, breaks, last-minute changes and part-time employees. If the manager reviews everything at month end, many incidents are no longer easy to remember accurately.
What a digital system should solve
A simple digital system should record starts, finishes and breaks; calculate effective hours; detect open clock-ins; allow corrections with history; and export reports by dates, employees and workplaces.
The goal is not to turn time tracking into a heavy process. The goal is for the data to be organised from the start and for each correction to be explainable later.
Quick comparison
| Need | Excel or paper | Digital system |
|---|---|---|
| Clock in at the right moment | Depends on memory | Team clocks in from app, QR, PIN or kiosk |
| Split shifts | Requires manual sums | Allows several clock-ins in the day |
| Incidents | Written elsewhere or lost | Marked for review |
| Corrections | Hard to trace | Can keep history and approval |
| Reports | Files need sorting | Exported by period, employee or workplace |
| Several locations | Information is scattered | Filtered by location |
The move does not have to be big
For a small business, digitising can start with something basic: add the team, decide whether they clock in from mobile or a shared tablet, and review incidents every few days.
The key is to avoid duplicate work. If the team clocks in through an app but someone copies everything back into Excel, the problem has not been solved. The system should become the main record.
What to check before choosing a tool
Check that it can export data, separate workplaces, record breaks and split shifts, and manage corrections. It also helps if employees can clock in in a few steps, because a slow process creates more forgotten records.
For frontline teams, tablet kiosk mode may be more practical than asking every employee to use a personal phone. For managers or people who move around, the mobile app can add flexibility.
How Woblip fits
Woblip centralises clock-ins by app, PIN, QR or kiosk mode, effective-hour calculation, incident detection, reviewable corrections and reports exportable to CSV or Excel. It also connects time tracking with rotas and absences, so month-end review does not depend on loose spreadsheets.
FAQ
Is it mandatory to stop using Excel?
The law does not impose one specific tool, but the system must be reliable, preserved and accessible. For teams with shifts, digital records usually reduce errors.
What if someone does not want to use their mobile phone?
You can use a shared tablet in the workplace, as long as each person identifies themselves individually.
Can I export records for my accountant?
Yes, a suitable tool should allow exports by dates, employees and workplaces.
What happens with corrections?
They should be recorded with history, showing what changed and who approved it.
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