Actual vs Planned Time Tracking (Sunsama)
Sunsama's feature that tracks how long tasks actually take versus initial time estimates, helping users improve planning accuracy over time by learning from the gap between expectations and reality.
Last updated: 2026-03-19 06:06
The Planning Problem
Most people consistently underestimate how long tasks will take, leading to:
- Overscheduled days
- Frequent missed deadlines
- Stress from unrealistic expectations
- Loss of credibility in time estimates
How It Works
Planning Phase
- User estimates task duration when scheduling
- Task is time-blocked on calendar
- Estimate recorded in system
Execution Phase
- User starts task timer
- Time automatically tracks while working
- User can pause/resume as needed
- Timer stops when task completed
Analysis Phase
- System compares planned vs. actual time
- Variance calculated and displayed
- Patterns identified across tasks
- Insights generated for improvement
Key Insights Provided
Task-Type Patterns
- "Design tasks typically take 30% longer than estimated"
- "Email processing is usually accurate"
- "Client calls consistently run over by 15 minutes"
Personal Tendencies
- Overall optimism/pessimism in estimates
- Time of day estimation accuracy
- Impact of interruptions on duration
Improvement Over Time
- Track estimation accuracy week by week
- See learning curve
- Measure planning skill development
Practical Benefits
Better Planning
- Apply learned buffers to similar future tasks
- More realistic daily capacity assessment
- Fewer overcommitted days
Improved Communication
- Give stakeholders accurate deadlines
- Set realistic client expectations
- Build trust through reliability
Reduced Stress
- Plans that actually work
- Fewer end-of-day disappointments
- Sustainable productivity pace
Related Items
Earned Value Management (EVM) Time Tracking
A project management methodology that integrates time tracking with budget and schedule data to measure project performance by comparing planned value, earned value, and actual costs, providing early warning indicators of schedule or cost overruns through metrics like Schedule Performance Index (SPI) and Cost Performance Index (CPI).
Fully Loaded Labor Rates
Comprehensive hourly cost rates that include not just base salary but also benefits, payroll taxes, overhead allocation, and other employment costs, essential for accurate project profitability analysis and ensuring billing rates cover true labor expenses.
Labor Burden Rate
The multiplier or percentage added to base wages to account for benefits, taxes, insurance, and overhead costs when calculating true employment expenses, typically ranging from 1.25x to 2.0x base salary, essential for accurate project costing, profitability analysis, and ensuring billing rates cover full labor costs.
Project Budget Burn Rate
A financial velocity metric calculated by dividing cumulative labor costs (from tracked time) by elapsed project duration, indicating how quickly a project is consuming its budget and enabling forecasting of budget exhaustion date, critical for early intervention when burn rate exceeds planned spending pace.