From http://www.strdtime.com Meet Kat Project manager And Standard Time® Powerhouse Ask Kat Define Project Management Triangle: Time, cost, and scope All competing for space In your project manager’s Crowded brain In Standard Time, that means Nice graphs And hard facts Illustrating the health of your projects Kat wants to know Ever seen a graph of Project triangles In Standard Time? stdtime.com
From https://www.strdtime.com You probably already know that one of the primary things Standard Time® is used for is to scan barcodes on the shop-floor in manufacturing to start and stop timer and collect time and materials.
Let’s go into this Scan Barcodes view and get a look at how it might work by actually scanning some barcode labels. But the first thing you might be asking is - where do I get the actual labels to scan? It turns out you can create those right in Microsoft Word®. What I’ve done here is typed in some text and then go up to the Font menu and chose the ID Automation font. Out they come on the printer and ready to scan in Standard Time.
Let’s go ahead and start by scanning a user name and then a job and then a task. A timer has now started so let’s deduct some inventory from stock. Now the person can go off, start the work they do and when they come back, they would scan the word Stop. It is now asking me for a quantity, which I’ll scan in, and I’ve just collected time and materials with just a few scans.
If the employee goes off on a break or lunch and comes back and wants to start the same task; they could then scan their user name and then scan Restart Last Job and the timer would restart. Very nice, very simple and easy to use on the shop-floor.
While we’re in this view I’d like to draw your attention to just a few more things. Let’s go ahead and start by this little icon in the upper left corner. I click it and up pops a little menu of things you can do. The first thing I wanted to draw your attention to was Barcode Defaults. It turns out that you can set up some defaults for a scanning station so that people would scan less information; makes it a little easier. If you have a certain scanning station or tablet that is dedicated to a certain employee or a job or a task or certain values; you could setup those defaults here and then that person would not need to scan those.
The second thing I’ll draw your attention to in this view is Barcode Required Scans. You may remember that I had to scan a quantity. Will turns out that is just a required scan that I set up. This is a way for you to extend or add to the number of things that Standard Time will ask for when scanning on the shop-floor. I simply set up one for quantity and it then asks me how many items I produced. Very simple way to collect additional information.
The third thing I’ll draw your attention to from this view is a little stand-alone program called BC. Turns out you can collect all this time and materials with a little stand-alone program that you can deploy to tables or laptops or small scanning stations on the shop-floor. Instead of the full Standard Time program. Employees would simply scan and that is all they can do within the BC program.
There you have it. Very simple way to collect time and materials and other information on the shop-floor for manufacturing with barcode labels.
From http://www.strdtime.com You have to track employee hours in a timesheet, right? Hey, everybody does. But what if there are stacks of projects to look through? You know which one you’re looking for, but still… you’ve got a huge list to tackle. You can’t even enter your time until you find it. Standard Time® has a solution, just for you! It’s called Timesheet Favorites. If you’re like most people, you have just one or two projects you’re working on right now. Those are your favorites. So why sort through all the rest?
Just click Favorites… choose the projects you want... and go to work!
• Timesheet clutter is gone • Scrolling is gone • You’re in and out, in no time Timesheet favorites! A new Standard Time feature just for you.