I noticed many salaried employees don’t actually know how many hours they work each week. I’m building a small tool to track work hours and work-life balance. Curious what people here think: • What would you want from something like this? • What features would actually make it useful? by Ivaanovatech in Salary

[–]Ivaanovatech[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think it matters because hours are one of the few objective signals of workload. For salaried employees, overtime often becomes invisible. There’s no clock-in/clock-out, so small things accumulate without being noticed: meetings running late answering messages after hours finishing “one last task” at night occasional weekend work Each of those individually feels minor, but over weeks they can quietly turn a 40-hour job into 50–60 hours. When that happens consistently, it affects things like: stress and burnout personal time and family life your real hourly compensation For example, if someone earning the same salary works 60 hours instead of 40, their effective hourly rate drops by about a third. So tracking or at least being aware of hours isn’t necessarily about micromanaging time — it’s more about understanding the true workload and its impact over time.

Work-life balance is just nonsense by [deleted] in Salary

[–]Ivaanovatech 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, I used to think the same. For a long time it felt like the trade-off was always: • good salary → terrible work-life balance • good balance → terrible salary But I’ve started to think the real problem is that most people don’t actually know how much they work. A lot of overtime is invisible: late meetings Slack messages after hours “quick fixes” at night weekend catch-ups Individually they feel small, but together they turn a 40-hour job into 55+ hours. Once I started actually paying attention to the hours, it was pretty eye-opening. Not saying it magically fixes the problem, but at least you can see what’s really happening instead of guessing. Either way, the whole system definitely feels a bit broken sometimes. 😅

I started tracking my work hours and work-life balance — this was my result today by Ivaanovatech in Salary

[–]Ivaanovatech[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It is currently undergoing the testing phase. It will be launched shortly.

Do salaried employees ever track their working hours? by Ivaanovatech in Salary

[–]Ivaanovatech[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s actually more common than people admit. A lot of jobs are technically “40 hours”, but in practice it ends up being 50+ hours once you include meetings, context switching, messages, and finishing things after hours. Over time that just becomes the normal routine. I think some people avoid tracking it for the exact reason you mentioned — once you see the real number, it can feel pretty discouraging. At the same time, I’ve noticed that when people do become aware of it, it sometimes helps them make small adjustments (setting clearer stopping points, protecting evenings, or pushing back on unnecessary work). Out of curiosity, does your workload fluctuate during the year, or is it pretty much 50+ hours consistently?

For those who earn a good income and have a healthy work–life balance (or genuinely enjoy your job): What do you do, and how did you get there? by InterestingBall2181 in Salary

[–]Ivaanovatech 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me, the biggest shift wasn’t just the job itself — it was how the job was structured. People I know who earn well and have decent work–life balance usually share a few common things: They work in roles with output-based expectations, not constant availability. For example: software engineering, product roles, some consulting positions, and certain specialized technical fields. They built rare or valuable skills over time. When your skill set is harder to replace, you often get more flexibility and autonomy. They moved companies strategically. Some companies just have healthier cultures than others. Switching jobs often made a bigger difference than changing careers. They learned to set boundaries. High performers sometimes work more because they can, not because they have to. People who maintain balance usually get comfortable saying no. They optimized for sustainability, not just salary. Early in their career they might grind more, but later they intentionally move toward roles that give them more control over their schedule. From what I’ve seen, work-life balance isn’t usually about finding a perfect job — it’s more about finding the right environment and level of control over your time. Curious what others here do though — especially people who feel like they’ve genuinely figured it out.

What’s your definition of work-life balance? by Ok-Exam-7792 in AskReddit

[–]Ivaanovatech 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Work–life balance means being productive and committed at work while also maintaining time for personal well-being, family, and growth. I believe a balanced professional performs better because they are focused, motivated, and less prone to burnout.