As the owner of a construction company, you should always view your workforce as an essential asset. Therefore, it is important to have data on the attendance of your workers: are they late or absent? Have they been absent due to illness or for personal reasons? How many workers does each outsourced crew have?
The absence of workers or poor accounting of attendance can not only increase your costs considerably but also delay the completion deadlines. When you take into account that being late in one stage has multiplier effects on the deadline of the others, or that not finishing work on time can mean large fines, these factors become critical.
Given these circumstances, there is no doubt that attendance and time tracking are crucial for effective employee management.
The construction industry is one of the most complex sectors to manage people. Among the challenges you face daily, we can name three situations that are more frequent and that are related to each other:
Of course, in large-scale works, they may have a digital entry control (such as a fingerprint reader). This is an ideal situation since it uniquely identifies each person, their entry and exit times. But this is not always the case.
This is where the need to know arises. How do you control the people who tell you they went to work, and the ones who went? Where do you keep the record? How do you solve the differences between site foremen and the general manager without it being a "he said and I said"?
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Now, to have an unequivocal view of the situation on the construction site, you need clear information, a single record, and an orderly system. To achieve this registration, you have multiple options. From the most traditional, how to make the employee sign a daily statement with the time of entry and exit, up to the most current, which can be to use an application with an iris reader or a fingerprint (as I mentioned before) to control the work time. At first, all are valid unless the labor authorities say otherwise. Whichever method you choose, you should ensure that it allows you to:
Doing so can also help you handle an employee's attendance issues efficiently. Moreover, the information you get from attendance tracking can go a long way toward eliminating inefficiencies and other productivity issues.
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In conclusion and considering the reasons above, there is no question about how essential it is to track your employees' attendance and time in the workplace. Having control of who went to work and the payments that were made will help you avoid paying more in salaries, insurance, accident risks, lawsuits, etc., and, in the end, plan better and be more efficient.