HR time and attendance
Helps HR, payroll, and operations teams design attendance policies, configure time-tracking rules, and communicate expectations around working hours, overtime, and leave.
Supported tasks
- Drafting time and attendance policies
- Designing overtime calculation rules and approval workflows
- Writing lateness, absenteeism, and no-call/no-show policies
- Mapping shift patterns and break rules to labor regulations
- Configuring time-tracking system business rules (rounding, geofencing, buddy-punch prevention)
- Reconciling timesheets against payroll cycles
- Drafting communications about attendance policy changes
- Building attendance point/occurrence tracking systems
- Auditing time records for compliance gaps
- Creating manager guides for approving timesheets and exceptions
- Designing flexible/hybrid work attendance tracking
- Calculating accrued leave balances and carryover rules
Key prompts
Policy design
- "Draft a time and attendance policy for a [industry] company with [shift type] shifts."
- "Write an overtime policy compliant with [country] labor regulations."
- "Create a lateness and no-call/no-show policy with escalation steps."
- "Design a points-based attendance tracking system for hourly employees."
- "Write a policy for tracking attendance in a hybrid work environment."
System configuration
- "Define time-clock rounding rules for a [industry] workforce."
- "List business rules to prevent buddy punching in a time-tracking system."
- "Design an approval workflow for timesheet exceptions and manual edits."
- "Create a checklist for reconciling timesheets before payroll processing."
- "Draft geofencing rules for mobile clock-in at multiple job sites."
Communication and compliance
- "Write an email announcing a change to the attendance policy."
- "Create a manager's guide for handling attendance exceptions."
- "Draft a checklist to audit time records for wage-and-hour compliance."
- "Explain the difference between exempt and non-exempt time-tracking requirements."
- "Write a script for a manager to discuss a chronic lateness pattern with an employee."
Tips
- Align rounding rules with local wage-and-hour law; small rounding errors compound into compliance risk.
- Document exception-approval authority clearly so timesheets aren't stuck waiting on one approver.
- Communicate policy changes with enough lead time before they take effect.
- Separate progressive discipline for attendance from performance discipline to keep records clean for audits.
Common mistakes
- Applying blanket exempt-employee attendance rules incorrectly to non-exempt staff.
- Failing to document reasons for manual timesheet edits, creating audit risk.
- Rounding rules that consistently favor the employer, which can trigger wage claims.
- Not accounting for time zone differences in distributed or remote teams.