Help
Installing Clockk in your environment
Remember: you can install the Clockk trackers in as many browsers, browser profiles, and computers as you wish!
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macOS desktop
Installing the Clockk macOS Desktop app, including granting the necessary permissions. 🎥 2m 16s 🔇.
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Windows desktop
Installing the Clockk Windows Desktop app. 🎥 56s 🔇.
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Chrome extension
The Clockk Chrome extension is used in any Chromium-based browser including Microsoft Edge, Brave, Arc, Sidekick and many more. 🎥 31s 🔇.
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Safari Extension
Installing, configuring and granting permissions to the Clockk Safari extension. 🎥 57s 🔇.
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Firefox extension
Installing, configuring and granting permissions to the Clockk Firefox extension.
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Adding your Calendar to Clockk
Not using Google or Microsoft calendars? Use these steps to add your calendar .ics feed to Clockk.
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Using Clockk betas
Opt in to the Clockk beta stream so you can be the first to enjoy Clockk’s latest & greatest features.
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Uninstalling Clockk’s trackers
You’ve decided not to use Clockk anymore. Follow these steps to remove all traces of the Clockk Desktop app from macOS and Windows. 🎥 1m 03s + 1m 28s 🔇.
Using Clockk
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Adding and adjusting time manually
You don’t need to turn on tracking to use Clockk like a pro! You can enter and adjust time manually by creating, deleting, and adjusting blocks.
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Using the supplemental activity feature
Clockk’s supplemental activity feature shows you EVERYTHING you did, not just the activity Clockk promoted to your Activity list.
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Setting up Single Sign-On (SSO) with Microsoft Entra ID
Step-by-step instructions to configure Microsoft Entra ID (Azure AD) for logging into Clockk using single sign-on (SSO), including app registration, client secret generation, and authentication settings.
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Setting up Single Sign-On (SSO) with Google (OIDC)
Step-by-step instructions to configure Google OIDC for logging into Clockk using single sign-on (SSO), including app registration, client secret generation, and authentication settings.
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Assigning your work
Learn how to review your daily tracked activity in Clockk, assign work items to the right projects, delete or ignore anything you don’t need, and understand how assigned time becomes part of your timesheet.
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Creating, editing, merging, archiving and deleting clients and projects
All the client and project management activities you’ll need to do in Clockk, with explanations how and when to use them.
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Locking in time on archived projects
Why Clockk does not let you lock in time on an archived project, and what to do about it.
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Set up your company as a client
You can (and should) add your own company as an “internal” client in Clockk, so you can track overhead time more efficiently.
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Locking in time
When you're ready to record your timesheets, lock them in. After that, they won't get changed by any new assignments.
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Attribution Preferences
See how Clockk’s automated time tracker handles overlapping projects. Choose single or multi-attribution to bill fairly, prevent double billing, and keep time tracking accurate.
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Adding descriptions to your timesheet
Learn how and why to add descriptions to your Clockk timesheet to remember your work, explain your time, and keep your records clear. --- # 📝 Adding Descriptions to Your Timesheet
Go deeper with Clockk
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How Clockk tracks time Pt. 1: “Stacking” time
Clockk doesn’t have a timer. It “stacks” time. Learn how time “stacking” works, and how Clockk handles idle/away-from-keyboard time. 🎥 1m 45s 🔈.
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How Clockk tracks time Pt. 2: Multi-attribution
It looks like Clockk is double-billing, but it’s actually doing multi-attribution. This article explains multi-attribution, and what to do about it, and the ethical implications. 🎥 2m 02s 🔈.
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Supported apps in Clockk
What are supported vs. unsupported apps in Clockk, and why do they matter?
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Time zones and the shifting midnight
As you travel around the world with an AI-powered time tracker, your midnight shifts. What happens to your timesheet? TL;DR: it’s super complicated.