You did the work. Prove every minute.
Clockwork logs your hours with a single keystroke and turns them into client-ready invoices before the conversation gets awkward.

The three ways freelancers leave money behind.
Reconstructing last week from calendar events and Slack threads.
It's 4:47pm Friday and the invoice is due. You're reverse-engineering your own week from a trail of calendar events, Slack threads, and the vague memory of that Tuesday rabbit hole. The number you land on is a guess. You know it. The client doesn't.
You did eleven hours of revisions. You charged for three.
The revision email said "just a few tweaks." Four rounds later, two full days are gone. But you never started a timer — you were in the work, not above it. So you invoice what feels defensible, not what actually happened.
"I don't think this took that long." — your client, probably.
The invoice lands and the reply is polite but pointed. They question the hours. You have no receipts — no timestamps, no session logs, nothing but your word against their assumption. You discount to end the discomfort. You resent it for a week.
Now watch it solve itself.
One keystroke starts the clock. Every session is stored. Every invoice is already written by the time you need it.
One keystroke. Every second logged.
Hit your shortcut key and Clockwork starts a timer against whatever project you name. Hit it again to pause. That's it. Every session is timestamped, labeled, and stored — so Friday afternoon is reading a report, not rebuilding a memory.

Every revision round has a receipt.
When the third round of "small tweaks" begins, Clockwork is already running. Each session logs its own start, pause, and end. The total surfaces automatically when you generate the invoice — with every session listed, timestamped, and ready to share.

Send a link, not an argument.
Every invoice includes a timestamped session breakdown — start time, end time, duration, project, and note. When a client questions the hours, you send the link. The conversation ends before it starts. No discount, no resentment.

A client-ready invoice. Generated in seconds.
Every session you tracked becomes a line item. Every line item has a timestamp. No spreadsheet. No formatting. Just send it.
Auto-generates invoice from your tracked sessions — no data entry
Shareable client link with full timestamp breakdown — dispute-proof
Export to PDF in one click, branded with your studio name
Set hourly rates per project — Clockwork calculates the total
Start tracking in under 60 seconds.
Enter your email and name your first project. You're already inside the product.
Freelancers who stopped guessing.
I used to lose roughly 6 hours of billable time every week. Not because I wasn't working — because I wasn't tracking. Clockwork fixed that in the first month. I invoiced $1,400 more in February than I did in January. Same workload.
A client disputed a 12-hour revision invoice. I sent them the Clockwork link. It showed every session — 9:14am start, 12:47pm pause, 2:03pm resume. They apologized and paid within the hour. That link has saved me three uncomfortable conversations.
We're a two-person dev shop. We used to sync timesheets in a shared spreadsheet that was always out of date. Now we both run Clockwork, projects are shared, and the invoice is ready before the sprint retrospective ends.
Used by freelancers at studios including