Time theft might sound like a minor operational nuisance, but it can quietly creep up on you and your team and undermine the trust, fairness, and engagement you work hard to build in your organization. Whether its employees padding hours, buddy punching for colleagues, or rounding time in their own favor, these behaviours tend to slip through weak processes and outdated practices which lead to major extra costs, as seen in the US where time theft costs employers at least $373 million a year[1].
Too often we see leaders view time theft as a worker problem, like if it’s only something to catch, discipline, and move on from but honestly, it’s more productive in the long run to treat it as a leadership challenge.
Gaps in clarity, inconsistent policies, and systems that make cheating easy all share a common thread: leadership oversight. When people see colleagues cutting corners without consequence, the real damage hits the company culture, morale, and retention, which we can all agree goes beyond lost minutes.
Where Time Theft Hides
The most common patterns are surprisingly everyday:
- A co-worker clocks in for someone running late
- Employees record their start time earlier than reality
- Breaks or end-of-shift punch-outs go unchecked
- Remote or mobile staff check in without being truly present
These gaps, left unaddressed, can leave frontline managers and HR playing what we like to call “time cop” rather than focusing on people and performance.
Why Trust Breaks Down
Trust takes years to build, but only a couple wrong moves and it comes tumbling down. When honest employees see rules ignored, we systematically see frustration grow and over time, that frustration turns into disengagement, absenteeism, or turnover. It’s worth remembering that a culture of fairness supports not only the bottom line, but also the psychological safety people need to do their best work.
Leadership’s Role in Fixing It
Time theft will always exist at the edges of a system, but how you design, communicate, and reinforce expectations makes the biggest difference. That means:
- Building clear policies that leave no ambiguity
- Communicating them consistently so people know what’s expected
- Reviewing systems and processes to identify easy-to-exploit gaps
- Empowering managers to apply policies fairly and consistently
- Encouraging employees to speak up when they see misuse
Of course, technology and industry innovation support these efforts but it can’t and will never replace leadership. Believe us when we say that even the best tools won’t matter if your policies are inconsistent or left unenforced. Leaders are here to stay and must without doubt set the tone for fairness and accountability.
Reframing the Conversation
Rather than asking “how do I catch people?”, leaders should ask “how do I make fairness easy and corner-cutting hard?”. When people see transparent, consistent rules backed by clear and transparent processes, they’re far less likely to push boundaries. And if (let’s be real, more like when) they do, managers can address it confidently, knowing the expectations are rock solid.
What to Do Next
If you sense time theft might be affecting your organization, take a moment to reflect:
- Are our policies well-defined and fair?
- Do our managers feel confident applying them?
- Is our time capture process open to misuse?
- Do employees trust that the system treats everyone the same?
You don’t need a surveillance culture but a company-wide culture that rewards honesty, applies rules consistently, and makes it easy to do the right thing. As far as we’re concerned, that’s a great leadership mindset and it’s the best defense against time theft in any organization.
[1] https://quickbooks.intuit.com/time-tracking/resources/time-attendance-stats/
