The Maverick timesheet lets employees log actual hours worked against project tasks — broken down by day across a Mon–Sun week. Row totals show hours per task; column totals show hours per day. Here are the seven steps to track time, filter the view, and compare actual hours to planned estimates.
1. Open the Maverick Home Page
Log in to Maverick and navigate to the Home page. The Home page is the central hub for daily work — it shows your active projects, recent activity, and quick-access icons for the tools you use most, including the timesheet. You do not need to open any specific project first; the timesheet is a cross-project view that aggregates all your assigned tasks in one place.
2. Click the Timesheet Icon
On the Home page, locate the Timesheet icon and click it. The timesheet opens to the current week by default. The header shows the week range — for example, "Week of May 11–17, 2026" — so you always know which week you are editing. Use the navigation arrows to move to the previous or next week when entering time for a week other than the current one.
3. Locate Your Project in the Timesheet List
Projects appear as bold group headers in the timesheet list. Each project you are assigned to appears here, listed in alphabetical or project-order sequence. Click the arrow beside a project name to expand it and reveal the tasks beneath it. If a project is already expanded, its task rows are visible immediately. The timesheet shows only projects where you have at least one task assignment — projects you are not on do not appear.
4. Find Your Task and Enter Hours for Each Day
Task rows appear indented beneath their parent project header. Locate the task you worked on and click the cell under the appropriate day column — Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat, or Sun. Type the number of hours you worked on that task that day. Decimal values are accepted: enter 3.5 for three and a half hours. Press Tab to move to the next day, or click any other cell to confirm your entry. Leave cells blank for days when no work was performed on that task — blank cells count as zero and do not affect totals.
5. Review Row and Column Totals
As you enter hours, two sets of totals update automatically. The row total at the right edge of each task row shows the total hours logged against that task for the week. The column totals — displayed at both the top and bottom of the timesheet — show the total hours logged across all tasks for each day of the week. The top and bottom positions mean the grand total is always visible without scrolling. Compare row totals to the planned estimate for each task to see whether actual effort is tracking on schedule.
6. Filter by User, Date Range, or Other Options
Use the filter controls at the top of the timesheet to change what you are looking at. The user filter switches the timesheet to show a different employee's hours — managers use this to review and approve individual timesheets. The date range filter navigates to a specific week or period — useful for reviewing a past pay period or comparing this week to last. Additional filters let you narrow by project, by task status, or by other criteria. When filters are active, column and row totals recalculate to reflect only the visible rows.
7. Use the Time Logs Page for a Grid View of All Entries
The Time Logs page, also accessible from the Home page, shows the same time data in a different format: a flat grid where each row is a single time entry with columns for date, project, task, hours, and notes. This view is better for auditing, editing individual entries, or exporting time data for payroll or billing. While the timesheet is optimized for entering and reviewing a week at a glance, Time Logs is optimized for working with time data record by record — searching, sorting, and filtering across all dates and all projects at once.