Tasks
Use Progress when you need to check whether the day is on track
Progress is the daily reality check. It shows what was planned, what received time, what got completed, and what still needs attention.
Problem / use case
If you need to check whether the day is on track, Progress becomes fragile when the work behind open Progress from the left menu after or during the workday. and Scan recorded time and completed items before deciding what to do next. is separated from Daily Plan, Reports, and Task detail.
What should be done conceptually
Progress works best when the tasks decision, next action, and progress evidence stay close enough for check whether the day is on track to remain visible.
TimeLens solution
TimeLens solves that by making Progress part of the same workspace as Daily Plan, Reports, and Task detail, so the feature helps the work move instead of becoming another isolated page.
Actual app screen
The public guide links to the real TimeLens route instead of showing a recreated mockup. Open the linked TimeLens screen to see the same route in action.
Actual product snapshots


How to use it in TimeLens
Open Progress from the left menu after or during the workday.; Scan recorded time and completed items before deciding what to do next.; Use task rows to jump back into recording, moving, or reviewing the work.; Use reports for longer-range patterns once the day has enough recorded context.
What it helps with
Check whether the day is on track; See work that slipped; Review time records without opening every task
Where this feature connects
Daily Plan; Reports; Task detail; Import; GitLab
Open this in TimeLens
Open the matching TimeLens menu item after signing in, or create an account to start from the same workspace.
Related feature pages
Continue with the most relevant TimeLens guide pages for this workflow.
Daily Plan · Reports analytics · Record time · Import your history