Time tracking for Asana, without leaving Asana's hierarchy
Connect your Asana account to Ayron, browse your assigned tasks inside the timer, and roll the tracked hours back into Ayron's invoices and AI reports.
Posts on how we're building Ayron, the time-tracking market, and what we're learning shipping a native Apple-first product.
Connect your Asana account to Ayron, browse your assigned tasks inside the timer, and roll the tracked hours back into Ayron's invoices and AI reports.
Connect Linear to Ayron, time your assigned issues straight from the timer, and turn engineering hours into invoiceable line items and AI status reports.
Ayron ingests your estimate as a PDF, text, or CSV, breaks it into stage budgets, and shows you in real time how the tracked hours compare. No spreadsheet required.
A practical time-tracking workflow for freelance designers on Mac — what to capture, how to price design work, and how to turn the week into an invoice.
Bonsai is a whole back-office suite. Here's when a lighter, Apple-native track-to-bill app fits better — and which ones to consider.
Clockify wins on raw price. For Apple-first freelancers, the bigger question is whether cheap stays cheap once you need billing, AI, and a native Mac app.
FreshBooks is accounting-first with time tracking attached. If the timer is the part you actually live in, here are the alternatives that put it first.
A working list of Harvest alternatives for Mac-first freelancers and small studios — with notes on pricing, invoicing, AI, and who each one actually fits.
QuickBooks Time is built for workforce management with QuickBooks Online behind it. For Apple-first studios billing knowledge work, a lighter, focused tool fits better.
Timemator is a beloved one-time-purchase Mac tracker — but solo work eventually grows into billing, teams, and reports. Here's what to look at when it does.
Timing is the benchmark for passive Mac tracking. Here's what to use when you also need to invoice — without leaving the Apple ecosystem.
Toggl Track leads on profitability depth — but Apple-first teams often pay for surfaces they don't use. Here are the alternatives worth a serious look.
Tyme covers the full Apple device lineup at $44.99/year — but invoicing lives in a separate app. Here's where a one-app track-to-bill story fits better.
A freelancer's actual week, mapped end-to-end — how time becomes margin becomes invoice becomes deposit, without leaving a single Apple-native app.
A small studio's weekly billing loop, written as a playbook — what to track, what to automate, what to skip, and how a single Apple-native app changes the rhythm.