ScreenJournal

ScreenJournal vs Time Doctor

Updated on 6 July 2026

Time Doctor is time tracking and workforce analytics built around screenshots, optional screen video and manager dashboards, widely used in BPOs. ScreenJournal pursues the same goal, proof of real work, the opposite way: it reads the work, writes a per-person timeline and deletes the raw screen data instead of storing footage.

What is Time Doctor?

Time Doctor is time tracking and workforce analytics software with a large customer base in BPO and outsourcing. Its Screencasts feature captures screenshots at an admin-chosen frequency, typically every three to fifteen minutes, and on the Premium plan, or as a paid add-on to other plans, continuous video of the screen in three-minute clips. Screenshots can be blurred irreversibly for privacy; video recordings cannot be blurred. Around capture it tracks websites, apps, attendance and input activity rates, categorises activity with machine learning, and flags artificial input through its Unusual Activity Report. Companies deploy it in an interactive mode employees start themselves or a silent mode that runs in the background on company devices. It does not record keystroke content, webcam or audio.

What is ScreenJournal?

ScreenJournal is an AI work visibility tool that reads on-screen work as it happens, turns it into a detailed timeline of what each person actually did, and then deletes the raw screen data. Timelines accumulate into a searchable chronicle of everyone's work history, and from them ScreenJournal generates timesheets and reports automatically and drafts standup summaries on request, answering questions about any of it in plain English.

Capture is scoped to work apps and work-related activity; personal activity is skipped in real time. PII is removed during processing, and because raw screen data is deleted immediately during processing there is no footage archive to secure. Each person's day is written up as a work timeline, and past timelines accumulate into the searchable work chronicle.

How do Time Doctor and ScreenJournal compare?

The table below summarises the practical difference: Time Doctor stores captures of the screen for managers to review, while ScreenJournal stores a written account of the work and discards the screen data.

Time DoctorScreenJournal
What it capturesTracked hours, input activity rates (counts, not content), websites and apps, attendance and schedulesOn-screen work activity, scoped to work apps; personal activity skipped in real time
What it storesScreenshots at an admin-chosen frequency, plus continuous screen video in 3-minute clips on the Premium plan or as an add-on; screenshots can be blurred irreversibly, video cannotAn AI-written timeline of the work; raw screen data deleted immediately during processing; no footage kept
How you get answersDashboards, productivity ratings, executive summaries, Unusual Activity ReportThe timeline, one-click timesheets with per-line source badges, a weekly digest, Ask AI in plain English
Employee privacyInteractive mode is employee-started; silent mode runs in the background on company devices; screenshot deletion only if enabled, and it removes the tracked time tooPII removed during processing; employees see the same timeline managers do and can redact entries first; redaction erases the entry entirely
Searchable historyDashboards and stored screencasts to browse manuallyTimelines accumulate into a chronicle, searchable in plain English and permission-scoped by role
Cheating resistanceUnusual Activity Report flags artificial input patterns; input-based activity can still be simulatedSimulated input produces no real work, so it registers as nothing
Best forBPOs and outsourcing operations standardised on screenshot and video verificationProof of work per agent without storing an archive of agent screens

If Hubstaff is also on your shortlist, the same comparison is here: ScreenJournal vs Hubstaff.

What does screenshot verification cost at BPO scale?

At BPO scale, stored screenshots and video become a standing cost in three ways: manager hours spent reviewing them, an archive of agent screens to secure, and a morale tax on the agents being recorded. A screenshot captures whatever is on the screen at that moment, which on a support floor can include customer records, so the archive is also a breach surface holding other people's data. ScreenJournal removes the archive rather than the accountability. Each agent's work is written into a timeline as it happens, the raw screen data is deleted, and a manager who wants to know who is stuck or where the billable hours went can ask in plain English rather than open a gallery.

When should you pick Time Doctor?

Pick Time Doctor when clients or auditors require stored screenshots or screen video as the verification standard, because that requirement can only be met by a tool that keeps footage. Pick it when you need attendance and schedule enforcement across shifts alongside tracking. It is also the pragmatic choice when a screenshot-review workflow is already contractually embedded in how you operate and you are not ready to renegotiate it.

When should you pick ScreenJournal?

Pick ScreenJournal when you want per-agent proof of work without holding thousands of agent screenshots. Timesheets are prepared in one click from the work itself, each line tagged with the app it came from, which keeps billable hours accurate without timers or reconstruction. Managers get answers rather than dashboards to interpret: Ask AI sits on every page and answers from the derived record, not footage. And if agent trust and retention matter to your numbers, employees seeing the same timeline their manager sees, with the ability to redact entries first, is a different working relationship from being silently recorded.

Frequently asked questions

Does Time Doctor record your screen?

It can. The Screencasts feature captures screenshots at an admin-chosen frequency and, on the Premium plan or as a paid add-on to other plans, continuous video of the screen in three-minute clips. Screenshots can be blurred irreversibly; video recordings cannot. ScreenJournal keeps neither: raw screen data is deleted immediately during processing.

Does Time Doctor have a silent mode?

Yes. Companies can deploy an interactive app that employees start themselves, or a silent version that runs in the background on company devices. ScreenJournal takes the opposite position: employees see the same timeline the manager sees and can redact entries before anyone reviews them.

Can employees delete Time Doctor screenshots?

Only if the company enables deletion, and removing a screenshot also removes the tracked time associated with it. In ScreenJournal, redaction is an employee control by design: a redacted entry is erased entirely and never appears in anyone's search. Redaction is unavailable only for roles a company flags as a data-leak risk.

Which is better for BPOs and call centres?

Time Doctor is the established screenshot-and-video verification workflow, with attendance and scheduling built in. ScreenJournal delivers proof of work as a per-agent timeline with no stored footage, which matters at scale: hundreds of agents times weeks of screenshots is an archive to review, secure and explain.

The bottom line

ScreenJournal and screenshot time trackers are trying to answer the same question: did real work happen? Trackers answer it with stored screenshots and activity percentages a manager interprets. ScreenJournal answers it directly: it reads the work, writes the timeline, generates the timesheet and deletes the footage. If you are choosing between them, the real decision is whether you want evidence to review or answers to act on.

See the work itself, not screenshots of it

Timesheets, reports and answers from the work your team actually did. Available for Windows and macOS, with Linux and mobile support coming soon.