A new book by entrepreneur and SaaS founder Vahagn Sargsyan examines why traditional approaches to time management often fail in modern, product-driven organizations, and what builders can do instead.
Titled Builder’s Time, the book reframes time not as a personal discipline problem but as a system that shapes how individuals, teams, and products actually move forward. Rather than offering productivity hacks or calendar techniques, Builder’s Time focuses on understanding how time flows through real work environments and how that flow can be intentionally designed.
Sargsyan draws on more than a decade of experience leading engineering teams, scaling a 150+ person software agency, and building SaaS products and mobile games with over 10 million downloads. Across those environments, he observed a recurring pattern: teams often feel busy while producing far less meaningful progress than expected.
According to the book, this disconnect stems from how humans perceive time at work. Meetings, context switching, unclear decisions, and invisible transitions consume far more capacity than most teams realize. As a result, only a fraction of the workday is spent on deep, value-creating work, even in high-performing organizations.
Time as a System, Not a Schedule
At the core of Builder’s Time is the idea that time cannot be managed effectively through to-do lists or personal discipline alone. Instead, time is shaped by systems like how teams communicate, how ownership is defined, how decisions are made, and how work is structured across products.
The book introduces three interconnected dimensions through which time should be understood:
- Personal Time, which covers focus, energy, and cognitive load
- Team Time, which includes meetings, coordination, communication patterns, and ownership gaps
- Product Time, which examines how development, delays, rework, and misalignment compound over time
By analyzing time across these layers, Builder’s Time argues that productivity challenges are often structural rather than individual. When these systems are poorly designed, no amount of personal effort can compensate. When they are aligned, deep work becomes the default rather than the exception.
Addressing the Reality of Modern Work
The book also reflects on how modern work environments like remote teams, hybrid schedules, asynchronous communication, and constant interruptions have increased the complexity of how time is experienced. Builder’s Time explores how intentional time design can help organizations create conditions where progress happens consistently, without relying on burnout or heroic effort.
Rather than prescribing a one-size-fits-all methodology, the book provides a framework for observing where time is lost, understanding why it happens, and redesigning systems so that meaningful work has space to happen.
Who the Book Is For
Builder’s Time is written for founders, entrepreneurs, product and engineering leaders, and creators who want a clearer understanding of how time influences real progress. It is particularly relevant for teams struggling with meeting overload, fragmented workdays, and the feeling of being busy without moving forward.
The book is authored by Vahagn Sargsyan, founder and CEO of WebWork Time Tracker, a platform focused on understanding how time is actually used across teams and organizations.
More information about Builder’s Time is available at: https://www.webwork-tracker.com/builders-time