post icon

Free Time Tracking Software for Law Students

We’re excited to announce that we are now providing free licenses of Chrometa for law students!

law school

The idea spawned from a conversation that we were having with the fine folks who run Social Media Law Student. We were originally planning to offer a steep discount on Chrometa for students in their listening audience…and then I started thinking back to my days as a student (which were not too long ago).

I was always broke (some would argue I still am!) Why not just make it free. So there you go – if you’re in law school, here’s how you can get a free copy of Chrometa:

  1. Download the free trial of our time tracking software.
  2. Send us an email from your school email address (.edu)
  3. We’ll send you a complimentary license code back!

It yours to keep – we hope that it’s of use to you in law school, and of course we’d encourage you to use Chrometa when you land your first gig.  The partners will be in awe of how many billable hours you rack up :)

And we ALWAYS appreciate your referrals – please refer Chrometa to friends and family who you think will benefit from it using this form: http://www.chrometa.com/refer-us.php

They’ll thank you – and so will we!

Read full story »

3 Comments

Leave a comment
  1. Larry
    03. Feb, 2010 at 10:30 am #

    I am just now in the process of looking for a software product that will help me track and bill for my time as a consultant. The only product I know is Timeslips. I will check out Chrometa and would appreciate

    a) Any comments or inputs regarding Chrometa and
    b) Any other time tracking/billing programs you are aware alkong with your review, good and bad.

    THanks.

  2. Brett Owens
    03. Feb, 2010 at 12:11 pm #

    Larry, thanks for the comment – you bet, will ping you offline with some thoughts.

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. Should Software Companies Support Their Users for Free? | Time Tracking with Chrometa - 09. Feb, 2010

    [...] recently started giving free licenses to students – which in theory, would further complicate our support.  How can you support free users [...]