In software developer circles gold plating refers to putting effort into a feature or product when it's no longer adding value. Wikipedia has a short article on this.
Answer from Wayne Johnston on Stack ExchangeIn software developer circles gold plating refers to putting effort into a feature or product when it's no longer adding value. Wikipedia has a short article on this.
"Gilding the Lily" is close - trying to improve on something already beautiful. It doesn't really address the time wasting aspect.
"Don't make a mountain out of a molehill" is a phrase for overcomplication or exaggerating is key.
"Wearing both Belt and Suspenders" is one that fits the "being too cautious"
What is the difference between "spend a lot of time" and "allocate a lot of time"?
What's a more casual way to say "spend a lot of time"?
Is it correct to say "spend a lots of time"?
I can't think of a single word, except maybe hours. People talk about the hours they worked on something. "How many hours do you have in this week?"
I saw that one time-tracking site called time spent on a task "active time," and another called it "tasktime" (one word, but coined, I think). In an office setting, it could also be called "billable time" or "billable hours."
I did my stint in the kitchen yesterday.
a period of time spent at a particular activity