Government & Defence Supply Chain Management

Supply chain and workforce solutions for government and defence.

Trace helps Defence and Government agencies optimise supply chains, workforce operations, and service delivery. With proven experience across Federal and State Government and as members of multiple government panels, we deliver practical, resilient solutions that improve outcomes in complex, high-stakes environments.

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Supporting Australia's most complex operations with practical, outcome-driven consulting.

The Australian Defence Force (ADF) manages one of the country’s largest and most complex supply chains with billions invested annually in procurement, sustainment, and logistics. The performance of these systems is critical to operational readiness and national security.

At Trace Consultants, we bring deep expertise in defence supply chain strategy, government procurement, and public sector service delivery.

Government & Defence Consultants

Meet our government and defence experts:

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Mathew Tolley

Trace Partner
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Mathew has had previous roles in the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, including as Director in the Office of Supply Chain Resilience. Over 12 years of experience advising public and private sector organisations.

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Emma Woodberry

Senior Manager
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Emma is a former Logistics Officer in RAAF, with over 10 years of experience in supply chain specialist consulting across diverse public sector organisations.

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Emma Hope

Senior Manager
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Emma has had previous logistics roles at Department of Defence and over 5 years experience in supply chain specialist consulting for a broad range or public and private sector clients.

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David Carroll

Manager
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David Carroll is a Management Consultant with over eight years of experience supporting Federal Government clients.

Core service offerings

Strategic, operational, and technical support for government & defence:

From high-level strategy to hands-on implementation, Trace delivers targeted support across the full spectrum of supply chain, procurement, workforce, and system challenges.

Workforce Strategy & Service Chain Optimisation

We help government agencies and defence departments plan, roster, and deploy workforces that are efficient, resilient, and ready. Our work spans the full end-to-end service chain, from strategic workforce planning through to daily scheduling.

Key Services:

  • Workforce Strategy & Organisation Design
  • Procurement Strategy for Services
  • Skills Mix Analysis & Forecasting
  • Rostering Strategy & Scheduling Optimisation
  • Cost Efficiency Reviews
  • KPI Dashboards & Reporting
  • Workforce Process Improvement

Defence & Government Supply Chain Consulting

Our consultants bring real-world supply chain experience from base logistics to multi-tier procurement, combined with deep understanding of public sector governance and risk frameworks. We design and implement defence supply chain strategies that are future-ready and built for complexity.

Key Services:

  • Defence Supply Chain Strategy
  • Supply Chain Operating Model Design
  • Integrated Product Support (IPS)
  • Supply Chain Planning & Forecasting
  • Preparedness Modelling & Resilience Diagnostics
  • Process Improvement & Cost Reviews
  • Governance Frameworks & Reporting

System Selection & Implementation

We guide agencies through the full lifecycle of supply chain and workforce technology transformation. From requirements gathering to post-go-live support, we ensure tech investments are fit-for-purpose, people-friendly, and properly embedded.

Key Services:

  • Requirements Definition & Functional Scoping
  • Technology and Software Selection
  • Implementation Project Support
  • End-User Support & Adoption

Download our Capability Overview:

A concise, shareable overview of our approach to supply chain risk and resilience across government and commercial environments.

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Download the Capability Overview (PDF)
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How to engage us

Federal & State Government panels.

Trace is a listed provider on multiple Federal and State Government panels, making it simple for agencies to engage our services through established procurement pathways. Engage our services through:

Australian National Audit Office (ANAO)
Provision of Professional and Associated Services SON3921486

System Assurance Audits, Financial Statement Audits, Performance Audits, Labour Hire Contractor Recruitment services, and other additional services.

Australian Electoral Commission (AEC)
Provision of Transport, Logistics, and Related Services SON4025476

The provision of freight transport, logistics, and associated services, including the movement of electoral materials, furniture relocation, short-term storage, and technical advice.

Department of Finance – PD
Management Advisory Services (MAS Panel) SON3751667

Benchmarking, competition and market analysis, regulatory and policy analysis, business case development, cost-benefit analysis, supply and demand forecasting and more.

NSW Government
Performance and Management Services

Government and Business Strategy, Business Processes, Financial Services, Audit, Quality Assurance and Risk, Procurement and Supply Chain Services.

Digital Transformation Agency
Performance and Management Services

Strategy, Policy and Governance services, Business, Systems and Process analysis services, Solutions Implementation services

Our Experience

Proven track record with Federal and State Government clients:

Insights and resources

Latest insights on government & defence topics.

Strategy & Design

Local Government Service Reviews: A Conversation with Srinath Susarla and Shanaka Jayasinghe on Assets, Procurement and Sustainable Council Operations

Shanaka Jayasinghe
Shanaka Jayasinghe
January 2026
Independent local government specialist Srinath Susarla joins Trace Consultants’ Shanaka Jayasinghe to discuss why service reviews are becoming critical for Australian councils, and how asset management, preventative maintenance, procurement and workforce optimisation can unlock sustainable outcomes.

Local Government and Council Service Reviews

A practical, on-the-ground conversation with Srinath Susarla and Shanaka Jayasinghe

If you work in local government, you’ll recognise the moment: a budget workshop where everyone is trying to be reasonable, but the numbers just don’t add up. Costs are climbing. The asset base is ageing. Community expectations keep moving in one direction (up). And the organisation’s capacity to absorb risk, disruptions, and “surprises” keeps moving in the other direction (down).

In that environment, service reviews stop being a nice-to-have. They become one of the few structured ways councils can make confident decisions—decisions that are defensible to councillors, executive teams, auditors and, most importantly, the community.

To unpack what a good local government service review looks like in practice—and where councils tend to get real traction—we’ve written this as a conversation between two people who spend a lot of time in the detail:

  • Srinath Susarla, an independent consultant with extensive experience across Australian local government service delivery and operational reform.
  • Shanaka Jayasinghe, Partner at Trace Consultants, working with councils on asset management, preventative maintenance, procurement support, workforce optimisation and fleet performance.

This isn’t a glossy brochure. It’s a deep dive into what councils are actually wrestling with, where service reviews most often pay off, and how to make improvement stick.

Why council service reviews are becoming unavoidable

Shanaka: The past few years have changed the baseline. Councils aren’t just dealing with “inflation this year” or “a difficult recruitment market right now.” A lot of the pressures feel structural—construction markets, contractor availability, compliance expectations, insurance, fuel, technology costs, climate-related events. Even when one pressure eases, another takes its place.

Srinath: I’d add that the “cost of doing business” has risen in ways that aren’t always visible in a single line item. A small change in regulatory compliance can mean new inspection regimes, more documentation, more contractor requirements. A small change in risk appetite can mean more planned work, more audits, more controls. Multiply that across multiple services and the operating model gets heavier.

Shanaka: And community expectations haven’t softened. If anything, visibility through social media means service issues escalate faster. Waste missed? Photos online the same day. Playground defect? People expect immediate action. Potholes? Community expects prioritisation and transparency.

Service reviews create a practical response to that reality. Not as a “cut costs” exercise, but as a way to clarify:

  • What services are we delivering today?
  • What level of service are we committed to?
  • What does it cost (end-to-end) to deliver it?
  • Where are the operational risks and failure points?
  • What changes would genuinely improve outcomes and sustainability?

What is a service review in local government?

A council service review is a structured examination of how a service is designed and delivered, with the aim of improving performance, cost effectiveness, risk management and community outcomes.

A good service review typically looks across four lenses:

  1. Service and demand
    • What is the service scope?
    • What service levels are expected (and by whom)?
    • What drives demand (seasonality, growth, regulatory change, community behaviour)?
  2. Operating model and workforce
    • Who delivers the work (internal, contractor, hybrid)?
    • How is work scheduled, dispatched, supervised and assured?
    • Where are bottlenecks, duplication, or skill gaps?
  3. Assets, maintenance and enabling systems
    • What assets underpin delivery (fleet, plant, facilities, equipment, infrastructure)?
    • How do we manage condition, risk and renewals?
    • Are systems (CMMS, GIS, finance) helping or hindering?
  4. Procurement, contracts and supplier performance
    • What are we buying and from whom?
    • Are scopes clear, measurable and aligned to outcomes?
    • Do contracts incentivise the right behaviour, and do we manage them properly?

Srinath: The key word is “structured”. Councils often feel where the problems are. Service reviews turn that intuition into evidence and options.

Shanaka: And ideally, they give councils a path forward that isn’t purely cost-based. Sometimes the right move is standardisation. Sometimes it’s better maintenance planning. Sometimes it’s a new contract model. Sometimes it’s workforce redesign. Often it’s a combination.

The service review trap: treating it as a report, not a decision tool

Service reviews fail when they become a document rather than a decision tool.

Srinath: I’ve seen reviews that produce beautiful diagrams but never change the day-to-day reality. That usually happens when the review is divorced from implementation—no owners, no sequencing, no governance, and no attention to the practical constraints councils operate under.

Shanaka: Another trap is starting with solutions. “We need to outsource this” or “we need to bring this in-house” before the service is properly understood. The review should build a baseline first, then explore options.

A practical service review should end with:

  • A clear baseline (cost, service levels, demand, performance, risks)
  • A small set of implementable options (not a menu of 40 ideas)
  • Impacts: cost, service, risk, workforce, procurement and governance
  • A staged roadmap (quick wins + structural changes)
  • Clear owners, timeframes and measures

A practical playbook: how councils can run service reviews that actually stick

There’s no single template that fits every council, but there is a sequence that tends to work.

1) Define the service properly (scope and service levels)

Before analysing cost, define what “the service” actually includes.

For example, “cleaning” might include:

  • routine cleaning,
  • periodic deep cleans,
  • consumables,
  • ad-hoc event cleaning,
  • after-hours call outs,
  • waste removal,
  • and complaints management.

If you don’t define scope, you can’t control it.

2) Build an end-to-end cost picture (not just the contract value)

Total cost of service isn’t only supplier invoices. It also includes:

  • internal supervision and contract management,
  • customer requests and complaints handling,
  • work order administration,
  • safety and compliance activity,
  • fleet and plant costs,
  • and overheads embedded in delivery.

3) Map demand and workload drivers

Demand is not static. Councils need to understand:

  • seasonal spikes (events, storms, summer parks usage),
  • growth areas,
  • changes in community behaviour,
  • and legislative/regulatory obligations.

4) Understand performance and constraints

What is “good” for this service?

  • response times,
  • defect reduction,
  • customer satisfaction,
  • compliance outcomes,
  • safety performance,
  • cost predictability.

And what are the constraints?

  • workforce availability,
  • contract lock-in,
  • technology limitations,
  • physical geography,
  • political sensitivity.

5) Identify options and trade-offs

Options should be realistic and comparable, for example:

  • standardise and re-tender,
  • rationalise suppliers,
  • redesign rostering and deployment,
  • increase planned maintenance,
  • change contract mechanisms (rates, indexation, scope),
  • implement new performance monitoring.

6) Implement with governance (and don’t underestimate change management)

Service reviews touch people’s work. Implementation needs:

  • clear executive sponsorship,
  • transparent engagement with stakeholders,
  • practical sequencing,
  • and simple reporting that keeps momentum.

Srinath: A good service review isn’t judged by how clever the analysis is. It’s judged by whether the council can act on it.

Deep dive 1: Asset management as the backbone of council service reviews

Asset management is where many councils feel the tension most sharply: large portfolios, rising maintenance needs, and limited resources. Roads, footpaths, buildings, playgrounds, drainage, lighting, sporting infrastructure—each comes with different risk profiles, condition patterns and service expectations.

Shanaka: We often see councils running multiple “asset conversations” at once. The capital works team talks renewals. Operations talks defects. Finance talks depreciation and long-term sustainability. A service review brings those conversations together and asks: what are we trying to achieve, and what’s the most cost-effective way to achieve it?

What a service review should examine in council asset management

Asset register quality and asset hierarchy

If the asset register is incomplete or inconsistent, decisions become guesswork. A review should test:

  • Is the asset register complete for key asset classes?
  • Is the hierarchy usable (asset class → component → subcomponent)?
  • Do we know location, age, material, and criticality?
  • Are we capturing failure history in a meaningful way?

Levels of service and community expectations

Councils often carry “implicit” service levels—standards that everyone assumes but nobody has formally defined.

Examples:

  • How quickly must a pothole be made safe?
  • What condition should playgrounds be kept at?
  • What is an acceptable level of amenity for public toilets?
  • How often should stormwater assets be inspected or cleaned?

Srinath: Many councils default to historical practice. The review question is: do those practices still make sense? Are we over-servicing some assets and under-servicing others?

Asset criticality and risk-based prioritisation

Not all assets matter equally. A risk-based approach considers:

  • safety impact,
  • service disruption impact,
  • regulatory exposure,
  • community visibility,
  • and replacement lead times.

Service reviews that introduce a practical criticality model often unlock fast improvements, because the organisation stops treating every defect as equal.

Linking asset planning to maintenance delivery reality

Asset management plans can be solid on paper, but service reviews test whether:

  • maintenance crews can actually deliver the plan,
  • work is scheduled and tracked properly,
  • and renewals programs address the true drivers of failures.

The most common asset management pain points service reviews uncover

Shanaka: There are patterns we see repeatedly.

  1. Reactive maintenance dominating the work programme
    Planned work gets bumped by urgent defects, which drives overtime, contractor call-outs, and budget volatility.
  2. The “tyranny of the visible”
    Highly visible assets (town centres, main roads) attract attention, while less visible assets (stormwater, back-of-house facilities) quietly deteriorate.
  3. Inconsistent standards across depots, regions or legacy councils
    Different teams do things differently. It feels flexible, but it usually means cost variability and quality inconsistency.
  4. Asset data not used in decision-making
    The council might have a CMMS, but if work orders aren’t coded correctly, or if condition data isn’t updated, the system doesn’t support planning.

What “good” looks like after an asset-focused service review

A practical outcome is not “perfect asset management”. It’s a set of improvements councils can actually maintain:

  • clear service levels by asset class,
  • a simple criticality model to prioritise work,
  • a realistic planned maintenance schedule,
  • standard job plans for recurring tasks,
  • and a pipeline that connects maintenance, renewals and budget planning.

Srinath: The best reviews reduce surprises. Councils can’t eliminate all failures, but they can eliminate the feeling that failures come out of nowhere.

Deep dive 2: Preventative maintenance and the shift from reactive to predictable

If asset management is the “what”, preventative maintenance is the “how”. It’s also one of the most misunderstood areas—because it’s easy to say “we should do more planned maintenance” and much harder to make it happen.

Shanaka: Preventative maintenance isn’t a slogan. It’s a disciplined operating model: planning, scheduling, work execution, quality assurance, and feedback loops.

What a preventative maintenance service review should cover

Maintenance mix and work order quality

A review needs to quantify:

  • planned vs reactive work,
  • emergency call-outs,
  • repeat failures,
  • and the “unplanned but not emergency” work that quietly consumes capacity.

But it also needs to test whether work order data is reliable. If everything is coded as “urgent”, the system can’t support prioritisation.

Standard job plans and time allowances

For recurring tasks (inspections, servicing, cleaning of assets, routine checks), standard job plans:

  • reduce variability,
  • make scheduling realistic,
  • and improve quality.

Councils often have pockets of this in certain teams; service reviews spread it across the operating model.

Scheduling discipline and weekly work programming

Preventative maintenance relies on scheduling discipline:

  • weekly work programmes,
  • route planning,
  • coordination of crews,
  • and early identification of constraints (access, traffic control, permits, parts).

Srinath: This is where the “real world” hits. A good review doesn’t assume perfect conditions. It designs for storms, sick leave, urgent defects, and community priorities.

Contractor integration without losing control

Where contractors deliver maintenance, councils need to ensure:

  • scopes are clear and measurable,
  • rates don’t incentivise inefficiency,
  • and council retains the ability to prioritise and redirect.

A common failure mode is letting contractors dictate what “needs doing” without a council-led asset risk framework.

KPIs that drive the right behaviour

Preventative maintenance KPIs should support reliability, safety and cost predictability—without creating perverse incentives.

Useful measures might include:

  • PM schedule compliance (by asset class),
  • reduction in repeat defects,
  • response time to safety-critical issues,
  • percentage of work delivered as planned,
  • and audit results for workmanship and compliance.

Examples of preventative maintenance levers in council environments

To make this concrete, service reviews often explore levers like:

  • Buildings and facilities: HVAC servicing regimes, essential safety measures, lighting inspections, fire systems, roof and gutter programmes.
  • Parks and open space: playground inspection routines, irrigation maintenance schedules, sports field maintenance cycles aligned to usage.
  • Roads: reseal and patching programmes, line marking schedules, sign and barrier inspections.
  • Stormwater: pit cleaning schedules tied to risk and known hotspots, inspection regimes after major rain events, proactive asset clearing.
  • Fleet and plant: servicing schedules, defect management, pre-start checks, and workshop scheduling.

Shanaka: The point isn’t to do everything more often. It’s to do the right things at the right frequency for the risk and usage profile.

Deep dive 3: Procurement support that improves service delivery (not just pricing)

Procurement is frequently treated as a process: tender, evaluate, award, repeat. But in councils, procurement is also a service design tool. The way a contract is structured determines how the service behaves.

Srinath: It’s not unusual to see councils with contract structures that reflect the market of 10 or 15 years ago. The contract still “works” but it doesn’t produce the outcomes councils now need—resilience, performance visibility, and flexible service changes.

Shanaka: And procurement is where councils can remove a lot of hidden waste—unclear scopes, duplicated suppliers, inconsistent standards, poor indexation mechanisms, weak performance regimes.

What procurement-focused service reviews examine

Scope clarity and “what we actually buy”

In operational services, cost blowouts often come from scope creep and ambiguity:

  • what’s included vs excluded,
  • what “good” looks like,
  • what happens when conditions change.

A procurement support review often starts by rewriting scopes so they are:

  • measurable,
  • auditable,
  • and aligned to service levels.

Contract mechanisms and commercial alignment

Service reviews test whether the contract mechanism matches the service:

  • schedule of rates vs lump sum,
  • output-based vs input-based,
  • incentives/abatements,
  • indexation and change control,
  • and mobilisation/transition requirements.

Supplier performance management (and council capability to manage it)

A contract is only as good as the council’s ability to manage it. Reviews look at:

  • who owns supplier relationships,
  • how performance is measured and reported,
  • how issues are escalated,
  • and whether councils have the right forums, templates and cadence.

Procurement deep dive: Waste services (collection, transfer stations, processing)

Waste is one of the highest spend and highest visibility services for many councils, and it’s also one of the most politically sensitive.

Srinath: Waste services often carry legacy decisions—collection frequency, bin sizes, kerbside configuration—that were made years ago. A service review is a chance to test whether the current configuration still fits community needs, cost pressures and environmental objectives.

What a waste service review typically covers

Service configuration and demand

  • collection frequency (and whether it’s consistent across the LGA),
  • bin configuration (general waste, recycling, organics),
  • contamination drivers and education needs,
  • growth areas and route expansion requirements,
  • and service exceptions (multi-unit developments, CBD areas, events).

Route design and operational efficiency

Even without going into complex modelling, a service review can examine:

  • route logic and depot location impacts,
  • missed bin trends (and their root causes),
  • timing constraints (school zones, traffic, noise restrictions),
  • and how changes are requested and approved.

Contract structure and risk allocation

Key issues councils should test:

  • how fuel and CPI indexation is applied,
  • what happens when landfill levies change,
  • how service changes are priced,
  • and whether the contract encourages proactive performance or simply “minimum compliance”.

Transfer stations and waste facilities

Service reviews look at:

  • operating hours vs community demand,
  • staffing models and safety controls,
  • third-party contractor roles,
  • weighbridge and reporting systems,
  • and the cost-to-serve of different waste streams.

Shanaka: A lot of improvement in waste comes from tightening the basics—clearer service standards, stronger performance reporting, better change control—rather than chasing headline changes.

Procurement deep dive: Cleaning services across council facilities

Cleaning tends to be underestimated. It looks simple, but it spreads across multiple facility types with different usage patterns.

Srinath: Councils often inherit cleaning contracts as “set and forget”. Over time, facilities change: libraries expand, community centres get busier, staff work patterns shift, and service expectations move.

What a cleaning service review should examine

Fit-for-purpose service levels

A practical review will segment facilities:

  • customer-facing vs back-of-house,
  • high-traffic vs low-traffic,
  • sensitive environments (maternal health, childcare, aquatic centres),
  • event-driven sites.

Then it tests whether cleaning frequencies reflect actual usage, not legacy assumptions.

Day cleaning vs after-hours models

Day cleaning can improve responsiveness and reduce security access issues, but it must be structured properly to avoid “busy but not effective” outcomes.

Quality assurance and auditing

Cleaning performance should be measurable:

  • audit checklists aligned to facility type,
  • clear rectification timelines,
  • and transparent reporting that doesn’t become a paperwork exercise.

Consumables and extras

Many councils see leakage in:

  • consumables supply arrangements,
  • periodic deep cleans,
  • ad-hoc event cleaning,
  • and reactive call-outs.

A service review tightens scope and commercial mechanisms around these.

Procurement deep dive: Security services (guards, patrols, technology)

Security is a service where risk appetite and historical practice often diverge.

Shanaka: Some sites genuinely need physical presence. Others may be better served by technology, access control, lighting improvements, or changes to operating hours.

What a security service review should examine

Risk-based coverage by site and time

  • Which sites have real incident history?
  • When do incidents occur?
  • What risks are we controlling (theft, vandalism, staff safety, public safety)?

Static guarding vs mobile patrols

Static guarding can be expensive and sometimes poorly targeted. Mobile patrols can be effective if:

  • response expectations are clear,
  • patrol frequency is defined,
  • and incident reporting is robust.

Integration with technology

A modern security model often includes:

  • CCTV monitoring and maintenance,
  • alarms and access control,
  • duress systems,
  • and clear escalation pathways.

Contractor governance and performance

Security contracts need strong:

  • vetting requirements,
  • incident reporting standards,
  • and performance consequences that are enforceable.

Srinath: The most common mistake is paying for “presence” rather than paying for risk reduction outcomes.

Procurement deep dive: Facilities maintenance, trades, and reactive call-outs

Facilities and trade services are a frequent source of cost volatility:

  • call-out fees,
  • quoting processes,
  • small variations,
  • inconsistent rates across contractors,
  • and limited visibility of repeat failures.

Shanaka: Service reviews often find councils aren’t buying “maintenance”; they’re buying fragmentation.

What a service review can do here

  • introduce a panel model with defined rates and response times,
  • standardise work order coding so repeat failures are visible,
  • clarify what is done in-house vs outsourced (based on skills, safety, cost and availability),
  • tighten quoting and approval processes to reduce leakage,
  • and implement basic performance reporting that doesn’t overburden teams.

Deep dive 4: Workforce optimisation with a spotlight on parking inspectors

Parking services are often discussed in narrow terms—revenue or enforcement. In reality, it’s a compliance service that sits in a sensitive community space.

Srinath: Parking enforcement is one of the most visible interactions between council and the public. That means the workforce model matters—not just for efficiency, but for fairness, safety, and public trust.

Shanaka: And it’s also one of the services where councils can use data well. Infringements, hotspots, time-of-day patterns, complaints, disputes—there’s usually more data than councils realise.

What a parking inspector workforce optimisation review should cover

Demand analysis by place and time

A practical review maps demand drivers:

  • commuter corridors,
  • activity centres,
  • school zones,
  • beach and recreation hotspots,
  • events and seasonal peaks,
  • construction impacts.

This helps answer: are we deploying staff where demand actually is?

Rostering and deployment design

Many councils carry rosters that are “how we’ve always done it”. Reviews test:

  • shift start and end times (do they align to demand peaks?),
  • split shifts and weekend coverage,
  • supervision spans (is support available when incidents occur?),
  • and fatigue/overtime drivers.

Productivity without perverse incentives

A common mistake is measuring “tickets per hour” as the primary indicator. That can distort behaviour and harm community trust.

Better measures often look like:

  • coverage of priority areas,
  • compliance outcomes in hotspots,
  • response times to high-risk issues (e.g. accessible parking misuse),
  • and customer complaint trends.

Safety and wellbeing

Parking officers work in challenging conditions. A workforce review should include:

  • incident patterns,
  • training and conflict management,
  • lone worker protocols,
  • escalation and support,
  • body-worn cameras (where used) and policies,
  • and alignment with WHS obligations.

Technology enablement

Technology can improve both productivity and fairness:

  • handheld systems,
  • mobile printing (or not, depending on policy),
  • evidence capture,
  • integration with permits,
  • licence plate recognition (where appropriate),
  • and streamlined infringement review processes.

Srinath: The point is not “more enforcement”. It’s smarter deployment that supports safe, fair compliance outcomes.

Deep dive 5: Fleet management as a council-wide performance lever

Fleet is one of those areas where costs creep quietly: maintenance, downtime, replacement, fuel, insurance, safety. It affects almost every operational service.

Shanaka: Councils can have strong procurement and maintenance teams, but still struggle with fleet because responsibility is spread—business units want autonomy, fleet teams want standardisation, finance wants cost control, and operations want reliability.

A fleet management service review helps align the organisation around a clear strategy.

What a fleet service review should examine

Fleet purpose and fit-for-task

  • Are vehicles fit for the tasks they do?
  • Are there specialised vehicles used for general tasks (or vice versa)?
  • Are heavy plant and light fleet managed consistently?

Utilisation and pooling

Some councils can unlock improvement simply by:

  • improving booking and pooling,
  • reducing underutilised vehicles,
  • and matching fleet availability to shift patterns.

Replacement strategy and lifecycle cost

A disciplined replacement strategy reduces “run to failure” behaviour and helps budgeting. A review typically tests:

  • replacement triggers (age, km/hours, maintenance cost, downtime),
  • alignment with safety and compliance,
  • and whether replacement decisions are consistent across units.

Maintenance delivery model

Key questions:

  • in-house workshop vs outsourced servicing (or hybrid),
  • parts procurement and inventory management,
  • vehicle downtime drivers,
  • and whether preventative maintenance is executed reliably.

Transition planning (including alternative fuel vehicles)

Many councils are considering EVs and lower-emission options. A service review can help councils approach this pragmatically:

  • which fleet segments are ready now,
  • what charging infrastructure is required,
  • what operational constraints exist (range, towing, payload),
  • and how to stage transition without disrupting services.

Srinath: Fleet tends to be a multiplier. If fleet reliability improves, service delivery improves. If fleet costs blow out, every operational budget feels it.

Pulling it together: governance, cost transparency and making service reviews actionable

A council can run great reviews and still struggle if governance and implementation capability are weak.

Shanaka: Implementation usually fails for boring reasons: unclear owners, competing priorities, weak data, not enough contract management capability, or “everyone agrees but nothing changes”.

What helps service review recommendations stick

A service catalogue and clear service ownership

A service catalogue doesn’t need to be complicated. It needs:

  • clear service definitions,
  • service owners,
  • service levels (where appropriate),
  • and a shared understanding of what is in/out of scope.

Cost transparency that supports decisions

Councils don’t need perfect activity-based costing to make better decisions. They do need:

  • consistent coding,
  • visibility of internal vs external cost,
  • clarity on overheads and enabling costs,
  • and a way to track whether changes are delivering benefits.

Contract management capability uplift

If a service review recommends “re-tender and standardise”, councils need the capability to:

  • manage the tender properly,
  • manage transition,
  • and then manage the contract over its life.

A realistic roadmap (quick wins + structural changes)

Not everything should be done at once. A good roadmap separates:

  • quick wins (scope clarity, reporting, scheduling discipline),
  • medium-term changes (procurement cycles, workforce redesign),
  • and longer-term reforms (systems uplift, asset data improvement).

How Trace Consultants can help councils with service reviews

Trace Consultants supports Australian councils through service reviews that combine operational reality with commercial discipline. The focus is on services where councils can improve outcomes by tightening the link between assets, maintenance, procurement, workforce and performance governance.

Shanaka: Our approach is practical and staged. Councils don’t need theory—they need a clear baseline, a small set of implementable options, and support to land the changes.

Where Trace typically supports local government service reviews

1) Service review design and baseline (getting the fact base right)

  • defining scope and service levels with stakeholders,
  • mapping end-to-end cost and process,
  • diagnosing demand and workload drivers,
  • identifying constraints and risks,
  • developing a clear baseline that can be used in decision-making.

2) Asset management and preventative maintenance uplift

  • asset criticality and risk-based prioritisation,
  • planned maintenance scheduling models,
  • standard job plans and performance measures,
  • integration between CMMS, asset registers and operational planning,
  • practical pathways to reduce reactive maintenance and improve predictability.

3) Procurement support across operational categories

  • scope standardisation (waste, cleaning, security, facilities, trade services),
  • go-to-market strategy and tender support,
  • commercial and contract mechanism design (including indexation, KPIs, abatements),
  • supplier performance frameworks and reporting cadence,
  • transition planning to reduce operational disruption.

4) Workforce optimisation (including parking compliance)

  • demand and deployment analysis,
  • roster and shift design,
  • productivity and safety improvements,
  • supervision and governance models,
  • technology enablement opportunities aligned to service outcomes.

5) Fleet management strategy and optimisation

  • utilisation and right-sizing,
  • replacement strategy and lifecycle cost drivers,
  • maintenance delivery model optimisation,
  • fleet procurement and standardisation,
  • practical transition planning for lower-emission fleet where appropriate.

What makes Trace’s approach different (in plain language)

  • We focus on what can be implemented, not just what can be analysed.
  • We connect procurement decisions to how services actually run day-to-day.
  • We work with councils to improve capability (not dependency), so improvements last.

Srinath: From an independent perspective, what councils value in external support is practicality—people who understand the realities of depots, contract transitions, union considerations, community expectations, and governance. When those realities are reflected in the review, recommendations are far more likely to stick.

Practical questions councils can use to guide a service review

Sometimes the simplest way to start is with the right questions.

Asset management and maintenance

  • Do we know which assets create the highest safety and service risk?
  • Are maintenance priorities set by risk, or by who complains loudest?
  • What percentage of maintenance is planned vs reactive—and why?
  • Are repeat failures visible in our data, and are we acting on them?

Preventative maintenance

  • Are planned tasks actually completed on schedule?
  • Do we have standard job plans for recurring work?
  • Are we resourcing planned maintenance, or hoping it happens “around” reactive work?
  • Do contractor arrangements support reliability, or encourage call-outs?

Procurement (waste, cleaning, security, facilities)

  • Are scopes and service levels clear and measurable?
  • Are contracts structured for today’s market conditions and risks?
  • Do we have performance reporting that’s meaningful, not just paperwork?
  • Do we have the capability to manage contracts once awarded?

Parking enforcement workforce optimisation

  • Are staffing levels and rosters aligned to demand peaks and hotspots?
  • Are safety protocols and supervision adequate for the reality of the role?
  • Are KPIs driving fair and effective compliance outcomes?
  • Are systems supporting efficient processing and dispute handling?

Fleet

  • Do we have underutilised fleet that could be pooled or removed?
  • Are replacement decisions consistent and based on lifecycle cost?
  • Is downtime disrupting services—and do we know why?
  • Do we have a realistic plan for any future fleet transition?

Closing thoughts: service reviews as a capability, not a one-off

Srinath: The councils that do well over time are the ones that treat service reviews as part of continuous improvement—not as a one-off response to budget stress.

Shanaka: Agreed. A strong service review gives councils clarity: where costs sit, where risks sit, and which changes will genuinely improve service outcomes and sustainability.

For Australian councils, the opportunity is real—particularly in the areas that consistently drive cost and risk: asset management, preventative maintenance, procurement across operational services, workforce optimisation (including parking compliance), and fleet management.

If your council is considering a service review—or wants to move from insights to implementation—Trace Consultants can help you design a practical review, build the baseline, identify workable options, and support delivery in a way that stands up to operational reality and governance expectations.

Organisational Design

In Conversation at Trace: David Carroll on operating models, co-design, and making change stick

January 2026
In the first edition of In Conversation at Trace, Management Consultant David Carroll reflects on operating model design, co-design, and what it takes to turn strategy into execution across government, defence, and private enterprise.
At Trace, our work is shaped by the people doing it. In Conversation at Trace is a new series where we sit down with our consultants to unpack how they approach complex problems, apply their thinking across diverse environments, and reflect on what they’re seeing across the industry.
David Carroll, Management Consultant

First up is David Carroll, a Management Consultant at Trace with more than eight years of experience across Federal Government, Defence, and private enterprise. David brings deep expertise in operating model design, governance, and end-to-end process reengineering, and is known for working closely with senior stakeholders to co-design solutions that are practical, context-aware, and built to last.

We sat down with David to talk about what he’s learned working across highly constrained environments, how to spot when an operating model is holding an organisation back, and what it really takes to turn strategy into execution.

You’ve worked across Federal Government, Defence, and private enterprise. How have those environments shaped the way you approach problem diagnosis and solution design?

DC: They’ve taught me the importance of understanding client context, especially when it comes to designing solutions. What works in one environment doesn’t necessarily work in another. For example in Government and Defence, changes to organisational charts are significantly harder than in private companies, as are opportunities to introduce new systems. In my experience, the degrees of freedom are far greater in private enterprise, with Defence being the most constrained due to security requirements and the mix of civilian and military personnel. However, Defence has a very hierarchical structure on the military side which at times can make it easier to gain buy-in and action when the senior officer is on our side.

When it comes to diagnosing problems, the tools and frameworks I’ve learned are applicable across all businesses, but they’re not enough on their own. Understanding the client is critical as while problems may appear similar, there is always something unique. There’s no substitute for interviews, workshops, and ideally sitting alongside teams to truly understand the problem and design solutions that fit their organisation.

Operating model design can sound abstract from the outside. How do you make it tangible for the teams who have to live with it day to day?

DC: The team on the ground wants to know how it will affect their day-to-day, so maintaining that focus is vital. Every layer of the operating model includes elements that are tactical for the team and strategic for the organisation. For instance, in organisation design the team on the ground are concerned on who their supervisor is and how many members are in their team. Meanwhile, management is more focussed on where that team sits, how that team impacts layers and spans of control. For the operational team, these considerations have no bearing on their day to day, as long as they aren’t broken and systems keep running smoothly.

For the team I have found the key is quickly identifying which documents/artifacts/systems are required and will be used either daily or as reference material. RACIs are a good example; they are rarely used daily but when a dispute arises they are excellent reference documents to determine responsibilities and help settle disputes. A process map and checklist on the wall is the opposite example, it is a quick reference that is used every day to make sure tasks are on track, and is vital for supporting new staff to get up to speed and be efficient.

Process optimisation is often framed as a cost exercise. What broader role does process design play in service quality, decision-making, and capability uplift?

DC: That's right, process optimisation is often seen as a way of freeing up time, and often with the aim of headcount reduction, but as you mention, the benefits can extend far beyond that. An optimised process can be a competitive advantage as the speed of activity increases, improving customer experience. An optimised process is also repeatable and reproducible meaning it can be done the same way and produce consistent outcome over and over again, hopefully providing a reliable, high quality and fast service that customers prefer.

AI, robotic process automation, machine learning and other emerging technologies offer significant opportunities in process optimisation. Not only to improve efficiency and consistency, but also to free up time for, in my view, more interesting work as the technology handles the low value add repetitive tasks like digital filing or system transfers. This enables staff to do work that is more meaningful, requires them to use their brain, which ultimately supports job satisfaction.

You’ve partnered with senior stakeholders in high-stakes environments. What does genuine co-design look like in practice?

DC: Genuine co-design requires an open mind from both sides but in particular the consultants. It requires spending time with the stakeholders, using a whiteboard to throw up half developed ideas and debate over their merits. Basically bringing the stakeholder into the tent on the design process and treating them as a member of the team. But it won't work if the consultant isn’t open to not only hearing but also exploring and using the stakeholders ideas. Co-design where the stakeholder is at the white board but none of their ideas are included in the end solution, will just breed resentment and make implementation harder.

Consulting is a team sport and my most successful projects have included client stakeholders on the team to develop solutions as they are brought in and become champions for the idea in the organisation.

Many organisations struggle to turn strategy into execution. What helps bridge that gap?

DC: You have to make it real to those on the ground, not just the c-suite and executives. Ideally everyone in the organisation should be able to read the strategy and clearly see how their role contributes to it, understanding that without their involvement, it simply won’t land.

That needs to be backed by active management support. Not just oversight to drive change, but a genuine willingness to explain the why, listen to concerns, and take feedback back up the chain. When even the most junior team members feel heard and understand how they fit into the bigger picture, they’re far more likely to take ownership and help turn a well-designed model into successful execution.

Government and Defence contexts come with unique constraints. What do leaders in these environments most need from a consulting partner?

DC: They need a partner who understands their environment and what levers are available to them. Reducing headcount, while not impossible in the public service, is harder in Government and Defence for instance.

I think the biggest constraint for those that may not have worked in Government and Defence is the need to consider the public good and stewardship of tax payer funds. This extends to Government Business Organisations and Not For Profits too, where scandals over incentives and perks that are commonplace in the corporate world have resulted in disciplinary action on leaders and even their dismissal. However, this is why those engagements can be fun, as the playbook for corporate companies can’t just be applied, rather new options need to be developed and explored.

When organisations talk about operational excellence, what’s one misconception you see time and time again?

DC: I find people often jump straight to the technology lens, which while critical and certainly an enabler, is not where one should start. You can have the best tech in the world but without the right people, processes, procedures it will not provide operational excellence.

To me, step one is always ensuring you have the right governance in place, step two the right people with the right skills and the third is tech and data. Organisations can provide a lot of value from just getting the first two right. But when they jump straight to number three, the term white elephant starts to come into play, which is a very expensive way to determine you don't have the right governance or people to achieve operational excellence.

Looking ahead, what shifts do you see emerging in organisational design across public and private sectors?

DC: The obvious answer is AI and technology upending work. However, while many people have said we will see an almost elimination of junior team members as they are replaced by AI, I am not as convinced.

Your junior team members today are your leaders of tomorrow. There are many very successful companies where their c-suite started at entry level and have worked through the ranks (Nike, GM, Disney CEOs come to mind), and most of them are very successful CEOs as they understand the business at every level. Without understanding the basics, the how, and why something is as it is, it's a lot harder to make effective business-specific changes.

Now there will probably be less of them as there is less activity for them to do, but that just means initial hiring needs to step up, rather than casting a wide enough net to ensure you capture a couple of high performers. So I see the net becoming smaller, but given the nature of junior hires, companies still need to take on enough to account for not all of them being rock stars, or even wanting to stay in that career long term, to ensure that in 20-30 years time there is suitably qualified and experienced people to fill senior positions.

David’s perspective reinforces a core Trace belief: lasting change doesn’t come from templates, technology alone, or theory. It comes from understanding context, working side-by-side with teams, and designing operating models that are both defensible at the top and usable on the ground.

Planning, Forecasting, S&OP and IBP

How Manufacturing Supply Chains Are Changing in Australia – And What Leaders Must Do Next

Shanaka Jayasinghe
Shanaka Jayasinghe
January 2026
Australian manufacturing supply chains are being reshaped by global disruption, rising costs, skills shortages, and new technologies. Understanding what is changing and how to respond is now a strategic priority for manufacturing leaders.
For decades, Australian manufacturing supply chains were designed around a relatively simple premise: global sourcing, predictable lead times, steady demand, and incremental improvement. Cost efficiency was king, inventory was treated as a necessary evil, and supply chain was often viewed as an operational function rather than a strategic one. That world no longer exists.

Over the past five years, Australian manufacturers have experienced a sustained period of disruption that has fundamentally changed how supply chains are designed, governed, and invested in. Global shocks, local labour constraints, inflationary pressure, evolving customer expectations, and rapid advances in digital technology have combined to force a rethink of what “good” supply chain performance actually looks like.

This article explores how manufacturing supply chains in Australia are changing, why those changes are proving so challenging, and what manufacturing leaders need to do to stay competitive in this new environment.

The end of “set and forget” supply chains

One of the most significant shifts in Australian manufacturing is the move away from static, long-range supply chain designs.

Historically, many manufacturers invested heavily in network design, sourcing strategies, and planning systems, then expected those decisions to hold for a decade or more. Supply chains were optimised once, with limited appetite for revisiting assumptions unless something went seriously wrong.

Today, that approach is no longer viable.

Australian manufacturing supply chains are now expected to be:

  • Continuously reviewed
  • Highly responsive to demand and supply volatility
  • Flexible enough to adapt to geopolitical, economic, and regulatory change

Network structures, sourcing strategies, inventory policies, and production footprints are increasingly viewed as living systems, not fixed assets. This shift is driving more frequent strategic reviews and a stronger connection between supply chain decisions and enterprise-level strategy.

Resilience has overtaken pure cost optimisation

Perhaps the most visible change in Australian manufacturing supply chains is the reprioritisation of resilience. While cost remains critical, manufacturers have learned often painfully, that the cheapest supply chain is not necessarily the most competitive. Extended disruptions have exposed the true cost of brittle, overly lean supply chains that lack redundancy, visibility, and flexibility.

As a result, many Australian manufacturers are now actively reassessing:

  • Single-source dependencies
  • Offshore manufacturing concentration
  • Supplier financial health and operational risk
  • Safety stock and decoupling strategies
  • Lead time exposure and variability

Resilience is no longer treated as insurance; it is increasingly viewed as a source of competitive advantage. Manufacturers that can continue to supply customers during disruption win trust, market share, and pricing power. This does not mean returning to inefficient stockpiling. Instead, it means smarter resilience, underpinned by data, scenario modelling, and segmented service strategies.

Supply chain is now a board-level topic

Another defining change in Australian manufacturing is the elevation of supply chain to the executive and board agenda.

Supply chain performance now directly impacts:

  • Revenue continuity
  • Working capital
  • Customer satisfaction
  • ESG commitments
  • Corporate risk exposure

As a result, boards and executive teams are asking more sophisticated questions about supply chain capability, maturity, and investment priorities.

This shift has led to:

  • Greater scrutiny of supply chain KPIs beyond cost
  • Increased demand for transparency and visibility
  • Stronger alignment between operations, finance, and strategy
  • More structured governance of supply chain decisions

Manufacturing supply chains are no longer something leaders only discuss when there is a problem. They are becoming a core pillar of enterprise performance management.

Demand volatility is forcing planning model redesign

Demand patterns for Australian manufacturers have become more volatile, less predictable, and more fragmented.

Contributing factors include:

  • Shorter customer order cycles
  • Greater product customisation
  • Channel proliferation
  • Faster shifts in end-consumer behaviour
  • Increased promotional and pricing activity

Traditional forecasting approaches often heavily reliant on historical averages, are struggling to cope with this reality. In response, manufacturers are rethinking how they plan demand and supply.

Key changes include:

  • Moving from forecast accuracy to forecast usability
  • Greater emphasis on scenario planning
  • More frequent re-planning cycles
  • Improved collaboration between sales, operations, and finance

Sales and Operations Planning (S&OP), and its evolution into Integrated Business Planning (IBP), is becoming a critical capability rather than a compliance exercise.

Inventory is being reframed as a strategic asset

Inventory management has long been a tension point for Australian manufacturers. Too much inventory ties up capital and increases risk. Too little inventory threatens service, production continuity, and customer relationships. What has changed is how inventory is being discussed and governed.

Rather than applying blanket inventory targets across the business, leading manufacturers are now:

  • Segmenting inventory by customer, product, and risk profile
  • Explicitly linking inventory levels to service promises
  • Balancing working capital objectives with resilience requirements
  • Using inventory as a buffer where it delivers the most value

This more nuanced approach requires better data, stronger planning discipline, and closer alignment between finance and operations. Inventory is no longer simply a cost to be minimised, it is a lever to be deliberately deployed.

Manufacturing footprints are being reassessed

Australian manufacturers are also revisiting where and how production occurs.

While reshoring and nearshoring are often discussed, the reality is more complex. For most organisations, the question is not whether to abandon offshore manufacturing, but how to build a balanced, risk-aware manufacturing footprint.

This includes:

  • Evaluating dual-sourcing or multi-site production strategies
  • Assessing local manufacturing for critical or high-risk products
  • Reviewing capacity flexibility and changeover capability
  • Understanding the total landed cost rather than unit cost alone

Manufacturing footprint decisions are increasingly being made in conjunction with supply chain, rather than in isolation.

Digital enablement is accelerating, but unevenly

Technology investment in Australian manufacturing supply chains is accelerating, but adoption remains uneven.

Many organisations have invested heavily in ERP platforms, planning systems, and reporting tools, yet still struggle with:

  • Poor data quality
  • Limited system integration
  • Over-complex planning processes
  • Low user adoption

At the same time, newer approaches including advanced analytics, automation, and low-code solutions are enabling faster, more targeted improvements without wholesale system replacement.

The key shift is not simply adopting more technology, but:

  • Designing processes first
  • Selecting fit-for-purpose tools
  • Ensuring usability for frontline and planning teams
  • Embedding governance and change management

Digital enablement is increasingly viewed as an ongoing capability rather than a one-off project.

Workforce constraints are reshaping operations

Labour availability and skills shortages are having a profound impact on Australian manufacturing supply chains.

Challenges include:

  • Difficulty recruiting skilled operators and planners
  • Increased reliance on casual or contingent labour
  • Rising wage costs
  • Greater safety and fatigue management requirements

In response, manufacturers are:

  • Redesigning workforce models and shift patterns
  • Investing in workforce planning and scheduling capability
  • Automating manual and repetitive tasks
  • Improving visibility of labour demand and capacity

Workforce considerations are now deeply intertwined with supply chain design, planning, and execution decisions.

Sustainability expectations are becoming operational

Sustainability is no longer confined to reporting or corporate messaging. For Australian manufacturers, it is increasingly shaping day-to-day supply chain decisions.

This includes:

  • Reducing transport emissions
  • Improving energy efficiency in manufacturing and warehousing
  • Minimising waste and obsolescence
  • Improving supplier transparency and compliance

Rather than treating sustainability as a standalone initiative, leading organisations are embedding it into supply chain strategy, procurement decisions, and performance metrics.

The challenge lies in balancing sustainability goals with cost, service, and resilience — particularly in an inflationary environment.

How Trace Consultants can help Australian manufacturers

As manufacturing supply chains become more complex and strategically important, many organisations are recognising the value of independent, specialist support. Trace Consultants works with Australian manufacturers to help them navigate this changing landscape with clarity and confidence.

Support typically includes:

Supply chain strategy and operating model design

Helping organisations align their supply chain design with business strategy, customer expectations, and risk appetite, ensuring supply chain decisions support long-term objectives.

Network and Manufacturing Footprint Reviews

Providing objective analysis of warehouse, transport, and manufacturing networks to identify opportunities to improve cost, resilience, and service performance.

Planning capability and S&OP / IBP design

Supporting the design and implementation of pragmatic planning frameworks that improve decision-making without unnecessary complexity.

Inventory and working capital optimisation

Helping organisations strike the right balance between inventory investment, service levels, and resilience, using data-driven segmentation and policy design.

Technology and digital enablement

Assisting manufacturers to select, design, and deploy fit-for-purpose digital solutions that improve visibility, automation, and planning effectiveness.

Workforce planning and operational efficiency

Supporting workforce modelling, rostering, and productivity improvement initiatives to address labour constraints and rising costs.

Trace Consultants brings a practical, implementation-focused approach grounded in real-world manufacturing and supply chain experience, helping organisations move beyond theory to tangible outcomes.

What manufacturing leaders should focus on now

Australian manufacturing supply chains are unlikely to become simpler in the years ahead. Uncertainty, volatility, and competitive pressure will remain defining features of the operating environment.

Leaders should focus on:

  • Building adaptable supply chain strategies
  • Investing in planning and decision-making capability
  • Treating resilience as a strategic asset
  • Aligning supply chain, finance, and operations
  • Taking a pragmatic, staged approach to digital enablement

The manufacturers that succeed will be those that treat supply chain not as a cost centre, but as a source of competitive advantage.

Final thoughts

The transformation of manufacturing supply chains in Australia is well underway. While the challenges are significant, so too are the opportunities for organisations willing to rethink long-held assumptions and invest in capability where it matters most.

In an environment where disruption is the norm rather than the exception, the ability to sense, respond, and adapt through the supply chain will increasingly define manufacturing success. The question is no longer whether Australian manufacturing supply chains need to change, but how quickly and how deliberately organisations choose to act.

Is your supply chain keeping pace with the reality of Australian manufacturing?

If resilience, planning confidence, or working capital still feel like trade-offs rather than deliberate choices, it may be time to take a step back and reset the foundations. At Trace Consultants, we work with manufacturers to redesign supply chains for today’s conditions. More adaptable networks. Stronger planning capability. Clear decisions that balance cost, service, resilience, and sustainability.

Get in touch with Trace to explore how your supply chain can move from reactive to resilient, and become a genuine source of competitive advantage.

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