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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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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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.

Resilience & Risk Management

Tariffs in 2026: The Procurement Response

Mathew Tolley
Mathew Tolley
June 2026
Australia's direct tariff exposure is modest. The indirect exposure, through repriced inputs and rerouted global supply chains, is where the real risk sits. Here's the procurement response.

Tariffs and Trade Fragmentation in 2026: A Procurement Response

For most of the last three decades, supply chains were built on an assumption that has quietly stopped being true: that goods would move across borders at predictable, low, and stable cost. Sourcing strategies optimised for the lowest landed cost. Inventory was stripped out in the name of efficiency. Long-term contracts assumed consistency. That world has shifted. Tariffs and trade fragmentation are no longer a passing shock to be waited out; through 2026 they have become a structural feature of the trading environment, and they are reshaping how supply chains have to be designed and run.

For Australian businesses, the instinctive reaction has been to check direct exposure, conclude it is small, and move on. That reaction is half right and dangerously incomplete. The direct hit to Australian exporters is indeed modest in aggregate. The indirect exposure, the way tariffs ripple through global supply chains and arrive on Australian businesses as repriced inputs, disrupted lanes, and volatile lead times, is far larger and far less understood. And it lands squarely on procurement and supply chain functions to manage.

This article is for procurement, supply chain, and operations leaders who need a practical response to the 2026 tariff environment rather than another round of commentary on trade politics. It covers where things actually stand, why the real exposure is indirect, why the old efficiency-first playbook no longer works, and the concrete procurement and supply chain moves that build resilience without simply inflating cost.

Where things actually stand

The headline facts are clearer than the noise around them suggests. Most Australian exports to the United States now face a baseline tariff of around 10 percent, with steel and aluminium subject to far higher rates of around 50 percent. Australia exports roughly $20 billion to the US each year, which sounds large but represents about 4 percent of total exports and around 0.8 percent of GDP. Treasury modelling has put the direct economic impact as marginal, on the order of a 0.1 percent reduction in GDP in 2025 and 0.2 percent in 2026. The most directly exposed industries are metals and advanced manufacturing, which carry the bulk of the US-bound trade.

So far, so manageable, and this is exactly where the complacency comes from. But two things complicate the picture. The first is that tariff effects take time to flow through, typically three to twelve months depending on the industry, so the full impact of measures already in force is only becoming apparent now, with further changes lagging behind that. The second, and more telling, is what is happening to disruption more broadly. The share of Australian industrial businesses reporting active supply chain disruptions, having fallen from a pandemic peak of around 79 percent in late 2022 to about 35 percent by late 2024, climbed back to roughly 47 percent through 2025. Supply chain performance is deteriorating again, and tariffs and the trade fragmentation around them are a significant part of why.

The aggregate GDP number, in other words, badly understates the operational reality facing individual businesses. A 0.2 percent hit to the economy is small. A repriced critical input, a rerouted supplier, or a lead time that has doubled is not small to the business experiencing it.

The real exposure is indirect

This is the insight that should reframe how Australian businesses think about tariffs. The question is not only "do I export to the US," it is "where does tariff and trade risk enter my supply chain," and for most businesses the answer is through the back door, not the front.

Most Australian organisations import components, materials, or finished goods whose cost and availability are shaped by global trade flows. When tariffs reprice those flows, the cost increases cascade through to Australian buyers regardless of whether they trade with the US at all. A manufacturer relying on imported components, a retailer sourcing product through global supply chains, a hospitality operator buying imported equipment: each can feel the effect quietly, through supplier invoices and input costs, without ever seeing a tariff line. As global supply chains reroute around the new tariff map, the secondary effects, capacity shifts, freight volatility, lead-time instability, and demand displacement, reach trade-exposed Australian industries that assumed they were insulated.

There is also a strategic uncertainty cost that sits on top of the direct price effect. US trade policy has been unusually dynamic, with settings changing repeatedly and more changes signalled, and that instability causes firms worldwide to delay investment and sourcing decisions until they have clarity that never quite arrives. For procurement, that means planning against a moving target, which is its own form of exposure.

The practical conclusion is that a business can have negligible direct US export exposure and still be materially exposed through its supply chain. Treating the two as the same thing is the most common and most expensive misreading of the current environment.

Why the old playbook no longer works

The supply chains most exposed today are the ones that were optimised hardest for the previous era. A strategy built around single-sourcing from the lowest-cost country, minimal inventory, and landed-cost decisions that ignored geopolitical and trade risk was rational when trade was stable and cheap. In a fragmented trade environment it is brittle. The same concentration that delivered efficiency now concentrates tariff exposure, disruption risk, and the inability to respond when a lane closes or a cost spikes.

This does not mean abandoning efficiency. It means pricing risk into decisions that previously ignored it, and rebalancing toward resilience where the exposure justifies it. The organisations that navigate this best are not necessarily the largest; they are the ones with clarity over their costs, their margins, and their supply chain exposure, and the agility to act on it. That clarity is a procurement and supply chain capability, and building it is the work.

The procurement and supply chain playbook

A credible response to the 2026 tariff environment is a sequence of deliberate moves, not a single defensive reaction.

See your exposure beyond the first tier. You cannot manage risk you cannot see, and tariff and trade exposure usually hides below the first tier, in the sub-components and raw materials that feed your key inputs and cross multiple borders before they reach you. Mapping the supply chain to n-tier depth, identifying where tariffs and trade risk actually enter and where single points of failure sit, is the foundation for everything else. This visibility is the single most valuable thing most organisations lack, and the hardest to build, because the data sits across many suppliers who guard it.

Reprice cost-to-serve against the new reality. Tariffs change the landed-cost mathematics that sourcing decisions were built on. A supplier or lane that was cheapest under the old regime may not be once tariffs, freight volatility, and risk are priced in. Rebuilding the cost-to-serve and landed-cost model so decisions reflect current conditions, rather than pre-tariff assumptions baked in years ago, is often where the first real savings and risk reductions appear.

Diversify sourcing deliberately, not reflexively. Reducing concentration in any single country or supplier lowers exposure, and the China-plus-one and friendshoring strategies much discussed are part of the answer. But diversification has to be weighed on total cost and total risk, not tariff avoidance alone, and it has to reckon with the fact that Australia's reliance on a small number of trading partners is genuinely hard to unwind given the economic complementarities involved. The goal is a sourcing base that is robust to disruption, not simply one that dodges the current tariff. This is core procurement and sourcing strategy work.

Rethink network and country of origin. Where inputs are processed and assembled affects tariff exposure, and that makes network design a tariff lever. Some businesses are already exploring regional processing hubs that allow partial reclassification of origin to reduce exposure, as seen in parts of the medical device sector shifting processing into Southeast Asia. Network and origin decisions that were once purely about cost and service now carry a trade-risk dimension that procurement and supply chain need to design around.

Use commercial and contractual levers. Tariff pass-through clauses, renegotiated supplier terms, longer-term agreements to manage volatility, and currency management where relevant all help share and stabilise the risk rather than absorbing it whole. The commercial structure of supplier relationships is a tool, not a fixed constraint.

Set the right inventory posture. The lean, just-in-time default needs revisiting for exposed and critical inputs. Selective resilience inventory, buffering the specific items where disruption or tariff risk is high, balances cost against risk far better than either blanket stockpiling or running everything thin. The discipline is in choosing where to hold and where not to.

Plan in scenarios. Because trade policy will keep moving, reacting to each change is a losing game. Scenario planning, and the corporate wargaming that some are now adopting, lets organisations anticipate plausible tariff and disruption scenarios and test their network and sourcing against them in advance, so the response is prepared rather than improvised. This connects directly to the resilience thinking we set out in navigating global trade tensions.

Leverage the trade agreements. With the federal government accelerating trade agreements with partners including ASEAN, India, and the UK to cushion the impact, procurement can deliberately route sourcing and market access to take advantage of preferential terms where they exist.

The opportunity, not just the threat

It is worth resisting a purely defensive reading. Trade fragmentation creates openings as well as costs. As global supply chains reroute, there is room for reliable, well-positioned suppliers to win share from those caught on the wrong side of the new tariff map. Agribusiness players are shifting into premium categories where margins can absorb tariff effects. Regional and sovereign supply relationships are becoming more valuable. And the organisations that build genuine supply chain agility now will be better placed not just to weather disruption but to capitalise when competitors cannot. Resilience, built well, is a competitive advantage rather than a cost of insurance.

The Australian context

Several Australian specifics shape the response. The direct export exposure is concentrated in metals and advanced manufacturing, so most of the economy faces the indirect channel rather than the direct one. The long-standing reliance on a narrow set of trading partners makes diversification both more important and more difficult. The country's geography and distance amplify the freight and lead-time volatility that trade fragmentation produces. And the government's pivot toward broader trade agreements offers a partial cushion that procurement can actively use. The right response is grounded in this reality: modest direct exposure, real indirect exposure, and a premium on visibility and agility.

How Trace Consultants can help

At Trace Consultants, we help Australian businesses turn tariff and trade uncertainty into a managed, deliberate supply chain response rather than a reactive scramble. The work sits squarely in our core: procurement, sourcing strategy, network design, and resilience.

We map your exposure to n-tier depth. We build the supply chain visibility that reveals where tariff and trade risk actually enters, beyond the first tier, into the sub-components and origins that drive your real exposure and your single points of failure.

We reprice the decisions. We rebuild cost-to-serve and landed-cost models against current conditions, so sourcing and network decisions reflect the tariff reality rather than pre-tariff assumptions.

We design the sourcing and network response. Through our procurement and warehousing and distribution practices, we develop deliberate diversification, network and origin strategies, and the inventory posture that balances cost against resilience for your specific exposure.

We build the scenario capability. We help you plan against plausible tariff and disruption scenarios and test your supply chain in advance, so your response is prepared rather than improvised, building on our supply chain resilience work.

Explore our procurement and resilience capability →

Speak to an expert at Trace →

Where to begin

Start by separating your direct exposure from your indirect exposure, and take the indirect channel seriously, because it is almost certainly larger than the direct one and far less visible. Map your supply chain deeply enough to see where tariff and trade risk actually enters, then reprice your major sourcing decisions against current conditions rather than the assumptions they were originally made under.

From there, work the playbook in priority order: diversify where concentration creates real risk, rethink network and origin where it moves tariff exposure, set a resilience inventory posture for your critical inputs, and build the scenario planning that lets you stay ahead of a policy environment that will keep changing. Treat this as a capability to build rather than a crisis to survive, and the same volatility that threatens less-prepared competitors becomes an advantage.

The era of cheap, stable, predictable trade is not coming back on the old terms. Tariffs and fragmentation are part of the operating environment now. The businesses that respond with visibility, deliberate sourcing, and genuine agility will not just absorb the shock. They will be the ones their customers can rely on when others cannot.

Related reading: Supply Chain Resilience: Navigating Global Trade Tensions · Procurement · Strategy & Network Design

People & Perspectives

Transforming Government Supply Chains in Australia

David Carroll
David Carroll
June 2026
Government supply chains are under more pressure, and more reform, than at any point in a decade. Here's what's driving the transformation and how to deliver it without the usual public-sector traps.

Supply Chain Transformation in Australian Government

Australian government supply chains are under more pressure, and more active reform, than at almost any point in the last decade. The forces are stacking on top of one another: a procurement framework that changed materially in late 2025, a sustained national focus on sovereign capability and resilience, the largest defence investment in a generation, and frontline services in health, aged care, and emergency response being asked to deliver more with budgets that will not stretch to match demand. Each of these is a supply chain question before it is anything else.

For the agencies and departments in the middle of it, this is a genuine transformation moment, not a tidy-up. The way government plans, sources, moves, sustains, and stocks the goods and services it relies on is being reshaped, and the organisations that treat that as a structural shift rather than a compliance exercise will be the ones that come out ahead.

This article is for public sector leaders, programme owners, and defence and agency executives thinking about how to transform their supply chains. It covers what transformation actually means in a government context, the forces driving it right now, why it is harder in the public sector than in the private, what good looks like, and how to deliver it without falling into the traps that catch so many public sector programmes.

What supply chain transformation means in government

It helps to be clear about scope, because in government the term gets used narrowly. Supply chain transformation is often reduced to procurement reform, how the agency buys, which contracts it lets, how it complies with the rules. Procurement matters enormously, and we will come to the reforms, but it is one element of a much larger picture.

A government supply chain is the full end-to-end system that gets capability and services to the point of need. For defence, that is sustainment, logistics, and the readiness of the force. For health and aged care, it is the flow of consumables, equipment, and the workforce that delivers care. For emergency services and policing, it is the evidence, equipment, and logistics that keep a statewide network functioning. Transformation touches all of it: network and facility design, inventory and sustainment, workforce planning and rostering, technology and data, supplier strategy, and resilience against disruption. Procurement sits inside that system, not above it.

Getting this scope right matters because the most expensive failures in government happen when one part is optimised in isolation. A procurement reform that lowers unit price but lengthens lead times, or a new facility that looks efficient on paper but ignores how the workforce actually operates, creates problems that cost far more than the saving. Transformation has to be designed across the whole chain.

The forces driving transformation now

Several pressures are converging, which is what makes this a transformation moment rather than business as usual.

Procurement reform is live and material. The Commonwealth Procurement Rules changed on 17 November 2025, and the changes are not cosmetic. The threshold for non-corporate Commonwealth entities on non-construction procurement rose from $80,000 to $125,000, the first lift to that threshold in a long time. More significantly, the rules now require non-corporate entities to prioritise Australian businesses, inviting only Australian businesses to tender for many non-panel procurements below the threshold, and only small and medium enterprises in certain cases once Indigenous Procurement Policy priorities are met. Ethical conduct has become an explicit factor in the value-for-money assessment, with officials now expected to make reasonable enquiries into a supplier's labour, work health and safety, and environmental practices. Alongside the rules, a publicly searchable Supplier Portal is being rolled out, identifying whether a supplier is an SME, an Australian business, an Indigenous business, or women-owned, and it becomes available to all businesses from July 2026.

The practical effect is that procurement is being used more deliberately as an economic and social lever, prioritising local industry, SMEs, Indigenous businesses, and ethical supply chains, while still anchored on value for money. For agencies, that means supplier strategies, market approaches, and supply chain transparency all need to be reconsidered, not just the paperwork.

Sovereign capability and resilience are now standing priorities. The disruptions of recent years, followed by sustained geopolitical volatility, have moved supply chain resilience from a periodic concern to a permanent one. Government is increasingly focused on the supply chains that matter most to national interest, fuel, critical minerals, pharmaceuticals, food, defence materiel, and on understanding dependencies several tiers deep rather than just at the first supplier. Friendshoring, nearshoring, and sovereign manufacturing are reshaping network design decisions that used to be made on cost alone. We have written about this shift in the context of navigating global trade tensions, and it is now embedded in how government thinks about supply.

Defence sustainment is the quiet half of the investment. The Australian Defence Force runs one of the country's largest and most complex supply chains, with billions invested annually in procurement, sustainment, and logistics, and that performance is directly tied to operational readiness and national security. The headline investment goes to acquisition, but acquisition wins battles and sustainment wins wars, as we have argued in our work on defence supply chains. Transforming the sustainment supply chain, spares, MRO, inventory, and the n-tier supplier base behind it, is where a great deal of the real value sits.

Frontline service delivery is straining the operational supply chain. Health, aged care, and emergency services are facing rising demand against constrained budgets, and much of the pressure lands on operational supply chains: the consumables, equipment, logistics, and workforce that keep services running. Doing more with the same requires the supply chain to work harder and smarter, which is a transformation problem.

Technology and data are finally usable. N-tier visibility, AI-enabled forecasting, scenario modelling, and analytics platforms have matured to the point where they can genuinely improve government supply chains, provided they are deployed on top of sound process rather than as a substitute for it.

Why it is harder in government than in the private sector

Supply chain transformation is difficult anywhere. In government it carries an extra layer of constraint that private sector playbooks do not account for, and ignoring that is why imported corporate approaches so often stall.

Probity and accountability sit over everything. Decisions must be defensible, transparent, and compliant with the procurement framework, which rightly limits the speed and flexibility available. Budget cycles are annual and often siloed, which makes multi-year transformation investment genuinely hard to fund and sustain. Legacy systems and entrenched processes are common, and replacing them is slow. Risk aversion is structural, because the consequences of a visible failure are political as well as operational. And machinery-of-government changes can reshape responsibilities midway through a programme.

None of this is an argument against transformation. It is an argument for transformation designed specifically for the public sector environment, with business cases that survive scrutiny, change approaches built for risk-averse cultures, and delivery that respects probity rather than treating it as an obstacle.

What good transformation looks like

The principles that separate successful government supply chain transformation from the programmes that disappoint are consistent.

It is strategy-led, not technology-led. The starting point is the operational and policy outcome the supply chain exists to deliver, not the platform someone wants to buy. Technology is sequenced in to accelerate a sound process, never to substitute for one.

It is built on a business case that withstands scrutiny. Public investment demands a defensible case, complete on costs, honest on benefits, clear on risk, and proportionate to the scale of the decision. This is the discipline that gets transformation funded and keeps it funded, and it is the same rigour the government's own investment frameworks demand.

It sees the whole chain, several tiers deep. Real visibility means going beyond the first supplier to map dependencies, choke points, and concentration risk through the n-tier base. For resilience and sustainment alike, the risks that matter usually sit below the surface.

It designs resilience and sovereignty in, rather than bolting them on. Network design, supplier strategy, and inventory decisions now have to weigh resilience and sovereign capability alongside cost, because the cost of fragility has been demonstrated too many times to ignore.

It embeds capability rather than dependency. The best transformation leaves the agency more capable, with its people equipped to run the new model, not permanently reliant on external support to operate what was built.

And it is delivered with change management built for the public sector. Stakeholder engagement, probity, and a culture that is necessarily cautious all have to be worked with, not around.

The Australian context

The structure of this country sharpens all of it. Australia's geography, long distances, dispersed population, and remote operations, makes logistics and network design materially harder and more expensive than in compact markets, and that is before the demands of operating across a continent and a region. The trade exposure is real, with a small number of partners accounting for a large share of both imports and exports, which is precisely why sovereign capability and resilience have moved up the agenda. And the defence environment, in an era of significant capability investment and close alliance commitments, places sustainment and supply chain readiness at the centre of national security rather than the periphery.

This is the environment in which Australian government supply chains are being transformed, and it rewards approaches grounded in the local reality rather than imported wholesale.

How Trace Consultants can help

At Trace Consultants, supply chain transformation for government and defence is core to what we do, and we bring credentials to it that are genuinely public-sector, not borrowed from corporate work. Our government and defence practice combines deep supply chain expertise with direct experience inside the system, including leadership that has served as a Director in the Office of Supply Chain Resilience within the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, and practitioners with Australian Defence Force logistics backgrounds. Our team holds defence clearances and we are an approved provider on government panels, which means we can engage quickly and work on sensitive and classified programmes.

We transform across the whole chain, not just procurement. From network and facility design through sustainment, inventory, workforce planning, and resilience, we work end-to-end, so improvements in one part do not create problems in another. Our strategy and network design work anchors transformation in the operational outcome the supply chain exists to deliver.

We navigate the new procurement environment. We help agencies translate the reformed Commonwealth Procurement Rules into supplier strategies and market approaches that prioritise Australian business, SMEs, and ethical supply chains while still delivering value for money. Our procurement practice links procurement to supply chain strategy rather than treating it as a standalone compliance task.

We map risk and build resilience several tiers deep. Using n-tier analysis, scenario modelling, and contingency planning, we uncover the dependencies and choke points that first-tier views miss, and design the sovereign capability and resilience that national interest now demands. This is the work behind our perspective on building supply chain resilience for government.

We deliver transformation that survives the public sector environment. We build business cases that withstand scrutiny, change approaches suited to risk-averse cultures, and capability that stays with the agency after we leave.

Explore our Government & Defence capability →

Speak to an expert at Trace →

Where to begin

If you are an agency leader weighing transformation, start with the outcome and the end-to-end picture rather than the part that is easiest to point at. Map your supply chain beyond the first tier to see where the real risk and cost sit, and be honest about which pressures, procurement reform, resilience, sustainment, service-delivery strain, are most material to your mandate.

From there, build a business case proportionate to the decision, sequence technology behind sound process, and design the change for the environment you actually operate in rather than the one a corporate playbook assumes. Above all, treat probity and accountability as design parameters, not obstacles, because a transformation that cannot be defended will not be sustained.

Government supply chains are being reshaped by forces that are not going away. The agencies that approach this as a structural transformation, designed for the public sector and grounded in the Australian context, will deliver better services, stronger resilience, and better value for the public money behind them. That is the prize, and it is well within reach.

Workforce Planning & Scheduling

NDIS Provider Operating Excellence 2026

A practitioner's guide to NDIS provider operating excellence in 2026, addressing the workforce constraint, operating discipline, and the operating model decisions that determine provider sustainability.

NDIS Provider Operating Excellence: A 2026 Guide for Australian Providers

The National Disability Insurance Scheme is now one of the largest service delivery programmes in Australia, supporting hundreds of thousands of participants across a provider market that includes everything from large national organisations to small specialised services. The scheme has matured. The operating environment for providers has changed with it.

The high-growth phase of the scheme, when participant numbers were expanding rapidly and the operating context was relatively forgiving, has given way to a more disciplined environment. Pricing has tightened. Workforce supply is constrained. Compliance expectations are higher. Participant expectations are higher. The providers who thrive in this environment are not the ones with the most polished marketing or the largest geographic footprint. They are the ones with the tightest operating discipline: workforce models that deliver consistent quality at sustainable cost, scheduling capability that protects continuity of carer, service delivery that meets participant goals without absorbing the margin, and the operating rhythm that surfaces problems early enough to fix them.

Operating excellence in the NDIS provider sector is no longer optional. It is the difference between sustainable margin and structural margin compression. This guide is the practitioner's framework for NDIS provider operating excellence in 2026. It covers the operating environment, the workforce model that sits at the centre, the scheduling and service delivery discipline, the back-office capability required to scale sustainably, and the common operating failure patterns that determine whether a provider grows or struggles.

The operating environment in 2026

Three forces are reshaping the operating environment for Australian NDIS providers in 2026, and providers cannot ignore any of them.

The first is pricing pressure. The NDIA reviews provider pricing annually, and the direction of travel for the past two cycles has been toward greater pricing discipline, tighter rules around travel and administration, and more national consistency in pricing across regions. Providers that were comfortably profitable at 2022 pricing settings are not automatically profitable at 2026 pricing settings without operating model adjustment.

The second is workforce pressure. Disability support workers, allied health professionals, support coordinators, and accommodation managers are all in workforce markets affected by national shortages, competition from adjacent sectors including aged care and public health, and rising wage costs through award and EBA settlements. Retention is harder. Agency reliance is more expensive. Recruitment cycles are longer.

The third is compliance and quality pressure. The NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission continues to enforce standards across registered and unregistered providers. Documentation discipline, billing accuracy, and incident management have all moved from administrative concerns to board-level operating concerns. Providers that treat compliance as paperwork are exposed to risks that can shut the business.

The combined effect is an operating environment that demands a tighter operating model than the one that worked when the scheme was in its high-growth phase. Providers cannot rely on participant growth to absorb operating drift. The operating model has to work on its own merits.

Workforce: the central operating lever

For NDIS providers, workforce is the largest cost line, the dominant determinant of service quality, the primary regulatory exposure, and the constraint that bounds operational growth. Workforce planning is therefore the central operating model lever. The provider that builds the right workforce model captures margin and quality outcomes that no other intervention delivers at the same return.

A modern NDIS provider workforce model has six components.

Workforce demand modelling. The starting point is a precise view of the workforce demand the operating model needs to deliver. Participant numbers, service mix, support intensity, geographic distribution, and the time-of-day demand profile all shape this. Most providers we encounter have a less granular demand view than they need. The gap shows up as chronic over-staffing in some areas, chronic under-staffing in others, and persistent reliance on agency to absorb the variance.

Workforce supply analysis. Against the demand profile, the supply analysis covers permanent workforce, contracted hours, voluntary overtime, casual pool depth, and agency dependency. The gap between demand and supply is what drives cost and risk. The supply analysis identifies where the gap is structural (insufficient permanent headcount) versus operational (sufficient headcount but poor deployment).

Workforce mix design. Permanent versus casual, full-time versus part-time, generalist versus specialist, on-site versus mobile, regular versus relief. The right mix varies by service category, geography, and the participant cohort the provider serves. The wrong mix shows up as fixed cost rigidity, agency reliance, or service continuity problems.

Recruitment and retention. The disability support labour market is tight, particularly in regional and outer-metropolitan locations and for specialist roles. Recruitment strategy, employer brand, career pathway design, and retention drivers all sit inside the workforce model. Retention is the most under-managed lever. A provider that reduces unwanted turnover by 20 per cent typically captures more margin improvement than a provider that runs a recruitment campaign.

Capability development. Quality and Safeguards expectations include implicit and explicit expectations of workforce capability. The capability development rhythm that produces the workforce the regulatory environment expects is a deliberate operating model component, not an ad hoc training programme.

Performance and engagement. Workforce engagement is the input that drives retention and quality. Performance management is what surfaces underperformance early. Most providers run one or the other reasonably well. Few run both.

The integrated workforce model is what allows a provider to deliver consistent service quality, control cost, manage continuity of carer, and protect margin simultaneously. Without it, the provider is solving the same problems repeatedly through tactical interventions.

Scheduling and service delivery: where the workforce model becomes real

The workforce model lives or dies in the scheduling layer. Scheduling produces the planned service delivery against participant plans. Daily scheduling handles the reality of variation: a participant cancellation, an unplanned absence, a hospital admission, a family request, a change in support needs. Both together determine whether the participant gets a consistent quality of service and whether the provider operates within sustainable cost parameters.

Most scheduling failures we see in human services environments are not technology failures. They are process and discipline failures.

Scheduling done badly looks like: rosters built reactively against participant plans without geographic clustering or continuity considerations. Permanent staff with shift patterns that no longer reflect participant mix. Casual pool members allocated by availability rather than skill match. Travel time absorbed without governance. Last-minute changes cascading into agency calls or workforce overtime without structured response.

Scheduling done well looks like: rosters built from the workforce demand model and the participant plan picture, with deliberate geographic clustering and continuity of carer principles. Permanent shift patterns reviewed regularly against the actual participant mix. Casual pool managed by skill match, fairness, and continuity. Travel time governed through structured route planning. Real-time scheduling visibility with decision-rights frameworks for site leaders. Replacement decisions made quickly enough to prevent agency calls where avoidable.

For mobile and community-based services in particular, travel time and geographic clustering are central operating variables. Pricing rules around travel have tightened over recent cycles, making mobile service economics more challenging. The providers operating mobile services efficiently in 2026 are treating route optimisation, clustering, and travel discipline as structural operating capabilities, not as scheduling afterthoughts.

For more on the workforce planning, rostering, and scheduling discipline across human services, our Workforce Planning and Scheduling practice covers the operating layer in depth.

Agency cost: the persistent operating issue

Agency cost is one of the most consistent operational issues across Australian NDIS providers. The cost differential between permanent and agency workers is significant. The continuity of carer impact is material. The compliance and quality risk associated with high agency use is real. Yet agency dependency persists across many providers, often at materially higher levels than the operating model needs.

Agency dependency is rarely a deliberate decision. It is the accumulation of small failures across recruitment, retention, rostering, casual pool management, and scheduling. Breaking out of it requires structured intervention, not tactical cost cuts.

The agency reduction pattern that works covers four steps. Quantify the current agency cost by service category, location, shift type, and cause (vacancy, unplanned absence, peak demand, skill match). Identify the proportion of agency use that reflects structural workforce gaps versus operational inefficiency. Build the permanent workforce in the areas where structural gaps exist and lift the scheduling discipline in the areas where operational inefficiency is the cause. Track the agency reduction outcome at site or team level monthly, not as an aggregated KPI.

In our experience, providers that approach agency reduction structurally typically see meaningful reductions over six to twelve months. Providers that approach it tactically (through procurement renegotiation alone, or through one-off recruitment drives) see modest short-term improvement that erodes within the year.

The service portfolio question

NDIS providers operate across a range of support categories: core daily living supports, capacity building, capital supports, therapy services, plan management, support coordination, and various accommodation models including supported and short-term accommodation. Each category has different economic characteristics, different workforce requirements, and different operating model implications.

The strategic portfolio question facing providers in 2026 is which categories to grow, which to maintain, and which to exit or transition. The right answer varies by provider scale, geography, workforce capability, and operating model maturity. The wrong answer is to maintain the historical portfolio without active review against the current operating environment.

Three patterns recur across providers reviewing their portfolio.

Mobile and travel-intensive services have become more economically demanding as travel-related pricing rules have tightened. Providers maintaining mobile services in dispersed geographies need denser clustering, group and centre-based delivery alternatives where appropriate, and structured route optimisation to maintain viability.

Plan management and similar administrative services depend more on scale and automation than they did when fee structures were more generous. Sub-scale operations in these categories often no longer pay back the operating overhead.

Accommodation services (supported and short-term) remain capital-intensive and workforce-intensive. The strategic question is portfolio composition, asset utilisation, and participant fit rather than service delivery efficiency alone.

The portfolio review is not a one-off exercise. It is an ongoing operating discipline that should sit alongside the annual financial planning rhythm.

Compliance, quality, and the data spine

NDIS providers operate in a higher-compliance environment than most adjacent service industries. Quality and Safeguards expectations, documentation requirements, billing accuracy, and incident management discipline all sit inside the operating model. The compliance capability that satisfied a less scrutinised environment is unlikely to satisfy the current one.

The data and technology capability that supports compliance and operating excellence has four components.

Workforce and scheduling data. Rostering systems, time and attendance, payroll integration, and the data flow that allows the workforce model to be managed actively rather than retrospectively.

Participant and service delivery data. Service agreements, plan tracking, service delivery records, progress notes, incident reports, and the documentation flow that supports both quality outcomes and billing.

Billing and revenue data. Claim accuracy, claim cycle time, claim rejection rates, and the analytics that surface revenue leakage early.

Performance and analytics layer. Workforce utilisation, agency cost trajectory, participant outcomes, quality indicators, and the operational analytics that allow leadership to manage the provider operation rather than just observe it.

Most providers we encounter have built up their data and technology capability incrementally rather than designed it deliberately. A patchwork of systems acquired over time produces reconciliation work, duplicate data entry, and reporting gaps that absorb leadership attention that should be spent on service delivery. Targeted investment in the data and technology spine pays back across compliance, workforce management, and revenue performance simultaneously.

For more on the technology and integration discipline that underpins this capability, our Technology practice covers selection and implementation.

The leadership operating rhythm

Operating excellence does not survive without a leadership operating rhythm. The rhythm is the set of recurring forums, reviews, and decisions that hold the operating model together at site, regional, and executive level.

The rhythm we see in providers who run well covers four levels.

Daily. At site or team level, the daily handover, the day's scheduled service delivery, the day's exceptions, the day's incidents. Site or team leaders own this rhythm.

Weekly. At regional or service category level, the weekly operational review covering workforce position, agency cost trajectory, scheduling discipline, complaints and incidents, and the trends that have emerged from the site-level rhythm. Regional leaders own this rhythm.

Monthly. At executive level, the monthly performance review covering financial position, workforce metrics, quality and compliance, participant outcomes, and the strategic issues that have emerged from the site and regional rhythms. Executive leaders own this rhythm.

Quarterly. Operating model review covering the strategic operating model decisions: portfolio, workforce mix, capability investment, technology, partnerships. Board and executive leaders own this rhythm.

The leadership rhythm is not the operating model, but the operating model does not deliver without it. Providers that run the rhythm consistently outperform providers that do not.

Where NDIS provider operating models fail

In our experience advising organisations on workforce planning and operating excellence across human services environments, five operating failure patterns recur. All of them are avoidable.

Jumping to solutions before understanding the problem. The most common pattern. A new rostering system, a recruitment drive, an agency procurement renegotiation, a workforce restructure. All deployed before the team has understood the actual shape of the operating problem at site level. The result is investment without operating improvement.

Treating compliance and operating excellence as the same thing. Compliance documentation passes audit. Operating excellence delivers service and protects margin. The two are related but not identical. Providers that focus only on compliance often pass audits while their operating model deteriorates underneath.

Underweighting change management. New workforce models, new scheduling disciplines, and new technology platforms all require structured change management. The change effort is consistently underweighted relative to the technical effort. Adoption then fails, and the investment does not deliver.

Centralising decisions that should sit at site or team level. Operating excellence in human services is local. Site and team leaders need decision rights on scheduling, agency calls, and exception handling. Centralising those decisions in regional or head office structures slows the response and increases cost.

Failing to measure what matters. Most providers measure the things that are easy to measure (cost lines, turnover percentages) rather than the things that drive performance (continuity of carer by participant, agency cost by cause, scheduling adherence by team). The measurement frame shapes the management response. The wrong frame produces the wrong response.

The common thread is that operating excellence is a discipline, not an outcome. The providers who build the discipline outperform the providers who treat it as a series of interventions.

How Trace Consultants can help

Trace Consultants advises Australian organisations on workforce planning, rostering, scheduling, and the broader operating model required to manage workforce as a strategic asset. We work with providers across human services environments, including aged care, broader health, hospitality, and adjacent sectors where workforce, service delivery, and operating discipline determine outcomes. Our positioning is deliberate: senior-led, partner-anchored, vendor-agnostic.

Workforce planning, rostering, and scheduling. Our Workforce Planning and Scheduling practice supports the demand modelling, supply analysis, scheduling design, and agency reduction work that determines whether providers operate sustainably.

Operating model design and review. We work with provider leadership teams to design the integrated operating model across service portfolio, workforce, financial, and technology dimensions. The deliverable is a coherent operating model the provider can execute.

Procurement and supplier strategy. Our Procurement practice supports category strategy across agency, technology, vehicles and fleet, property, and the broader supplier portfolio.

Technology selection and implementation. Workforce management platforms, scheduling tools, practice management systems, and data integration capability are in scope of our Technology practice.

Programme delivery and change management. Where the operating excellence agenda is delivered as a transformation programme, our Project and Change Management practice supports the delivery and adoption.

Adjacent sector experience. Our work across Health and Aged Care brings the operating substrate to make recommendations practical. The methodologies translate cleanly across human services environments.

Explore our Workforce Planning and Scheduling services →

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Where to begin

If you are an NDIS provider leader scoping the operating excellence agenda for 2026, start with three questions. What is your workforce model against your actual service demand, by role, by geography, by shift, and where are the gaps? What is your agency cost line by service category and by cause, and what proportion is structural versus operational? What is the scheduling discipline at site or team level, and where does it break down under pressure?

If those three questions surface material gaps, the next step is a structured operating excellence review.

Frequently asked questions

What does operating excellence mean for an NDIS provider? The integrated discipline of workforce planning, rostering and scheduling, agency management, service portfolio choices, compliance, technology, and leadership rhythm that allows a provider to deliver quality service sustainably. It is a discipline, not a one-off intervention.

Why does workforce model design matter so much? Workforce is the largest cost line, the dominant determinant of service quality, the primary regulatory exposure, and the constraint that bounds operational growth. A weak workforce model shows up as agency dependency, quality issues, retention problems, and margin compression simultaneously.

What is the typical agency cost issue? Many providers run agency cost lines materially higher than the operating model needs, driven by the accumulation of small failures across recruitment, retention, scheduling, and casual pool management. Structured intervention typically produces meaningful agency reduction over six to twelve months. Tactical cost cuts typically do not.

How do you reduce agency cost without compromising quality? Quantify the current agency cost by service category, location, shift type, and cause. Identify what is structural versus operational. Build permanent capacity where the gap is structural. Lift scheduling discipline where the gap is operational. Track the reduction at site or team level, not as an aggregated KPI.

Why is continuity of carer important? Continuity of carer is a quality dimension and a retention dimension simultaneously. Participants and families value consistency. Workforce engagement improves when carers build sustained relationships with the people they support. Scheduling for continuity is harder than scheduling for availability, and most legacy approaches optimise for the wrong variable.

How long does it take to lift operating excellence? Material operating improvements typically take six to eighteen months depending on scope. Scheduling discipline can lift in three to six months with structured intervention. Workforce mix redesign and agency reduction typically takes six to twelve months. Broader operating model transformation typically takes twelve to eighteen months.

What is the most common operating failure pattern? Jumping to solutions before understanding the problem. A new rostering system, a recruitment campaign, or an agency procurement renegotiation deployed before the underlying operating issue has been diagnosed. The result is investment without operating improvement. Diagnosis first, intervention second.

How does operating excellence interact with compliance? Compliance is necessary but not sufficient. Operating excellence delivers service and protects margin while maintaining compliance. Providers that focus only on compliance often pass audits while their operating model deteriorates underneath. The two need to be managed together.

Where should an NDIS provider start? With an honest current state of the workforce model against service demand, the agency cost line by category and cause, and the scheduling discipline at site or team level. The starting point is operational reality, not a target operating model designed in the abstract.

Operating excellence in the NDIS provider sector is not glamorous. It is the daily discipline of workforce model, scheduling, agency management, service portfolio choices, and leadership rhythm that determines whether a provider runs sustainably under sustained operating pressure. The providers who build the discipline outperform. The providers who treat operating excellence as a series of interventions do not.

If you are scoping the operating excellence agenda for 2026, the work starts at site level.

Explore our Workforce Planning and Scheduling services →

Speak to an expert at Trace →

Related reading: Workforce Planning and Scheduling · Health and Aged Care · Procurement · Technology · Project and Change Management · Insights

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