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Mathew Tolley

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Mathew has over 15 years of experience in the public and private sector, advising senior executives on technical solutions in operations and supply chain, from design and development through to system implementation. This experience has been gained in sectors including hospitality, distribution, retail, telecommunications, fast-moving consumer goods, pharmaceutical products, food processing, after-market parts, and the Australian Defence Force.

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Tim Fagan

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Tim has over 10 years experience in collaboratively working clients to find the right technology solution to meet their unique needs. With a background in tactical solution development, best of breed system implementation, system requirements definition, multi-language programming, (plus an undergraduate and postgraduate in Mechatronics) Tim has the expertise to support clients navigate their supply chain technology journey.

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How Australian Supply Chains Are Being Rebuilt

I do less travel and more thinking these days. Here is how I think Australian supply chains are being rebuilt this decade, what is actually changing in commercial operations, where the real cost-out is, and why the next ten years will be won by execution rather than strategy.

How I Think Australian Supply Chains Are Being Rebuilt This Decade

For a stretch a couple of years back, I was on the Melbourne to Perth flight every week. Some of my clearest thinking about supply chains happened at thirty thousand feet over the Nullarbor on a Thursday evening. That pattern compressed when our third arrived in November. The travel is lighter now, the house is busier, and the thinking happens at the eleven o'clock dream feed and on the cab ride into Sydney. The setting changes. The thinking continues.

The conversation, lately, is some version of this. The supply chain we built for the last decade is not going to work for the next one, and we need to fix it without spending more, in fact probably while taking cost out, while also adding new layers of regulation and resilience and reporting that did not exist five years ago, and finding the people to do the work, and putting some kind of artificial intelligence into the mix because the board has asked.

I have had a version of that conversation in retail, FMCG, hospitality, property, industrial manufacturing, health and aged care, financial services, and construction in the last six months. The products are different. The margins are different. The customers are different. The conversation is identical.

This is what I think has shifted, what I think comes next, and what I think the leaders I respect should be doing about it. It is not a list of trends. It is what I actually think, including the parts that are unpopular with my own profession.

The end of single-source efficiency

Australian supply chain practice for the last thirty years was built on a single big idea. Find the lowest landed cost. Source it from a single, scaled supplier. Build the network around the inventory. Optimise the working capital. Hold a small safety buffer. Repeat.

It worked, for a long time. The economics were genuine. China matured into the world's manufacturer at a pace that flattered every cost-out program it touched. Container freight got cheaper in real terms, year after year. Trade liberalised, mostly. A generation of supply chain leaders built careers on landed-cost models that assumed all of this would continue. A generation of boards backed them.

Then 2020 happened, and 2021, and 2022, and we are all still standing in the rubble pretending we have moved on.

The events themselves have been written about exhaustively. What I think gets written about less honestly is the cumulative effect on Australian boards. The pandemic stockouts. The Suez Canal blockage. The Chinese trade sanctions on barley, beef, wine, and lobster. The 2022 fertiliser crisis. The 2023 AdBlue scare, when the diesel additive that keeps every modern truck running nearly ran out across the country. The collapse of the global liquid urea supply when one country decided to keep its production at home. The Hormuz fuel exposure that we modelled across a dozen sectors earlier this year. None of these were defence stories. They were commercial stories. They hit retailers, manufacturers, transport operators, mining companies, hospitality groups, and farmers. They did not feel like supply chain shocks at the time. They felt like operational ambushes.

What happened in the boardroom over those four years, in my view, is that concentration risk got repriced. Not in a dramatic, revolutionary way. In a quiet, steady, line-item way. Risk committees started asking different questions. Internal audit started flagging single-source dependencies that used to be invisible. CFOs who had spent a decade praising lean inventory started asking whether maybe a bit more buffer was prudent, just in case. Procurement teams who had been measured purely on landed cost started getting questions about supplier geography that they did not have ready answers for.

The shift I now see, almost universally, is that single-source-is-cheapest has stopped being a defensible position with most boards. It is not that boards have abandoned cost. They have not. Cost discipline is, if anything, more demanding than it was. The shift is that "cheapest" no longer wins an argument by itself. It has to be defended against a residual risk position, an alternative-supplier scenario, and a question about what happens if the country of origin has a bad year.

For most commercial operators, the answer is not full reshoring. The maths does not work, and frankly most of the people writing those articles have not had to defend the unit economics in a board pack. The answer is some form of deliberate redundancy. A second source, often regional, sometimes domestic. A modest inventory buffer in critical categories. A tighter relationship with the primary supplier so you find out about problems earlier. Maybe a small investment in onshore finishing, packaging, or assembly that lets you respond to demand changes faster.

This sounds simple. It is not. Building a credible second source for a category that has been single-sourced for a decade takes eighteen to thirty months. It costs working capital. It requires a procurement team capable of managing a portfolio rather than running a tender. And it has to be funded, paradoxically, while the same procurement team is being asked to deliver year-on-year cost savings on the existing book.

The companies I see making genuine progress on this are the ones who have stopped framing resilience and cost-out as competing priorities. They have figured out that, done well, deliberate redundancy is a cost-management strategy, not a cost burden. A second source disciplines the primary supplier on price. A small onshore capability prevents the catastrophic stockout that dwarfs the line-item premium. A sensible buffer reduces expediting costs, air freight, and customer-service compensation. The framing is "redundancy as insurance with a positive return profile," not "redundancy as a tax on resilience."

The companies still struggling are the ones who treat resilience as something the risk function does and cost-out as something the procurement function does and never reconcile the two.

Sovereign capability is now a commercial question

A specific version of the resilience argument has been getting most of the political airtime, which is sovereign capability. The framing tends to come dressed in defence language because the most visible Australian programs in this space are defence programs, and politicians enjoy speaking about submarines and frigates more than they enjoy speaking about urea.

This is a mistake of audience. Sovereign capability has become a commercial question, and the operators figuring it out fastest are not in defence.

Walk into a major Australian retailer right now and you will find someone, usually quite junior, building a list. The list is the SKUs whose primary source of supply is a single country, in many cases a single facility, where a ninety-day disruption would create a material problem. The list is shorter than people expect, but the items on it are more concentrated than people expect. Once you have the list, the conversation changes. It is no longer "how do we cut three percent from the cost of goods." It is "what would it cost to make sure we could replace these in ninety days, and is that less or more than the disruption cost of not being able to."

I have done versions of this work for retailers, FMCG manufacturers, health groups, hospitality operators, and infrastructure clients in the last twelve months. The patterns repeat. The number of genuinely critical, single-source, single-country SKUs is usually between ten and thirty. The cost of building credible alternative supply for those SKUs, properly scoped, is usually between one and three percent of the total category spend. The avoided cost of a single realistic disruption event, properly modelled, is usually a multiple of that. The economics work. They almost always work.

What stops the work from getting done is not the economics. It is the absence of someone to own it. Procurement is set up to run tenders, not to build supply optionality. Risk is set up to monitor exposures, not to fund mitigations. Operations is set up to keep the lines running, not to invest in things that are not on a critical path today. Finance is set up to ask whether this quarter's number is on track. Sovereign capability work, in commercial organisations, falls in the gap between all of these functions. The companies making progress are the ones who have figured out where to put the accountability, usually within a strengthened procurement or strategy and network design function, and who have given that role enough air cover to make decisions that look, at first glance, like cost increases.

The deeper point is that sovereignty in the commercial world is not about national pride or government policy. It is about which fifteen things you cannot afford to be without. The framing on a recent diligence I worked on was: if our top customer asked us tomorrow whether we could guarantee continuity of supply across our material categories, in writing, what would we say. The honest answer in most cases is "we could not." The next question is "what would it take to be able to."

That is a commercial question. It is also one of the cleanest cost-and-risk problems I have worked on in years, because the answer is bounded, the work is concrete, and the value, if you do it well, shows up in two places. It shows up in the avoided-loss line, where you can model the disruption cost. And it shows up in the procurement line, because the existence of a credible second source disciplines pricing on the first.

The defence programs in the public eye are the most visible expression of this shift, and they will be the case studies that get written about for the rest of the decade. I would rather you spent your time on the version of the question that lives inside your own organisation. It is more valuable, more tractable, and more urgent. The people building the lists right now are not waiting for the policy environment to settle.

The trade architecture has permanently changed

The third thing I think has shifted, and the one most clients still mentally treat as temporary, is the global trade architecture.

The decade from roughly 2008 to 2018 was the high-water mark of trade liberalisation as a default. Free trade agreements proliferated. Tariffs trended down. Cross-border supply chains grew more complex because the friction was getting less, not more. Most of the planning assumptions baked into Australian commercial supply chains were laid down in this period. You could plan a five-year sourcing strategy on the assumption that the trade environment in year five would be roughly the trade environment in year one, with some adjustments at the margin.

That assumption is gone. It is not coming back.

The recent shifts in US trade policy, the periodic Chinese sanctions episodes, the new European tax on imports based on their carbon footprint, the various export controls that have been brought in on critical minerals and advanced computer chips for national security reasons, the steady maturing of trade policy as a routine instrument of geopolitical pressure, all of these point in the same direction. Tariffs, sanctions, and export controls are now policy tools that any government will use, predictably, in response to events that have nothing to do with your supply chain. You should plan for that, the way you plan for currency volatility or interest rate changes. It is now part of the operating environment.

What this means in practical terms, for an Australian importer or exporter, is that the question of where you source from is no longer adequately answered by "wherever is cheapest." You need a coherent geographic portfolio. The companies I see doing this well have stopped trying to find a single best country to source from and have started thinking in portfolios. Keep a strong position in China for the categories where the cost advantage is genuinely structural and the geopolitical risk is manageable. Build a meaningful second position somewhere in Southeast Asia, usually some combination of Vietnam, Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, occasionally the Philippines. Add an Indian or domestic capability for specific categories where the strategic case is strongest. Manage that portfolio actively, the way you would manage a portfolio of customers or financial assets, rather than passively.

This is harder than it sounds. Running a sourcing strategy across three or four geographies, instead of one, is materially more demanding. Lead times are longer in most of the alternative geographies. Quality systems are different. Logistics infrastructure is uneven. The supplier base is less mature. The trade agreements are different. The freight forwarding network is fragmented. Most procurement teams in Australia are not built for this. They were optimised for a single-geography world and the muscle for genuine portfolio management has atrophied.

There is also a quieter cost that does not get talked about much. Diversifying out of China at scale, in most categories, makes your overall cost go up. Not enormously. Three to seven percent in most cases I have worked on. Sometimes more in highly automated categories where Chinese productivity is genuinely structural. The boards that are doing this well have accepted the cost increase and committed to make it back through working capital release, network optimisation, automation, and tighter supplier management. The boards that are not are doing one of two things. They are either pretending the cost increase will not happen, in which case the procurement team will eventually disappoint them. Or they are using the trade environment as an excuse to avoid the diversification, in which case they will eventually be ambushed by the next round of policy changes.

I do not think this is a crisis. I think it is a permanent recalibration, and the operators who treat it as a temporary disruption to be waited out will be the ones who get caught when the next round comes.

Cost-out has not gone anywhere. It has compounded.

If there is a single sentence that best describes what has actually changed in commercial supply chains over the last three years, it is probably this. The list of things the supply chain function is expected to deliver has roughly doubled, and the budget has not.

Three years ago, a reasonably senior supply chain leader in an Australian commercial business was expected to manage cost-of-goods, optimise working capital, run a credible procurement function, keep the network operating, and report on a few performance metrics. The agenda was wide enough.

Today, that same person is expected to do all of the above, and manage emissions reporting across their entire supplier base under the new climate disclosure rules, and respond to regulator-driven supply chain mapping requirements where they apply, and assess and mitigate concentration risk across their critical categories, and evaluate and pilot artificial intelligence applications across planning and procurement, and navigate the people and skills shortage that is hitting most of their function, and keep delivering year-on-year cost reduction because the CFO has not changed her view about the size of the procurement savings target.

The budget has not doubled. The team has not doubled. In many cases the team has shrunk because the previous round of cost-out included the supply chain function itself. The expectation that all of this gets done in parallel, with the same or fewer resources, is the thing that makes the current operating environment genuinely difficult, in a way that boards and CEOs do not always appreciate.

This is the texture I think most commentary about supply chains misses. Resilience, sustainability, technology, talent, sovereignty, and compliance are not replacing cost-out. They are stacking on top of it.

What has shifted, sharper than the volume of work, is the defensibility of the cost-out itself. Boards have been burned, repeatedly, by transformation programs that promised double-digit savings and delivered fragments. They have grown sceptical. The CFO who used to accept a procurement savings claim at face value now wants to see the baseline, the methodology, the assumptions, the run-rate, and the verifiable benefit. The savings number is not enough. The argument supporting the savings number is what gets scrutinised.

The way through this is not to hide from it. It is to invest in the analytical infrastructure that makes the defence of the saving easy. Historical headcount data going back four or five years. Org charts at multiple points in time. Activity-based costing, where it is feasible. A clear methodology written down before the conversation gets political. Reframing where it makes the message easier without compromising the substance. "Cost avoidance" rather than "cost reduction" lands better in some forums; the dollars are the same.

The deeper point I would make to any commercial leader running a cost-out program right now is that the operators who win this decade will not be the ones who promise the biggest savings. They will be the ones who promise defensible savings, and then deliver them. The premium on credibility is rising sharply. Boards are tired of being disappointed. Procurement leaders, supply chain leaders, and the consultants advising them, would do well to take that seriously.

I have come to think of cost-out, sovereignty, sustainability, technology, and resilience as a single integrated problem rather than five competing ones. The companies making the most progress are the ones who understand that resilience well done releases cost, sustainability well done finds waste, and technology well done takes labour out of the right places. The framing is not "how do I deliver cost-out and all this other stuff." It is "how do I deliver cost-out through all this other stuff." That is a more useful posture.

Australia has a productivity problem, and supply chains are part of the answer

There is a force operating underneath every conversation I described above that is bigger than any single company's supply chain agenda. Australia has a productivity problem.

The Productivity Commission has been documenting it for years. Treasury has flagged it in successive intergenerational reports. The numbers are stark by historical standards. Australia's productivity growth over the last decade has been at multi-decade lows. Output per hour worked has barely moved. Real wages cannot grow, sustainably, faster than productivity does, which means the productivity slowdown is also the wages slowdown, and the cost-of-living problem, and the housing affordability problem, and the budget problem, all of which connect back to the same root.

I am not an economist and I will not pretend to know all the levers that contribute to it. Migration patterns, capital investment intensity, energy costs, regulatory complexity, the mix of industries we have built. All of those matter. What I am qualified to say is that supply chains, operations, procurement, and workforce planning sit closer to the productivity question than most public commentary acknowledges.

Roughly half of every dollar of operating cost in most Australian commercial businesses goes through the supply chain or the labour roster in some way. Inventory carrying cost. Logistics. Procurement. Production planning. Workforce scheduling. Distribution. The processes that determine what a business sources, where it sources from, how it gets it to the customer, who does the work, and how the work is organised. If you make those processes ten percent more productive, you have moved a bigger lever than almost any other change a business can make.

The problem is that most Australian commercial operations are not anywhere near the productivity frontier. The forecasts are still run in spreadsheets. The networks are designed around facilities that were chosen for reasons that no longer apply. The procurement processes are run on systems that were modern in 2008. The rosters are built by hand. The decisions are made on data that arrives a week too late. The operating model is the operating model the business inherited, and nobody has been given the air cover to rebuild it.

This is the gap that the rebuild I have been describing through this piece is supposed to close. Smarter network design takes cost out and reduces lead times, which is productivity. Better technology takes routine work out of the day and lets people focus on the decisions that matter, which is productivity. Targeted AI in planning and procurement compresses analytical time and improves decision quality, which is productivity. Workforce planning that matches labour to demand more accurately reduces wasted hours, which is productivity. Resilience-driven dual sourcing, done well, improves supplier performance and reduces emergency expediting, which is productivity. Each of the themes in this article, taken seriously, is also a productivity story.

I do not think Australia's productivity problem gets solved by a single national policy. It gets solved by ten thousand commercial decisions to invest in better operations, better systems, better processes, and better people. Most of those decisions sit with the same operators I have been writing about all along. The leaders who treat their supply chain rebuild as a productivity investment, not just a cost-out exercise, are doing some of the most useful work in the country right now, in my view. They will not get the credit for it the way a politician gets credit for a press release. But the cumulative effect on Australia's economic performance over the next decade is, I suspect, larger than most policy packages will manage.

That, I think, is part of why this work matters. It is not only commercial. It is national.

Targeted benefits, faster, beats big platform transformation

Let me say this directly because I think it is the most important practical shift in supply chain technology in the last three years and most boards have not yet understood it.

The era of multi-year, multi millian dollar dollar transformation programs that promised everything and delivered fragments is over. It is over because boards will not fund it any more, and it is over because they should not have to. The capability stack now available to a moderately well-organised supply chain or procurement function makes the old transformation logic obsolete.

The new logic, the one I think the operators ahead of the curve are running, is roughly this. Identify a specific, measurable benefit pool. A category where forecast accuracy is poor and inventory is inflated. A function where invoice processing is taking up disproportionate time. A spend area where you do not really know where the money is going. A planning cycle where the analytical work consumes more time than the decisions it informs. Stand up a focused capability against that benefit pool. A new planning system selected, deployed, and operationalised. A pilot using smarter forecasting tools that pick up shifts in customer behaviour earlier than traditional models do. Better analytics on your spend data, feeding the next sourcing wave. An automated invoice processing tool. AI assistants handling routine procurement tasks end-to-end in a single category. Deliver the benefit inside six to twelve months. Measure it. Then go again, with the next benefit pool.

This is not a less ambitious model than the old transformation programs. It is more ambitious, because it is real. The old model promised forty million in benefits over three years and routinely delivered eight to twelve. The new model targets two to four million in a single category in nine months and routinely delivers it. Stack four or five of those over three years and the cumulative benefit is larger than the old transformation, the cash payback is materially faster, the organisational learning is deeper, and the risk profile is much lower because each phase stands on its own.

What I have seen change in the buying pattern, over the last twelve to eighteen months, is interesting and worth noting. Clients are increasingly asking for selection and implementation as a single piece of work, rather than separating them. The old model had a strategy firm pick the technology, then a system integrator implement it, then maybe an operations consultancy come in to operationalise it. Three vendors, three contracts, three sets of incentives, and a value leakage at every handoff. The new model wants one team to pick the right tool, embed it in the operation, and stay around long enough to make the value real. That is a different commercial offer, and it is the one most clients I speak to now genuinely want.

There is a frame I have used in a number of recent conversations that seems to land. The work in any consulting engagement breaks roughly into three zones. The early zone, where the strategic direction is set, the problem is framed, and the conviction is built. The middle zone, where the analysis happens, the models get built, the options get evaluated, the slides come together. The late zone, where the change actually has to happen on the floor, in the system, with the people doing the work.

Artificial intelligence does the middle zone genuinely well, and it is going to do it far better, and far cheaper, every twelve months. It does not do the early zone well, because conviction is a human act and an AI cannot have a coffee with a CEO who is wrestling with the trade-off between capital investment and short-term earnings. It does not do the late zone well either, because change management is fundamentally a relationship business and an AI cannot sit with a supervisor who is afraid the new system is going to make their team redundant.

This is going to reshape what supply chain technology is worth, and what supply chain people are worth, faster than most leadership teams have priced in. The planners and category managers who survive the next decade will be the ones who can do the strategic edge of their work and the execution edge of their work, with AI doing the analytical middle for them. The ones who built their careers on being faster and more accurate than the next person at building a model in Excel will struggle, because they were running a race that no human is going to win.

The honest counter-point, and it is a serious one, is that most Australian commercial businesses do not yet have the data foundations to run any of this well. The forecast accuracy uplift you can achieve from the smarter, machine-learning-based forecasting tools is real, sometimes very large, but it depends on having clean, detailed sales history at a product level, going back several years. The value of any tool that analyses where your money goes depends on consistent, well-coded supplier data. The AI assistants that promise to handle routine procurement tasks end-to-end depend on processes that are documented well enough to automate. The first investment for most clients I work with is not the AI tool. It is the unsexy, frustrating, slow work of fixing the master data, integrating the systems, and cleaning up the processes that the technology is supposed to sit on top of. Boards do not love this conversation, because there is no glamorous press release at the end of it. But the businesses that do this work are the ones who get to be in the AI conversation in three years' time. The ones that skip it will buy expensive software that fails to perform, blame the vendor, and conclude that AI is hype.

I think the next decade is going to separate Australian businesses, fairly cleanly, into two groups. The ones who built the data foundation and used AI to genuinely change their operating model, and the ones who put a chatbot on the front of an unchanged process and called it transformation. The cost gap between those two groups will be large enough to determine winners and losers in most commercial categories.

Procurement has quietly become a regulated function

There is a separate force at work in commercial supply chains that I think is underappreciated, even by people inside procurement.

The function used to be a commercial discipline. You ran tenders, negotiated contracts, managed suppliers, reported savings. The skills were commercial, analytical, and relational. Compliance existed, in modern slavery, in anti-bribery, in sanctions screening, but it was a side activity. The main game was commercial.

In the last three years, the compliance side has exploded, and it is no longer a side activity. It is the main game in several large commercial categories.

Australia's new mandatory climate reporting regime is the most obvious driver. The largest companies, those above $500 million in revenue, started reporting their direct emissions and electricity emissions from the start of 2025, with their full supply chain emissions becoming mandatory from their second reporting year. Mid-sized companies, above $200 million, follow from July 2026. Smaller companies above $50 million from July 2027. Within eighteen months, virtually every large and mid-sized Australian commercial business will be reporting on emissions across its full supply chain, which by definition sits across the supplier base, which means it sits on the procurement function's desk.

Then there is the new operational risk standard the banking regulator has brought in for the financial services industry. It now requires banks, insurers and super funds to map their critical service providers, work out where they have dangerous concentration, and prove they could keep operating if a major supplier went down. The work I have seen this generate inside major Australian banks is significant. It is not a one-off mapping exercise. It is an ongoing operational discipline that cuts through procurement, vendor management, technology, and risk. Procurement teams in financial services are now responsible for evidencing supplier resilience to a regulator, not just managing supplier cost. The shift in skill profile required is genuine.

Add modern slavery reporting, which is now reaching its second wave of maturity with stronger expectations on supplier engagement and remediation. Add the regulations covering critical infrastructure, which have expanded the perimeter of what gets treated as critical and brought new sectors into supply chain reporting obligations. Add the various environmental, social and governance reporting frameworks that have been brought in across different industries and states, all of which map onto the same supplier base. The cumulative effect is that procurement, which used to be a commercial function with a compliance overlay, is becoming a compliance-and-commercial function. The compliance is not optional, the data trail has to withstand external assurance, and the work has to happen at scale.

Most procurement teams in Australia are not built for this and do not yet know it. The capability profile that won in 2018, strong commercial negotiators with category depth, is still necessary but no longer sufficient. The new profile needs that, plus the ability to design data collection from suppliers, plus the ability to integrate emissions and operational risk data into category strategies, plus the ability to evidence the work to internal and external assurance providers, plus the ability to maintain all of this as the regulatory perimeter keeps expanding.

This shows up commercially in two ways. It shows up in the supplier conversation, where the top fifty suppliers in any large business are now being asked, in some combination, for their emissions data, modern slavery disclosures, evidence of business continuity planning, evidence of their cyber security, and proof that they could keep delivering if something went wrong. The good suppliers are starting to charge for this work, or to penalise customers who ask for it inconsistently. The poor suppliers are giving evasive answers, which is its own form of risk. It also shows up in the procurement contract itself, which is becoming a compliance instrument, with clauses on emissions reduction, supplier audit rights, data sharing, and resilience obligations. The negotiation is now harder, slower, and more multi-dimensional than it used to be.

The leaders who are getting this right are doing two things. They are investing in the data and process infrastructure that makes regulated procurement sustainable, rather than trying to spreadsheet their way through it. And they are being clear, internally, that this work is not a tax. It is a competitive advantage when done well. Knowing more about your supplier base than your competitors do is genuine value, and the regulators have just done procurement leaders the favour of mandating that they do the work.

The workforce squeeze, and the service line it has created

I have written before about the supply chain talent shortage in Australia, and most of what I said then I still believe. The mid-level capability is structurally short. The pipeline from universities is thin. The skill profile required has shifted faster than the supply of people has updated. The sectors competing for the same analytical and commercial talent, finance, technology, consulting, private equity, are all paying more than supply chain has historically paid. The geographic concentration in Sydney and Melbourne makes it harder still for clients in Perth, Brisbane, Adelaide, and the regions.

I do not think we are solving this fast enough as a profession or as a country. I am happy to be wrong, but the data and the conversations I am in keep saying the same thing. The mid-level, eight-to-fifteen years experience, capable of running a category, leading a planning cycle, owning a transformation, comfortable with technology and commercial work and a bit of regulation on top, is the scarcest profile in the market. Salaries are climbing for genuinely good people. Transformation programs are stalling because the people to lead them are not available. Internal promotions are happening earlier than they used to, which is good for individuals but creates fresh capability gaps below.

What I want to add to that conversation, because it is visible in our pipeline in a way that I had not fully appreciated until this year, is that workforce planning, rostering optimisation, and operating model design for labour-intensive operations have become one of the most actively bought services in the commercial market. Not as a constraint on supply chain transformation. As a service line in their own right.

Aged care providers are buying rostering optimisation, hard, because the regulatory environment has lifted the floor on care minutes (the minimum direct care time each resident must receive each day) and the labour cost base has gone up faster than the funding model. Health groups are buying it because nursing labour is the single largest controllable cost in a hospital and the workforce shortage means every roster is now a constraint problem. Hospitality groups are buying it because casual labour is the dominant variable cost in their P&L and the regulatory environment has tightened materially. Financial services are buying workforce planning for complaints handling, scams response, and compliance functions where caseload is volatile and the consequences of under-staffing are direct customer harm. Industrial operators are buying it for shift optimisation in plants where the mix of permanent, casual, and contract labour is structurally complicated.

The common thread is that labour, in labour-intensive commercial operations, is the cost-out frontier most operators have not yet worked over. Procurement has been worked over for a decade. Inventory has been worked over for five years. Network design has had its turn. The labour cost stack, in most labour-intensive commercial businesses, has not been touched at the same level of sophistication. The savings available are typically four to twelve percent of the relevant cost base, sometimes more in operations where the legacy roster has accumulated drift over several years. That is a large number. It is also defensible, because the methodology is concrete, the data is auditable, and the change is observable in week-on-week roster cost.

The reason this is not better understood, I think, is that workforce planning has historically lived in HR rather than in supply chain or operations. The discipline has been seen as a compliance and people-cost function, not as an operating-model lever. The leaders who are unlocking value from this work right now are the ones who have moved it into operations, given it analytical horsepower, treated it as a planning problem with hard constraints, and put a senior person in charge of it. It is, frankly, very similar to running a good demand and supply planning cycle (what supply chain people call S&OP). The grammar of demand, supply, capacity, and constraint maps almost directly. The teams who have made that connection are the ones doing the most interesting work.

This connects back to the broader talent shortage. The same scarcity that makes the work hard, also makes the work valuable. If labour is structurally hard to find and structurally expensive, then optimising how you use the labour you have is structurally valuable. The two things are related, and the leaders thinking about them as a single integrated problem are pulling away from the ones who treat them separately. And every hour that gets used better, instead of wasted, is a small but real contribution to the productivity number Australia desperately needs to lift.

How supply chain consulting is being reshaped, and what the market actually rewards now

This is the section I have been thinking about the longest, because the easiest thing for a consultant to do is write a self-serving piece about how the market needs more of what their firm does. I will try to avoid that. What I want to describe here is what I think is actually happening to the supply chain consulting market, including the parts that I find uncomfortable.

The same force I described earlier, about artificial intelligence compressing the analytical middle, is reshaping consulting at least as fast as it is reshaping operations. The work in any engagement breaks into three zones. The early zone, where the problem is framed, the conviction is built, the strategic direction is set. The middle zone, where the analysis happens, the models get built, the slides come together. The late zone, where the change has to happen on the floor.

The middle zone is what most large consulting firms have been selling, profitably, for the last twenty years. Big teams of analysts and managers, building decks and models, with a partner showing up for the steering committee. That work is being commoditised, fast. A capable senior consultant with the right tools can now produce, in a week, the analytical output that used to take a team of four most of a month. The economics of pyramid-shaped consulting firms depend on selling the middle at high enough rates and high enough volumes to fund the partner overhead. Those economics are quietly cracking, and the firms that depend on them are starting to feel it.

What is not being commoditised, in fact what is becoming more valuable, is the early zone and the late zone.

The early zone, the work of framing the right problem, building the conviction to act, and helping a CEO or COO see something they could not see before, is fundamentally a senior judgement business. It does not scale through analyst leverage, and it does not get faster with AI. It depends on the cumulative pattern recognition of a person who has seen forty versions of the situation and can tell, within the first conversation, which version this one is. That capability is rare, expensive, and increasing in value.

The late zone, the work of making the change actually happen, is fundamentally a relationship and execution business. It also does not scale through analyst leverage. It depends on consultants who can sit in a steering committee and read the politics, who can spot the supervisor on the floor whose buy-in will determine whether the new process sticks, who can find the right phrase to land the change with a sceptical board chair. That capability is also rare and increasingly valuable, partly because the AI tools that are making the analytical middle cheaper are also making the operational complexity higher, which means more change management, not less.

If I am right about this, then the supply chain consulting market is being repriced in a way that most firms have not yet acknowledged. The day rate for a senior consultant doing real strategic or execution work should be going up. The day rate for a junior or mid-level analyst doing work that AI can now do better should be going down. The shape of a sustainable consulting firm in this market is therefore senior-heavy, deliberately. Not because seniors look better in front of a client, although they do. Because the work the market actually rewards now is the work that seniors do.

I think about the return on fees a lot, probably more than is healthy. The number I keep coming back to, across the engagements I am proudest of, is around twelve to one. For every dollar a client spends with us, roughly twelve come back to them in benefit. Cost out, working capital release, service uplift, risk avoided, value protected. That number is not a marketing line and I will not put it on the website without underlining it five times. It is the lens I use, internally, to decide whether work is worth doing. If we cannot see a credible path to ten to one, I think we should not be in the room. The reason this matters more in the next decade than it did in the last is that boards no longer have patience for fees-to-value ratios of two or three to one, which is what most large transformation programs actually deliver when you measure them honestly.

There is a phrase one of my partners uses that I have come to think of as the most important sentence we have written down about how we work. He says our job is to be the most helpful person in the room, not the smartest. I think about that a lot. It is a deceptively important distinction.

The smartest person in the room writes the cleverest deck. The smartest person in the room can quote the latest McKinsey research. The smartest person in the room is on the slide with the diagonal arrows. That work is being eaten alive by artificial intelligence. The model can write that deck for you in twenty minutes, and the model is getting cheaper every quarter.

The most helpful person in the room is different. The most helpful person is the one the operator actually calls when something goes wrong on a Sunday night. The one who flagged the risk three months ago and was right. The one who knows the difference between what the slide says and what the supervisor is actually going to do on Monday morning. The one who will tell the truth about whether the program is going to work, even when it is not the easy truth to tell. The market for clever decks is collapsing. The market for the person you call on a Sunday night is, if anything, growing.

I would much rather build a firm that does the second thing well than the first thing brilliantly. That has consequences. It means we hire more slowly than firms our size usually do, and we hire seniors more aggressively than juniors. It means we say no to engagements where we cannot see the multiple, even when the work is interesting. It means we invest in our people in ways that look uneconomic if you only look at this quarter. It means we charge more than some of our peers for the senior end of the work, and noticeably less than others for the mid-level work, because we are deliberately trying to buy our seniors back from the analytical middle that AI is going to take over anyway. It also means we lean hard on the idea that the decision a senior consultant brings into a CEO conversation is the genuinely valuable bit, not the deck that supports it.

For what it is worth, the questions I would ask any consulting firm right now if I were hiring one are these. Who actually does the work, the senior people or the analysts. Whether the pricing model depends on a pyramid that AI is going to compress. Whether they will commit to a credible return on fees, or whether the conversation only ever lives in day rates. Whether the senior people in the room have actually run operations themselves, or whether they have only consulted on them. None of these are silver bullets. I do think they tell you something useful about which firms have done the work to figure out what their job actually is in this new market, and which have not.

The next decade gets won by execution

I want to land the piece on the thing I am most certain about, which is that the next decade in Australian supply chains will be won by execution rather than strategy.

I do not say this dismissively about strategy. The strategic shifts I have been describing through this piece are real and matter. They will determine the shape of the playing field. But when I look across the operators I respect, the ones genuinely pulling ahead, the consistent characteristic is not strategic brilliance. It is operational obsession. They show up. They follow up. They check the data. They change what is not working. They do the unglamorous, painstaking, sustained work of making a thing actually function.

Australian commercial history is full of cautionary tales of programs that made sense on paper and fell over in delivery. Major retail systems that were going to revolutionise inventory management and ended up costing more than they saved. Procurement transformations that delivered the savings on paper and lost them in the second year because the operating model never caught up. Network redesigns that won the modelling exercise and never made it to operational stability. AI pilots that produced beautiful business cases and quietly stalled when the data turned out to be worse than the slide assumed. Workforce planning programs that built the model and never made the rosters change. The pattern is so consistent, across so many companies and sectors, that I have come to think of it as the default outcome rather than the exception.

The leaders who pull ahead, against this default, share a few characteristics. They are unreasonably specific about what they are trying to deliver. They measure it. They expose the measurement to scrutiny. They keep the senior team uncomfortable about the work even when it is going well, because they have learned that complacency is what kills programs. They invest in the unglamorous middle of the work, the data, the processes, the capability building, the change management, more than they invest in the launch event. They are willing to slow down at the right moments. They understand that the program ends not when the technology goes live but when the operating model has truly absorbed it.

In a world where AI can produce a strategy paper in twenty minutes and a board deck in forty, the constraint on value creation is no longer the quality of the analysis. It is the quality of the execution. That has been true for a long time. It is more true now than it has ever been, because the analytical edge is collapsing toward zero and the execution edge is becoming the entire competitive moat.

A note from home

I am writing this on a Sunday afternoon, with a six-month-old asleep in the next room. The firm is busier than it has ever been. We are almost four years into building Trace, and the senior team is more behind the steering wheel than they were even a year ago, which has changed the shape of my week in ways I did not predict. There is a clarity that comes with that, which I had not expected.

I think about the work I want to do for the next decade in a way I did not think about it five years ago. I am less interested in being busy, and more interested in being useful. Less interested in being clever, and more interested in being honest. Less interested in winning the deck, and more interested in moving the needle for an operator who actually has to make a hard call on Monday morning.

That is what I am betting on, professionally. That is what the firm I helped build is for. We are senior-heavy because the work that matters is senior work. We are deliberately small because we believe in the multiple, not the headcount. We say openly that being the most helpful person in the room is more valuable than being the smartest, because we have seen the evidence in our own engagements. And we think the next decade in Australian supply chains will reward exactly that posture, more than the previous decade did.

There is one more reason, less commercial than the others. Australia's productivity problem is not going to be solved by a single policy. It will be solved by ten thousand operators making their operations better, slowly and seriously. Helping with that is, in our view, some of the most useful work an Australian supply chain consulting firm can do right now.

If you have read this far, the most likely reason is that you are wrestling with some version of the problems I have been describing. The cost-out program that has gone political. The technology investment that needs to land in nine months. The supplier base that no longer feels safe. The workforce model that is straining under regulation and shortage. The board that wants resilience and Scope 3 and AI and savings, all of them, all at once.

I would be happy to talk about any of it. Not because we are the only ones who can help, we are not, but because most of these problems get easier when you can talk them through with someone who has seen a number of versions of them. That conversation, more often than not, is what gets the work moving.

You can find me, or any of the team at Trace, through the contact page. The firm has grown enough that we now have specialist depth across strategy and network design, procurement, planning and operations, technology, resilience and risk management, supply chain sustainability, workforce planning and scheduling, and organisational design. We work across retail, FMCG and manufacturing, property, hospitality and services, health and aged care, and government and defence. But the bit that matters, in my view, is not the org chart on the website. It is whether the person who shows up to your problem can actually help you solve it.

That is what we are trying to build. That is why I am writing this piece.

Thank you for reading !!

Shanks

Technology

Warehouse Automation: When to Invest in Australia

Warehouse Automation: When to Invest in Australia
Tim Harris
April 2026
Not every warehouse needs automation. Many Australian businesses that do need it are evaluating it the wrong way. Here's what a rigorous decision actually looks like.

The global warehouse automation market is valued at approximately $30 billion in 2026, growing at close to 19 percent annually. In Australia, the combination of labour shortages, rising wages, e-commerce growth, and increasing customer expectations around delivery speed and accuracy is pushing warehouse automation onto the capital agenda of organisations that had previously considered it a future investment rather than a current priority.

The technology is real and the results are demonstrable. Automated storage and retrieval systems (AS/RS) can increase usable space by up to 40 percent. Goods-to-person systems can improve picking productivity by 200 to 300 percent. Autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) navigate dynamically through a facility without fixed infrastructure. The capability is there.

So is the risk. Warehouse automation is a significant capital commitment, typically $2 million to $20 million or more depending on scale and complexity. Payback periods of 18 to 36 months are achievable but not guaranteed. Implementation takes 6 to 18 months. And 80 percent of warehouses globally still operate largely manually, which means the majority of businesses have decided, whether deliberately or by default, that automation is not yet right for them.

The Australian market has its own dynamics. Labour costs are high by global standards, making the labour savings component of the business case more compelling here than in lower-wage markets. Industrial real estate in the major logistics corridors is expensive, making space-saving technologies more attractive. But the market is also relatively small, which means fixed costs of automation are spread across lower volumes, and the technology suppliers and integrators available locally are fewer than in Europe or North America.

This article covers when warehouse automation makes sense, how to evaluate the business case rigorously, and where Australian businesses consistently get the decision wrong.

When does warehouse automation make sense?

Not every warehouse needs automation, and not every business that could benefit should invest now. The decision should be driven by operational need, not technology enthusiasm.

Labour is the binding constraint. If your warehouse operations are consistently limited by the ability to recruit, retain, and manage labour, automation moves from a productivity tool to an operational necessity. In Australia, warehouse labour shortages are structural across the transport, postal, and warehousing industry, from pick-pack operators through to forklift drivers and warehouse supervisors. If labour availability is capping your throughput, driving overtime costs, or creating quality and safety issues, automation addresses the root constraint rather than treating the symptoms.

Volume is growing faster than floor space. If demand growth is outpacing your physical warehouse capacity, you face a choice: lease or build additional space, or extract more throughput from the existing footprint. AS/RS systems can increase storage density by 40 to 60 percent compared to conventional racking. Goods-to-person systems can double or triple pick rates per labour hour. For organisations in high-rent logistics corridors, particularly in Sydney's western suburbs and Melbourne's south-east, the cost per square metre of additional warehouse space makes the automation business case more compelling than it would be in lower-cost locations.

Accuracy and quality are non-negotiable. Manual picking in a high-SKU environment has an inherent error rate, typically 1 to 3 percent even with barcode scanning and pick-to-light systems. For organisations where order accuracy has direct commercial consequences, including pharmaceutical distribution, food safety compliance, or high-value consumer goods, automation can reduce error rates to below 0.1 percent. That improvement may justify the investment on quality grounds alone.

The operation runs multiple shifts or 24/7. Automation delivers the greatest labour cost savings in operations that run extended hours, where labour cost is multiplied by shift premiums, weekend rates, and the management overhead of a multi-shift workforce. A single-shift operation may not generate sufficient labour savings to justify automation. A three-shift operation almost certainly will.

How do you build a rigorous automation business case?

The business case for warehouse automation must be built on your operational reality, not vendor projections.

Start with the operational baseline. Before evaluating any technology, document your current operation in detail: throughput volumes by order type, pick rates per labour hour, error rates, labour costs including overtime, casuals and agency, space utilisation, and current and projected growth rates. This baseline is what the automation business case is measured against. Without an accurate baseline, the ROI calculation is fiction.

Model total cost of ownership, not just capital cost. The capital cost of automation equipment is the most visible number but not the most important one. Total cost of ownership over a five-year horizon should include: capital equipment and installation, facility modifications (floor loading, power supply, fire protection, HVAC), software licensing and integration with your WMS and ERP, commissioning and testing, training and change management, ongoing maintenance and spare parts, energy consumption, and the cost of operational disruption during implementation. Vendor proposals typically highlight the capital cost and headline labour savings. Your business case needs to capture the full picture.

Be honest about volume assumptions. The most common error in warehouse automation business cases is over-optimistic volume projections. An ROI calculation that assumes 20 percent annual growth for five years produces a compelling payback period. If growth turns out to be 8 percent, the payback extends significantly. Run sensitivity analysis across volume scenarios: what does the ROI look like at 50 percent of projected growth? At flat volumes? At a demand decline? If the business case only works at the optimistic end of the range, it is not robust.

Quantify both tangible and intangible benefits. Tangible benefits include labour cost reduction, space savings, error reduction, and throughput improvement. Intangible benefits include improved safety (reduced manual handling injuries), customer satisfaction (faster and more accurate fulfilment), scalability (handling demand peaks without proportional labour increase), and data quality (automated systems generate richer operational data). The tangible benefits drive the financial case. The intangible benefits can tip the decision when the financial case is marginal.

Account for the transition. Implementation is not costless. Budget for 3 to 6 months of reduced productivity during commissioning and ramp-up. Plan for dual operation, running existing manual processes alongside the new automated systems during the transition period. Factor in the cost of training existing staff and recruiting the technical staff needed to maintain and operate the automation once it is live.

What factors are specific to the Australian market?

High labour costs. Australian warehouse labour is expensive by global standards. A warehouse operator in Sydney or Melbourne earns $55,000 to $75,000 per year, with casuals and agency workers costing more on an hourly basis. Forklift operators earn $60,000 to $85,000. Team leaders and supervisors earn $80,000 to $110,000. Add superannuation, workers' compensation, and overhead, and the fully loaded cost per warehouse FTE is significant. This makes the labour savings from automation more compelling in Australia than in lower-wage markets.

Expensive industrial real estate. Prime warehouse space in Sydney's western corridor runs at $150 to $200 per square metre per annum. Melbourne's south-east is similar. AS/RS systems that increase storage density can defer the need for additional warehouse space, which at these rental rates represents a material annual saving.

Long supply lines for automation equipment. Most warehouse automation equipment is manufactured in Europe, Japan, or China. Lead times for AS/RS systems, AMR fleets, and sortation systems are typically 6 to 12 months from order to delivery. Australian businesses need to plan automation projects further ahead than their European or North American counterparts, where equipment is sourced closer to the point of installation.

Robotics-as-a-Service. The emergence of RaaS models, where robots are leased on a per-unit or per-pick basis rather than purchased outright, is particularly relevant for the Australian mid-market. RaaS reduces the capital barrier to entry, converts a fixed cost to a variable cost, and allows organisations to scale automation up or down with demand. For businesses that are uncertain about volume growth or lack the capital budget for a full automation investment, RaaS provides a lower-risk entry point.

Where do businesses consistently get it wrong?

Automating a broken process. If your warehouse processes are poorly designed, inconsistent, or undocumented, automating them produces automated inefficiency, not automated efficiency. The prerequisite for automation is a well-designed process. If your receiving, putaway, picking, packing, and dispatch processes have not been optimised for the current operation, optimise them first. Process redesign alone often delivers meaningful throughput and accuracy improvements, and it makes subsequent automation more effective.

Letting the vendor drive the solution. Automation vendors sell automation. Their incentive is to recommend the solution that maximises their revenue, not necessarily the solution that maximises your ROI. An independent assessment of your operational requirements, conducted before you engage vendors, ensures the technology you evaluate matches your actual needs rather than the vendor's product portfolio.

Over-automating. Not every process in the warehouse needs to be automated. The highest ROI typically comes from automating the highest-volume, most repetitive processes: picking in a high-SKU environment, storage and retrieval in a space-constrained facility, or sortation in a high-volume dispatch operation. Automating low-volume, high-variability processes often delivers poor returns because the flexibility required to handle variability is expensive to build into automated systems.

Underinvesting in the WMS. Automation equipment executes tasks. The warehouse management system (WMS) orchestrates the operation: directing work, managing inventory, optimising workflows, and integrating with the ERP. Investing in automation equipment without a capable WMS is like buying a high-performance engine without the drivetrain to deliver it. The WMS investment should precede or accompany the automation investment, not follow it.

What does a phased approach look like for Australian businesses?

For many Australian businesses, the right answer is not automate everything now or do nothing. It is a phased approach that builds automation capability incrementally, starting with the processes where the return is clearest and the risk is lowest.

Phase 1: Foundation. Implement or upgrade your WMS to provide real-time inventory visibility, directed picking, and ERP integration. Optimise your warehouse layout and processes. Introduce barcode scanning or RFID if you have not already. These steps are low-cost, low-risk, and deliver immediate productivity and accuracy improvements. They also create the data foundation that subsequent automation depends on.

Phase 2: Targeted automation. Automate the single highest-volume, most repetitive process in your operation. This might be pick-to-light or voice-directed picking for high-volume SKUs, automated conveyor and sortation for dispatch, or AMRs for pallet movement. Start with one process, prove the ROI, build internal confidence and capability, and use the results to build the case for further investment.

Phase 3: Integrated automation. Expand automation across multiple processes, integrating them through a warehouse execution system (WES) or an advanced WMS that orchestrates both manual and automated workflows. This is where goods-to-person systems, AS/RS, and robotic picking come into play for organisations with the volume and complexity to justify them.

Phase 4: Intelligent automation. Overlay AI and machine learning to optimise workflows dynamically: predictive slotting, demand-responsive labour allocation, and real-time throughput optimisation. This is where the leading edge of Australian warehouse technology currently sits. It requires a mature data environment, a capable WMS or WES, and operational teams that can work effectively with algorithmic decision support.

Most Australian mid-market businesses should be somewhere between Phase 1 and Phase 2. The organisations that leap to Phase 3 or 4 without the foundations in place are the ones that underdeliver on their automation investment. The phased approach manages risk, builds capability, and ensures each investment is justified by demonstrated operational need rather than technology ambition.

Not sure whether automation is the right investment for your operation right now? Trace runs warehouse automation readiness assessments that tell you where you stand, what's worth fixing first, and what the business case actually looks like.

Speak to our team →

How can Trace Consultants help with warehouse automation?

Trace Consultants helps Australian organisations make better warehouse automation decisions, from the initial assessment through to vendor selection and implementation oversight.

Automation readiness assessment. We assess your current warehouse operations, quantify the performance baseline, and determine whether automation is the right investment given your volume profile, growth trajectory, and operational constraints.

Business case development. We build rigorous automation business cases with full total cost of ownership modelling, volume sensitivity analysis, and realistic implementation timelines, giving your CFO and board the information they need to make an informed decision.

Vendor-independent technology evaluation. We evaluate automation technologies and vendors against your specific operational requirements, ensuring you invest in the right solution for your operation rather than the most impressive demonstration.

Process optimisation. Before automation, we optimise your warehouse processes to ensure you are automating an efficient operation, not an inefficient one.

See how we work with warehousing and distribution teams →

Where should you start?

Start with the baseline, not the technology. Document your current throughput, labour costs, error rates, and space utilisation. Project your volume growth over five years under realistic assumptions. Identify the specific operational bottleneck that automation would address. Then, and only then, evaluate the technology options that match your requirements.

The organisations that get the best outcomes from warehouse automation treat it as an operational investment decision, not a technology purchase. They build the business case from the operation up, not from the vendor brochure down. That discipline is what separates an automation investment that delivers on its promise from one that becomes an expensive piece of infrastructure waiting for a problem it was never quite right for.

If warehouse automation is on your capital agenda, we're worth talking to before you talk to vendors.

Get in touch →

FAQs

How much does warehouse automation cost in Australia?

Warehouse automation projects typically range from $2 million to $20 million or more, depending on scale and complexity. Total cost of ownership over five years should account for capital equipment and installation, facility modifications, software licensing, ERP and WMS integration, training, change management, and ongoing maintenance. The capital equipment cost is the most visible figure but rarely the only significant one.

What is a realistic payback period for warehouse automation in Australia?

Payback periods of 18 to 36 months are achievable for well-designed automation investments in operations with the right volume profile, labour cost base, and space constraints. Payback periods extend when volume assumptions prove optimistic, implementation costs are higher than anticipated, or the automation is not well-matched to the operational profile.

What is the difference between an AMR and an AS/RS system?

Autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) navigate dynamically through a warehouse to move goods between locations without fixed infrastructure. Automated storage and retrieval systems (AS/RS) use fixed racking and mechanical systems to store and retrieve goods at high density. AMRs suit operations that need flexible, scalable automation for movement and picking. AS/RS suits operations where maximising storage density in a constrained space is the primary objective.

What is Robotics-as-a-Service and is it right for Australian businesses?

Robotics-as-a-Service (RaaS) allows organisations to lease robots on a per-unit or per-pick basis rather than purchasing them outright. This converts a fixed capital cost to a variable operating cost and allows organisations to scale automation up or down with demand. For Australian mid-market businesses that are uncertain about volume growth or lack the capital budget for a full automation investment, RaaS provides a lower-risk entry point.

Should we fix our warehouse processes before automating?

Yes. Poorly designed or inconsistent warehouse processes produce automated inefficiency when automated, not automated efficiency. Optimising your receiving, putaway, picking, packing, and dispatch processes before investing in automation ensures the technology is applied to a well-designed operation. Process optimisation also tends to deliver meaningful productivity and accuracy improvements in its own right, and it creates a cleaner foundation for the automation that follows.

Warehousing & Distribution

Contract Management: Stopping Procurement Savings Leakage

 Contract Management: Stopping Procurement Savings Leakage
Emma Woodberry
April 2026
Procurement teams celebrate the deal. Then the savings leak away through poor contract management. Here's where the value goes and how to keep it.

Contract Management: Why Most Procurement Savings Never Hit the P&L

Procurement teams are good at running competitive processes. They analyse the spend, develop the strategy, go to market, evaluate responses, negotiate terms, and sign a contract that delivers better pricing, better service levels, or both. The CFO is briefed on the savings. The business case is updated. Everyone moves on to the next project.

Twelve months later, the actual spend against that contract tells a different story. The negotiated rates are not being applied consistently. Volume commitments that triggered discounts have not been met because the business units are still buying from the old suppliers. Price escalation clauses have been triggered without challenge. Scope creep has pushed spend above the contracted terms without a formal variation. The supplier is invoicing at rates that do not match the contract, and nobody is checking. The performance metrics that were part of the deal are not being measured, let alone managed.

This pattern is so common that it has a name: savings leakage. Research consistently estimates that 20 to 40 percent of negotiated procurement savings are lost through poor contract management in the period after the deal is signed. On a $5 million savings programme, that represents $1 million to $2 million in value that was captured on paper but never delivered to the bottom line.

The root cause is simple. Procurement teams are structured, incentivised, and measured on the pre-award process: sourcing, negotiation, and deal completion. Post-award contract management, the work of ensuring the contracted terms are actually applied, complied with, and delivering value over the life of the contract, receives a fraction of the attention, resource, and governance.

This article covers where procurement savings leak, why it happens, and how to build a contract management capability that protects the value your procurement function works hard to create.

Where Savings Leak

Non-compliance with contracted rates. The most direct form of leakage. Suppliers invoice at rates that differ from the contract, either through error or through deliberate rate creep. In categories with complex rate cards, multiple service tiers, or volume-dependent pricing, the invoiced rates can drift above the contracted rates without anyone noticing. Regular invoice audits against the contract rate card are the most basic contract management discipline, and most organisations do not do them systematically.

Maverick spend. The contract is in place, but business units continue purchasing the same goods or services from non-contracted suppliers. This happens because the contract has not been communicated effectively, because the procurement system does not enforce compliance, or because individual buyers prefer their existing supplier relationships. Maverick spend undermines the volume commitments that the contract pricing was based on, which can trigger volume shortfall penalties or simply reduce the buying power that the negotiation was designed to leverage.

Unmanaged scope creep. Over the life of a contract, the scope of work delivered by the supplier often expands beyond what was originally contracted. Additional services, extended coverage, new locations, or higher service levels are added informally, without a formal variation that adjusts the pricing and terms accordingly. The supplier delivers the additional scope and invoices for it, often at rates that are not competitively tested. Over a three-to-five year contract, unmanaged scope creep can increase total spend by 15 to 25 percent above the original contract value.

Unchallenged price escalation. Many contracts include annual price escalation provisions linked to CPI or other indices. These provisions are legitimate, but they need to be actively managed. Is the correct index being applied? Is the escalation calculated correctly? Is the base to which the escalation applies correct? In a multi-year contract, compounding escalation errors create a material gap between what the contract intended and what is actually being paid. Organisations that do not validate escalation calculations at each adjustment point are overpaying, sometimes significantly.

Performance not measured or enforced. Contracts typically include service level agreements (SLAs) or key performance indicators (KPIs) with associated service credits or abatement provisions. If the performance is not measured, the SLAs are not enforced. A supplier that is consistently underperforming on delivery times, response times, or quality metrics but never faces consequences has no commercial incentive to improve. The service credits that were negotiated as a risk management mechanism become a paper exercise because nobody is tracking the data.

Auto-renewal without review. Contracts that automatically renew without a structured review process lock the organisation into pricing and terms that may no longer be competitive. A contract that was competitive three years ago may not be competitive today. Auto-renewal provisions are convenient for the supplier and convenient for the procurement team, but they bypass the competitive discipline that ensures value for money. Every contract renewal should be treated as a procurement decision, not an administrative formality.

Why It Happens

Contract management is nobody's full-time job. In most organisations, the person who negotiated the contract moves on to the next sourcing event once the deal is signed. The ongoing management of the contract falls to an operational manager, a finance team member, or a procurement person who is already stretched across multiple categories. Contract management is an additional responsibility, not a primary one, and it consistently loses priority to more urgent tasks.

The incentive structure rewards deals, not delivery. Procurement teams are typically measured on savings identified through sourcing events: the difference between the old price and the new price. They are rarely measured on savings realised: the actual financial benefit that flows through to the P&L over the life of the contract. This creates an incentive to close deals and move on rather than to invest time in ensuring those deals deliver their promised value.

Contracts are hard to access and harder to interpret. Many organisations store contracts in shared drives, email archives, or filing cabinets where they are difficult to find and difficult to interpret. The operational team managing the supplier relationship may not have easy access to the contract, or may not have the commercial expertise to interpret the rate card, the escalation provisions, or the performance framework. If the people managing the supplier cannot easily check what was agreed, they cannot enforce it.

Data is not connected. Validating contract compliance requires connecting contract terms to transactional data: purchase orders, invoices, and payment records. In many organisations, the contract lives in one system (or a shared drive), the purchase orders in another, and the invoices in another. Without a connection between these data sources, systematic compliance checking is impractical, and ad hoc spot-checks miss most of the leakage.

How to Fix It

Assign contract ownership. Every significant contract needs a named owner who is accountable for its performance. This person does not need to be a dedicated contract manager for each contract. It can be the category manager, the operational manager, or a procurement specialist with a portfolio of contracts. What matters is that someone is explicitly responsible for monitoring compliance, managing the supplier relationship, and ensuring the contract delivers its intended value.

Build a contract management calendar. For every active contract, document the key dates and actions: annual price review dates, performance review schedule, option exercise dates, renewal or retender trigger dates, and any milestone deliverables. This calendar should be maintained centrally and reviewed monthly. The most common form of savings leakage, auto-renewal at stale terms, is entirely preventable with a calendar that triggers action at the right time.

Conduct regular invoice audits. For high-value contracts, compare a sample of invoices against the contracted rates at least quarterly. Check that the correct rates are being applied, that the rates match the agreed seniority or service levels, that escalation has been calculated correctly, and that disbursements and expenses are within the contracted parameters. Invoice audits are the simplest and most immediate way to identify and recover savings leakage.

Measure and enforce performance. If the contract includes SLAs or KPIs, measure them. Establish a regular performance review cadence with the supplier, typically quarterly for significant contracts. Report performance against the agreed metrics. Apply service credits or abatement where performance falls below the threshold. This discipline not only protects service quality but also establishes the contractual and commercial framework within which the supplier relationship operates.

Track realised savings, not just negotiated savings. Change how the procurement function measures success. Report not just the savings identified through sourcing events but the savings actually realised in the P&L over time. This requires connecting procurement savings to financial outcomes, which is harder than tracking negotiated savings but infinitely more valuable. Organisations that measure realised savings create accountability for the post-award phase that negotiated savings metrics do not.

Invest in contract management technology. Contract lifecycle management (CLM) tools provide a centralised repository for contracts, automated alerts for key dates, integration with procurement and finance systems for compliance checking, and dashboards that give procurement and operational teams visibility of contract status and performance. The investment is modest relative to the value it protects. A CLM tool for a mid-market organisation can cost $30,000 to $100,000 annually, which is a fraction of the savings leakage it prevents.

Where Leakage Is Worst: Categories to Watch

Some procurement categories are structurally more prone to savings leakage than others. Understanding which categories carry the highest leakage risk helps prioritise contract management effort.

Professional services. Consulting, legal, IT services, and other professional services contracts are among the leakiest categories in most organisations. Rate cards are complex, seniority levels are ambiguous, scope boundaries are porous, and the work is difficult to measure objectively. A consulting firm that quotes a senior manager at $2,500 per day but staffs the role with a manager at $1,800 while invoicing at the senior manager rate is a common pattern that invoice audits will catch but passive contract management will not.

Facilities management. FM contracts typically span multiple service lines (cleaning, security, maintenance, grounds), multiple locations, and multi-year terms. The complexity creates opportunities for rate creep, scope creep, and performance drift. FM contracts also tend to accumulate variations over time, each individually modest but collectively material. An FM contract that started at $3 million per year can easily drift to $3.6 million through unmanaged variations without a single competitive process being applied to the additional scope.

IT and telecommunications. Licensing, support, and managed services contracts in IT are notoriously difficult to manage. Licence metrics are complex, usage-based pricing is difficult to validate, and the technical nature of the services makes it hard for procurement to challenge invoices. Telecommunications contracts with multiple service lines, usage tiers, and technology-dependent pricing are similarly prone to overcharging.

Contingent labour and recruitment. Contracts for temporary staff, labour hire, and recruitment services often involve high transaction volumes at individually low values, which makes systematic compliance checking impractical without technology support. Margin rates, markup structures, and fee schedules that were competitive at tender can drift significantly over the contract term if not actively monitored.

Transport and logistics. Freight contracts with rate schedules that vary by lane, weight break, service level, and surcharge type are among the most complex to audit. Fuel surcharges, accessorial charges, and minimum charge thresholds all create opportunities for invoicing that exceeds the contracted terms. Organisations with large freight spend that do not audit carrier invoices systematically are almost certainly overpaying.

The Government Dimension

For government agencies, contract management is not just a commercial discipline. It is a compliance obligation. The Commonwealth Procurement Rules require agencies to demonstrate value for money for each procurement, including through the contract management phase. The ANAO has repeatedly found that government agencies underinvest in contract management, with consequences for both financial outcomes and accountability.

State government frameworks have similar requirements. The NSW Procurement Board, the Victorian Government Purchasing Board, and equivalent bodies in other jurisdictions all expect active contract management as a core procurement discipline. For government suppliers, this means that contract compliance is increasingly likely to be audited, and non-compliance has reputational and commercial consequences beyond the immediate financial impact.

The Maths of Getting It Right

Consider a procurement function that runs sourcing events worth $10 million in annual savings. If 30 percent of those savings leak through poor contract management, the organisation is losing $3 million per year in value that was already captured. Over a three-year contract cycle, that is $9 million.

Investing $200,000 in contract management capability, whether through additional headcount, technology, process design, or a combination, to reduce leakage from 30 percent to 10 percent would retain an additional $2 million per year. The return on investment is ten to one in the first year alone.

This is why contract management is not a cost. It is a protection mechanism for the investment the organisation has already made in procurement. Every dollar spent on contract management protects multiple dollars of procurement savings. The organisations that understand this invest accordingly. Those that do not are running procurement programmes that look impressive on paper but deliver significantly less in practice.

How Trace Consultants Can Help

Trace Consultants helps organisations build contract management capability that protects procurement value over the life of the contract.

Contract compliance review. We audit active contracts against invoicing and transactional data to identify savings leakage, rate discrepancies, and unmanaged scope changes, and quantify the recoverable value.

Contract management framework design. We design the processes, governance, and tools that ensure contracts are actively managed: ownership structures, review calendars, performance frameworks, and escalation protocols.

Savings realisation tracking. We establish the measurement framework that connects procurement savings to P&L outcomes, giving the procurement function and executive team visibility of value actually delivered, not just value negotiated.

Contract renewal and retender support. We manage the review and competitive process for contracts approaching renewal, ensuring every renewal decision is based on current market conditions and genuine competitive tension.

Explore our Procurement services →Explore our Planning & Operations services →Speak to an expert at Trace →

Where to Start

Pull your top 20 contracts by annual value. For each one, answer three questions: Is someone actively managing it? When was the last time the invoiced rates were checked against the contract? When is the next renewal or retender trigger date? If the answer to any of those questions is "I don't know," you have a contract management gap that is costing you money right now.

The organisations that get the most value from procurement are not the ones that run the most sourcing events. They are the ones that protect the value those events create through disciplined, systematic contract management over the full life of every significant contract.

Read more insights from Trace Consultants →Contact our team →

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