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.

The top deck of a naval ship.

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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James Allt-Graham

Trace Partner
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James has over 30 years industry experience supporting Healthcare, Government, Defence and other public sector organisations.

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Emma Woodberry

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

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Emma Hope

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

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

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.

BOH Logistics

Back-of-House Logistics for Major Infrastructure: Design it Right, Run it Right

Emma Woodberry
Emma Woodberry
September 2025
Major infrastructure assets—airports, hospitals, stadiums and government precincts—often struggle after opening because back-of-house (BOH) logistics were an afterthought. This article sets out a supply-chain playbook to design BOH correctly from the start, reduce whole-of-life cost, and ensure smooth operations on day one.

Back-of-House Logistics in Major Infrastructure: Avoiding Hidden Costs and Operational Bottlenecks

Major projects live and die in the last hundred metres: the loading dock that can’t take peak volume, the central store that bottlenecks replenishment, the waste system that blocks corridors, the lifts that clash with guest flows, or a supplier roster that piles trucks into a single hour. These are supply-chain problems disguised as building problems. Get BOH wrong and you inherit higher operating costs, safety risks, and reputational damage; get it right and you unlock faster turns, cleaner floors, and calmer frontline teams.

This article provides a supply-chain first approach for Infrastructure Australia and the Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development, Communications and the Arts to embed BOH excellence into planning, business cases, design briefs, procurement, and commissioning.

What goes wrong when BOH is treated as an afterthought

  • Undersized docks and marshalling: trucks queue on public roads; receiving teams work around the clock to clear peaks.
  • Fragmented internal logistics: too many micro-stores at wards/offices, high walk time, and misplaced responsibility for replenishment.
  • Lift and corridor conflicts: goods share circulation routes with visitors, creating safety and service issues.
  • Waste backflows: bins occupy valuable space; collections clash with deliveries; contamination lifts disposal costs.
  • Poor vendor choreography: all deliveries arrive at similar times; security checks become a choke point.
  • Catalogue sprawl and SKU misuse: no standard packs or kitting; frequent substitutions; high write-offs.
  • Data blind spots: no single source of truth for deliveries, inventory, or waste—leaving KPIs to spreadsheets.

A supply-chain framework for BOH design

1) Demand and flow forecasting

  • Build hour-by-hour inbound/outbound profiles for each category: F&B, clinical/maintenance consumables, linen, parcels, equipment, waste streams.
  • Distinguish steady vs event-driven demand (e.g., match-day spikes, flight banks, theatre lists).
  • Translate flow to dock door requirements, staging area size, and MHE (materials handling equipment) needs.

2) Dock and yard design

  • Size for 99th percentile peak with time-phased smoothing; allow separate lanes for perishables, high-security items, and waste.
  • Provide off-street marshalling and a pre-check zone to reduce dock dwell.
  • Integrate driver self-check-in and digital queue management; design for rigid and semi-trailer geometry as relevant.

3) Central stores and internal logistics

  • Right-size staging and quarantine zones; ensure temperature-controlled rooms where required.
  • Use zone picking and kitting for repeatable orders (theatre packs, event bars, room-turn carts).
  • Standardise min/max and cycle rules; choose two-bin/kanban for fast-movers near point-of-use.
  • Align freight lifts with goods routes; separate clean vs dirty flows; set turn-back areas for trolleys to avoid corridor deadlocks.

4) Waste, recycling and back-haul

  • Map waste streams (general, co-mingled, organics, clinical, cardboard, e-waste, grease traps) with segregation points and container sizes.
  • Design back-haul loops: full in, empty out.
  • Provide wash-down bays and contamination controls; schedule collections to avoid peak inbound windows.

5) Security and compliance

  • Segregate screening and seal-check lanes for higher-risk deliveries; maintain audit trails.
  • Design biosecurity and food safety receiving procedures; integrate allergen labelling and temperature checks.

6) Catalogue discipline and kitting

  • Rationalise SKUs; use ready-to-use kits for recurring tasks; set pack sizes to match storage and usage cadence.
  • Apply the square-root rule to hold shared safety stock centrally while maintaining service for fast-movers.

7) Digital enablement

  • Implement a dock booking system with time-stamped slots and vendor SLAs.
  • Use barcode/RFID for receiving and internal transfers; track DIFOT, dwell time, and exceptions.
  • Connect BOH systems to BMS/BAS for temperature, lift uptime, and energy insights.
  • Stand up a control tower view: inbound load, internal replenishment status, waste capacity, exceptions.

Asset-specific BOH considerations

Airports and precinct transport hubs

  • Align BOH with flight banks: demand spikes must not collide with security peaks.
  • Provide airside vs landside segregation, with controlled cross-over and manifest integrity.
  • Ensure cold-chain and high-value store rooms are within efficient lift distance to concession clusters.
  • Design night replenishment to protect daytime passenger flows.

Hospitals and health campuses

  • Balance central stores vs ward stock rooms; keep clinical corridors clear with scheduled top-ups.
  • Theatre kits must align to procedure lists with sterile services capacity matched to lists and tray turns.
  • Separate clean vs dirty flows religiously; plan for isolation surges.

Stadiums and large venues

  • Build supply plans for ingress/interval/egress waves; pre-stage event-day kegs, cartons and merch near points of sale.
  • Provide cage storage for high-value lines; route waste extraction around crowd egress.
  • Enable rapid pop-up concessions with standard plug-and-play BOH packs.

Government office precincts & mixed civic assets

  • Design parcel lockers and mail rooms sized to modern e-commerce loads; manage courier peaks with booking.
  • Coordinate tenant fit-outs to protect core goods routes and lifts.
  • Plan consolidated waste and recycling with shared dock governance.

Procurement and supplier choreography

  • Move from activity-based input specs to outcome-based KPIs: DIFOT to dock, dock dwell <X minutes, internal replenishment cycle time, waste contamination <Y%.
  • Set delivery windows by category; restrict “free-for-all” deliveries.
  • Require pre-advice (ASN) and compliance to labelling and packaging standards.
  • Use panel + mini-competition for repeat buys; reserve assured alternates for critical categories.
  • Bake in continuous improvement clauses linked to queue reduction, route consolidation, packaging light-weighting, and waste diversion.

Commissioning and day-one readiness

  • Treat BOH as a workstream in commissioning, not an operational afterthought.
  • Run mock receiving days with live vehicles; time the full flow from gate to store to point-of-use to waste.
  • Validate catalogues, storage plans, labels, kitting, trolley specs, and lift scheduling.
  • Execute a vendor mobilisation plan: slot allocations, badges, induction, ASN/EDI testing, packaging standards.
  • Staff and train a BOH control room for the first 90 days of operations.

Sustainability and Scope 3 gains via BOH

  • Cut truck kilometres through delivery consolidation and dock slotting.
  • Reduce packaging via reusable tote programs and standard carton sizes.
  • Lift waste diversion with correct segregation points, signage, and collection cadence.
  • Monitor energy loads in cold rooms and lift banks; smooth peaks with better replenishment timing.

Risk and resilience planning

  • Map single points of failure: one dock, one lift bank, one compactor—design alternates and bypass routes.
  • Hold contingency mobile storage and temporary marshalling plans for special events or outages.
  • Maintain surge playbooks for weather, industrial action, or supplier failure; run annual drills.

KPIs that matter

  • Inbound: booked vs attended slots, truck dwell time, DIFOT to dock, non-conformance rate.
  • Internal moves: pick accuracy, replenishment cycle time, lift utilisation and uptime.
  • Stock health: critical stockout rate, expiry/write-off value, kit completeness.
  • Waste: contamination % by stream, compactor fullness at pickup, diversion rate.
  • Cost & sustainability: cost-per-case handled, energy per pallet through cold room, tCO₂e per delivery.
  • Safety: near-miss frequency, corridor block time, manual handling incidents.

Link payment to a subset of these and review monthly, with quarterly improvement gates.

90-day BOH plan for new or refurbished assets

Days 1–15: Diagnose and stabilise

  • Validate demand profiles; run a capacity check on dock doors, lifts, staging.
  • Clean catalogues; standardise labels, pack sizes, and kit lists for top 100 lines.
  • Stand up a dock booking MVP and publish slot rules.

Days 16–45: Redesign flows and contracts

  • Re-lay central stores; set min/max and cycle rules; implement two-bin where suitable.
  • Re-write vendor guides: ASN format, packaging, slotting, safety, waste segregation.
  • Let a consolidation lane for small-parcel and low-volume suppliers.

Days 46–90: Embed and prove

  • Run full-dress rehearsals with suppliers; measure dwell, replenishment time, kit completeness.
  • Launch control tower dashboards; automate exception alerts.
  • Lock in CI projects (queue reduction, waste diversion, packaging redesign) with benefit share.

Common pitfalls and how to avoid them

  • Design to average, not peak: always size to critical peak windows and smooth with slotting.
  • One lift for all goods: separate dirty/clean flows and dedicate lift time bands.
  • Too many point-of-use stores: centralise what you can; automate top-ups to reduce staff time and loss.
  • No vendor governance: publish a vendor handbook; enforce slot compliance and labelling standards.
  • Data last: define item master, ASN, and KPI schemas before go-live.
  • Waste as an afterthought: plan streams, compactor capacity, and routes from day one.

How Trace Consultants can help

BOH strategy and functional brief development

  • Translate business and service objectives into BOH functional requirements for docks, marshalling, stores, lifts, routes, waste rooms, and MHE.
  • Produce demand and peak-flow models and convert them into space, door, and equipment specifications.

Design reviews and value engineering

  • Run independent BOH design reviews at concept, schematic and detailed design stages.
  • Optimise layouts for pick paths, trolley turning radii, lift adjacency, and segregation of clean/dirty flows.

Dock scheduling and vendor choreography

  • Implement dock booking with slot rules by category; create vendor guides (ASN, labelling, packaging).
  • Set up consolidation lanes for small suppliers to reduce truck movements.

Central stores, kitting and replenishment standards

  • Design kitting programs for recurring service points (clinics, bars, rooms, theatres).
  • Establish min/max, cycle rules, and two-bin replenishment; standardise carts and storage equipment.

Waste and sustainability optimisation

  • Map streams, design segregation points and collection cadence; set up back-haul processes.
  • Build initiatives for packaging reduction and waste diversion with measurable KPIs.

Digital control tower and data hygiene

  • Stand up a BOH control tower: inbound schedule, dwell, DIFOT, replenishment times, waste levels, exceptions.
  • Clean item masters and supplier IDs; enable barcode/RFID flows; integrate to BMS where useful.

Commissioning and day-one readiness

  • Plan and run mock receiving days, training, vendor induction, and catalogue cut-over.
  • Provide the first 90-day run book and on-site BOH control room support.

Contracting and KPI frameworks

  • Draft outcome-based service KPIs and reporting packs for suppliers (DIFOT, dwell, kit completeness, contamination).
  • Build continuous improvement pipelines with benefit-share structures.

Governance and assurance artefacts

  • Prepare risk registers, logistics method statements, and operational readiness evidence suitable for executive and audit review.

Back-of-house logistics is the operating system of an asset. It determines how calmly and safely the front-of-house performs, and it sets the trajectory of whole-of-life cost. Treat BOH as a supply-chain design challenge from day one—forecast the peaks, size the docks and lifts, standardise catalogues and kits, choreograph suppliers, digitise the flows—and major infrastructure works the way it should: reliably, efficiently, and with fewer surprises.

Asset Management and MRO

Procurement Excellence in Defence: Applying the Seven Levers to Multi-Billion Programs

Shanaka Jayasinghe
Shanaka Jayasinghe
September 2025
Lift readiness, reduce through-life cost, and harden supply risks by treating Defence procurement as a supply-chain operating system — not a one-off buy.

Procurement Excellence in Defence: Applying the Seven Levers to Multi-Billion Programs

Defence programs live or die on supply chain: spares, repair loops, forward distribution, contractor mobilisation, obsolescence, and data. Getting the contract signed is table stakes; getting aircraft, vessels, vehicles and ICT mission-ready, reliably, is the job. This piece reframes the classic seven procurement levers through a Defence supply-chain lens — demand governance, specification discipline, market design, commercial models, category management, supplier performance, and digital enablement — with practical moves you can deploy inside CASG and sustainment teams without compromising probity.

Why Defence procurement is different (from a supply-chain view)

  • Decades-long demand: spares and upgrades outlast the initial purchase. Inventory and repair tactics matter more than the contract press release.
  • Readiness over price: availability, MTBF, and turnaround times trump minor unit-price wins.
  • Sovereign control: local repair pathways, dual sourcing, data escrow, and cyber-clean interfaces are strategic, not optional.
  • Audit resilience: every decision must connect to evidence — requirements, should-costs, risk and benefit logic — and be reproducible.

The seven levers — adapted for Defence supply chains

1) Demand & requirements governance

Tighten the what before you touch the how.

  • Convert “feature lists” into performance outcomes (availability hours, turnaround time, reliability thresholds).
  • Time demand to IOC/FOC milestones and industrial capacity; don’t bunch orders into windows industry can’t meet.
  • Use a joint requirements board (ops, engineering, logistics, finance) to filter gold-plating and right-size initial provisioning.

Supply-chain move: model readiness vs inventory with scenario curves (e.g., service level vs holding cost vs repair TAT) to set provisioning by effect, not guesswork.

2) Specification & standards optimisation

Over-spec drives single-source traps and long lead times.

  • Keep interfaces and data models standard and modular; specify outcomes for subsystems wherever safe to do so.
  • Challenge any spec that drags in bespoke tooling, non-standard fasteners, or fragile IT integrations.

Supply-chain move: run a “should-spec” review to identify the 10–20% of requirements that drive 50% of lead time, then reframe as performance clauses.

3) Market engagement & competition design

Shape the market before you buy from it.

  • Start with a compressed supplier scan: map tier-2/3 constraints, local repair capability, and export-control risks.
  • Use competitive prototyping and down-selects to de-risk schedule and test maintainability.
  • Split or aggregate lots based on supply-base depth: split where competition is shallow; aggregate where economies of scale matter.

Supply-chain move: publish draft outcome KPIs and data requirements at RFT so bidders price the real operating model (stocking policies, telemetry, repair SLAs), not a guess.

4) Commercial models & pricing

Pay for capability, not paperwork.

  • Use outcome-based sustainment (availability, TAT, mission-ready rates).
  • Mix models: fixed price for known work, incentives for schedule and reliability, cost-plus with underrun share for true uncertainty.
  • Anchor with should-cost/parametric models; pre-agree change pricing rules (FX, indexation, regulatory shifts).

Supply-chain move: fund a joint continuous improvement (CI) pipeline with benefit-share (e.g., 50/50) for VMI, repair-loop redesign, or transport routing changes.

5) Category management (the Defence portfolio view)

Treat recurring buys as portfolios: fuel & energy, uniforms/PPE, catering, MRO/rotables, ICT/cyber, facilities/BOH.

  • Standardise terms via framework agreements; run mini-competitions for tasks to keep tension and speed.
  • Rationalise SKUs where security permits; design dual sources for critical lines.
  • Embed sustainability and sovereign metrics in the scorecard (local jobs, emissions per operating hour, waste diversion).

Supply-chain move: apply the square-root rule where feasible to cut network safety stock while maintaining service; back it with supplier-managed inventory on high-runner spares.

6) Supplier performance & SRM

Contracts don’t fly aircraft. People and processes do.

  • Segment vendors (strategic/critical/managed) with governance cadences that match risk.
  • Run joint improvement forums focused on leading indicators (engineering change cycle time, repair queue age) not just lagging KPIs.
  • Test surge plans with table-top exercises — don’t discover your weak link during a real event.

Supply-chain move: link a portion of fee to operationally meaningful metrics (availability tiers, repair TAT bands, critical stockout avoidance) with auditable data feeds.

7) Process, data & technology enablement

Speed and probity can coexist if the workflow carries the governance.

  • Digitise approvals and evaluations with low-code workflows that enforce delegation and capture artefacts.
  • Stand up a lightweight procurement/sustainment control tower: requirements baselines, spend cube, risk register, supplier scorecards, and EVM in one place.
  • Automate KPI ingestion from OEM/MRO systems and link directly to payment triggers.

Supply-chain move: implement a common data spec (IDs, versioning, telemetry schema) at contract signature to prevent “Excel islands” later.

Making outcome-based sustainment real

Outcome-based fails when outcomes are fuzzy or suppliers can’t influence the drivers. Make it workable by:

  • Picking controllable outcomes (availability, TAT, MTBF).
  • Agreeing data capture and audit before pricing.
  • Pairing the outcome core with a time-and-materials lane for discrete upgrades/emergent work.

Whole-of-life economics (beyond the press release)

  • Provision for spares, tools, training, obsolescence, and end-of-life handling from day one.
  • Include BOH logistics in the model: loading docks, central stores, waste streams, and energy draw.
  • Cost the disposal phase — data wiping, hazardous materials, demilitarisation — to avoid unfunded liabilities.

Risk, resilience, and sovereignty

  • Map tier-2/3 exposures and export-control choke points; design assured alternates.
  • Localise repair and calibration where practical; escrow critical data and documentation.
  • Stress-test transport lanes and forward distribution to deployed locations.

Operating model: speed with probity

  • Build integrated delivery teams (commercial, logistics, engineering, finance, end-user) with clear decision rights.
  • Standardise evaluation packs and moderation so auditability is built-in, not bolted on.
  • Use three lines of defence: project controls, central assurance, independent review.

Metrics that actually move readiness

  • Availability & readiness: mission-ready hours, availability %, sortie generation rate.
  • Reliability & maintainability: MTBF/MTTR, repair TAT, cannibalisation rate.
  • Supply performance: DIFOT to base/forward locations, critical stockouts, supplier queue age.
  • Commercial & CI: cost-per-ready hour, CI savings delivered vs plan.
  • Sovereign & sustainability: AIC milestones achieved, emissions per operating hour (where relevant).

A practical 12-week sprint to embed the levers

Weeks 1–2: Mobilise, baseline demand/spend, map critical risks.
Weeks 3–4: Challenge requirements, build should-costs, define outcome KPIs/data spec.
Weeks 5–6: Supplier clinics, sovereign capacity check, tier-2/3 risk scan.
Weeks 7–8: Lotting strategy, evaluation model, probity plan, draft commercial structure.
Weeks 9–10: Release RFT, train evaluators, configure workflow & control tower.
Weeks 11–12: Negotiate to should-cost anchors, finalise KPI annexures & CI pipeline, assurance review.

Common failure patterns to avoid

  1. Gold-plated specs → convert to outcomes; prototype to prove “good enough”.
  2. One-shot tender → stage competition; test maintainability early.
  3. Misaligned incentives → tie money to controllable operational outcomes.
  4. Bespoke everything → standardise interfaces/data to keep options open.
  5. Paper KPIs → define schemas and automate feeds; audit quarterly.
  6. Through-life blind spots → price sustainment, BOH, and disposal from the start.
  7. AIC as narrative → measurable milestones, reported like schedule.

How Trace Consultants can help

We focus on the unglamorous, operational levers that make capability work every day. No invented war stories — just the specific things we do:

Supply-chain strategy for readiness

  • Translate platform performance goals into inventory, repair, and distribution settings (service-level targets, stocking policies, repair TAT design, forward-holding logic).
  • Run scenario modelling (availability vs cost curves) to right-size initial provisioning and sustainment buffers.

Sovereign and supplier risk design

  • Map tier-2/3 exposure, dual-source where necessary, and establish assured alternates for critical lines.
  • Design local repair & calibration pathways and the data/doc escrow required to keep them viable.

Category strategies for Defence portfolios

  • Fuel & energy, uniforms/PPE, catering, MRO/rotables, ICT & cyber, facilities & BOH: create portfolio playbooks (SKUs rationalised, sourcing lanes, KPI frameworks, sustainability/AIC metrics).

Outcome-based sustainment frameworks

  • Define readiness KPIs and the data specification to support them (IDs, telemetry, audit trail).
  • Build payment logic and CI benefit-share mechanisms tied to availability and TAT tiers.

Procurement & go-to-market execution (probity-ready)

  • Lotting and evaluation design aligned to supply-base realities (including SME/consortia participation to support AIC).
  • Should-cost/parametric models to anchor negotiations and manage change pricing.

Control tower & low-code workflow enablement

  • Stand up a light control tower (requirements baseline, risk, supplier scorecards, EVM) and low-code approval/evaluation workflows that capture artefacts for audit.
  • Automate KPI ingestion from OEM/MRO systems and link to payment triggers.

BOH logistics and facilities integration

  • Design practical loading dock, central stores, waste and energy flows so sustainment logistics work on the ground — not just on paper.

Mobilisation & transition management

  • Plan and run supplier mobilisation (ramp profiles, training, data migration, spares uplift, catalogue hygiene) to avoid capability dips at cut-over.

Assurance and “three lines” artefacts

  • Produce the decision logs, evaluation records, risk registers, KPI annexures and delegate packs that withstand audit.

If you want this embedded in your program, we can start with a 6–8 week diagnostic focused on readiness KPIs, inventory & repair settings, supplier risks, and a rapid commercial model check — culminating in a concrete playbook and artefacts ready for governance.

The contract signature is the beginning, not the end. Defence procurement creates the scaffolding, but supply chain keeps capability alive — day after day, under audit and under pressure. Get the levers right, and you’ll see fewer stockouts, faster repair loops, cleaner data, and steadier readiness.

Asset Management and MRO

Defence Procurement Excellence: Driving Value, Accountability, and Capability

Mathew Tolley
Mathew Tolley
September 2025
From submarines to fighter jets, uniforms to rations, every contract carries not only financial weight but also political and strategic implications.

Defence Procurement Excellence: Driving Value, Accountability, and Capability

The High Stakes of Defence Procurement

Few areas of government expenditure attract as much scrutiny as Defence procurement. Australia invests tens of billions annually into equipping, sustaining, and supporting its Defence Force. From submarines to fighter jets, uniforms to rations, every contract carries not only financial weight but also political and strategic implications.

When Defence procurement goes well, it underpins Australia’s national security and supports sovereign industry development. When it goes wrong, the consequences make headlines: cost blowouts, capability delays, and parliamentary inquiries.

Against this backdrop, Defence Procurement Excellence is not simply about securing the best price—it’s about delivering reliable capability, building sovereign resilience, ensuring taxpayer accountability, and enabling long-term strategic advantage.

This article explores three key levers for achieving procurement excellence in Defence:

  1. Applying the seven levers of procurement to Defence programs.
  2. Embedding outcome-based contracting and performance frameworks.
  3. Elevating category management for common Defence supplies.

Why Defence Procurement Matters

Scale and Complexity

Defence procurement is vast in scale and scope. From multi-decade programs like AUKUS submarines to the daily purchase of catering and uniforms, the Defence supply chain touches every aspect of capability. Complexity arises from:

  • International partnerships and security agreements.
  • Integration with Defence industry and sovereign manufacturing.
  • Long lead times for capital acquisitions.
  • Compliance with strict regulatory and security frameworks.

Political Sensitivity

Defence procurement decisions often have diplomatic and political implications. Choosing suppliers can affect alliances, regional strategy, and sovereign capability development. Cost overruns or underperformance quickly become matters of public debate and political accountability.

Strategic Impact

Beyond the numbers, procurement choices directly influence Defence’s ability to respond to threats, sustain readiness, and project power. Procurement is therefore a national security enabler, not just a financial process.

Applying the Seven Levers of Procurement to Defence

The seven levers of procurement, widely recognised in industry, are equally relevant to Defence. When systematically applied, they create measurable savings, enhance value, and reduce risk.

1. Demand Management

Defence Context: Optimising demand is critical in environments where “gold-plating” (specifying more than necessary) often inflates costs. For example, rationalising specifications for uniforms, vehicles, or IT equipment can significantly reduce procurement complexity and expense.
Levers in Action:

  • Challenge requirements: differentiate between mission-critical and “nice to have.”
  • Standardise specifications across Defence branches to unlock economies of scale.

2. Specification and Scope Management

Defence Context: Overly complex or bespoke specifications are common in Defence programs. Simplifying specifications without compromising capability can reduce costs and risks.
Levers in Action:

  • Use modular designs for assets like ships or vehicles.
  • Apply commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) solutions where appropriate.

3. Supplier Base Management

Defence Context: Defence often relies on a limited pool of suppliers, sometimes creating dependency risks.
Levers in Action:

  • Broaden supplier engagement through competitive processes.
  • Invest in sovereign capability to reduce reliance on international partners.
  • Rationalise supplier bases in non-sensitive categories (e.g., catering, office supplies).

4. Process Improvement

Defence Context: Procurement processes can be slow and bureaucratic. Streamlining approvals and digitising workflows accelerates delivery and reduces administrative costs.
Levers in Action:

  • Deploy low-code procurement workflow tools for faster decision-making.
  • Standardise contract templates and performance metrics.

5. Volume Leveraging

Defence Context: Many Defence categories—fuel, catering, uniforms—are highly standardised and benefit from aggregated demand.
Levers in Action:

  • Aggregate demand across Defence sites nationally.
  • Leverage joint procurement with allied forces for bulk purchases.

6. Price Leverage

Defence Context: Defence is often a “price taker” for niche or high-tech capabilities. However, in areas with competitive supply bases, negotiation is key.
Levers in Action:

  • Benchmark rates against comparable sectors.
  • Use multi-year contracts to secure better terms.

7. Relationship Management

Defence Context: Long-term programs require robust supplier relationships. Poor collaboration leads to disputes and project delays.
Levers in Action:

  • Establish structured supplier relationship management (SRM) frameworks.
  • Share performance data transparently to drive continuous improvement.

Outcome-Based Contracting and Performance Frameworks

Moving Beyond Inputs and Activities

Traditional Defence contracts often specify activities (e.g., hours worked, services delivered) rather than outcomes. This creates inefficiency and misalignment, as suppliers focus on fulfilling the contract rather than delivering strategic value.

Outcome-based contracting (OBC) shifts the focus to results:

  • Did the supplier deliver capability on time and within budget?
  • Did the service improve readiness or resilience?
  • Did the asset achieve agreed levels of uptime, safety, or compliance?

Benefits of OBC in Defence

  1. Alignment with Strategic Goals: Suppliers are incentivised to deliver outcomes that matter to Defence capability.
  2. Cost Efficiency: Payment is tied to value delivered, reducing waste.
  3. Innovation Encouragement: Suppliers are rewarded for finding better, more efficient solutions.

Performance Frameworks

Embedding performance frameworks ensures contracts deliver results:

  • KPIs and Metrics: On-time delivery, asset availability, cost performance, safety, and compliance.
  • Balanced Scorecards: Combine financial, operational, and strategic metrics.
  • Incentive Structures: Link payments to performance, with penalties for underperformance.

Practical Example

  • Fuel Supply Contracts: Rather than paying for litres delivered, contracts could focus on guaranteed availability at bases, resilience under crisis conditions, and sustainability metrics (e.g., biofuel integration).
  • Maintenance Services: Instead of paying for hours worked, contracts could link payment to uptime of critical equipment or vehicles.

Category Management for Common Defence Supplies

Why Category Management Matters

While high-value projects like submarines dominate headlines, everyday categories—fuel, catering, uniforms, MRO (maintenance, repair, and operations)—represent a large share of Defence’s spend. Poor management in these areas accumulates into millions in waste annually.

Key Categories and Opportunities

  1. Fuel
  • One of Defence’s largest recurrent costs.
  • Opportunities: consolidate suppliers, negotiate long-term supply agreements, and integrate carbon-reduction strategies.
  1. Uniforms and Apparel
  • Defence requires uniforms across multiple branches and roles.
  • Opportunities: standardise specifications, streamline supplier bases, and explore sustainable materials.
  1. Catering and Food Services
  • Essential for bases, deployments, and exercises.
  • Opportunities: aggregate demand across sites, modernise supply chains, and adopt centralised production kitchens.
  1. MRO Supplies
  • Covers everything from spare parts to tools.
  • Opportunities: rationalise SKUs, leverage predictive analytics for inventory optimisation, and negotiate aggregated contracts.

Category Management Framework for Defence

  1. Spend Analysis: Understand baseline expenditure and supplier fragmentation.
  2. Market Analysis: Assess supplier capabilities, market dynamics, and sovereign considerations.
  3. Category Strategy Development: Define levers to apply—aggregation, standardisation, supplier partnerships.
  4. Execution: Implement sourcing strategies, negotiate contracts, and establish governance.
  5. Performance Management: Monitor and refine through KPIs, SRM, and continuous improvement.

ROI of Procurement Excellence in Defence

Tangible Benefits

  • Cost Savings: Systematic application of levers and category management can deliver savings of 10–20% in common categories.
  • Reduced Risk: Broader supplier engagement reduces dependency on single vendors.
  • Improved Efficiency: Digitised processes shorten procurement cycles and improve auditability.

Intangible Benefits

  • Capability Readiness: Reliable procurement ensures Defence is mission-ready.
  • Sovereign Resilience: Stronger domestic supplier bases improve self-reliance.
  • Public Trust: Demonstrating accountability and value for taxpayer funds builds credibility.

Practical Steps for Defence Agencies

  1. Conduct a Procurement Diagnostic
    • Map current spend, suppliers, and processes to identify quick wins.
  2. Embed Outcome-Based Frameworks in New Contracts
    • Pilot OBC in categories like catering or maintenance to test performance-linked models.
  3. Invest in Category Management Capability
    • Establish dedicated category managers for fuel, catering, uniforms, and MRO.
  4. Adopt Digital Procurement Tools
    • Use low-code/Power Apps platforms for workflow automation, supplier performance dashboards, and demand forecasting.
  5. Engage Independent Advisors Early
    • Objective partners like Trace Consultants bring cross-sector expertise and fresh thinking to complex Defence procurement challenges.

Procurement as a Strategic Enabler

Defence procurement is not simply about managing contracts—it’s about safeguarding Australia’s strategic future. Mistakes cost billions, delay capability, and erode public trust. Excellence, on the other hand, unlocks resilience, efficiency, and accountability.

By systematically applying the seven levers of procurement, embedding outcome-based contracting, and elevating category management, Defence can transform procurement into a strategic enabler of national security.

The question for Defence leaders is this:

Are your procurement practices delivering true capability outcomes—or just ticking the compliance box?

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