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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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Workforce Planning & Scheduling

Aged Care Operating Excellence 2026

A practical operating excellence guide for Australian aged care providers: workforce planning, rostering, scheduling, and the operational discipline that protects margin and care quality.

Operating Excellence in Australian Aged Care: A 2026 Guide for Providers

The Australian aged care sector is operating under sustained pressure. Care minute obligations, 24/7 registered nurse coverage, the Strengthened Aged Care Quality Standards, the Support at Home transition, and Fair Work Commission wage increases have collectively reshaped the operating environment. Funding has increased in headline terms. Cost pressure has increased more. The space between the two is where every provider's operating model now lives.

The providers who thrive in this environment are not the ones with the most polished compliance documentation. They are the ones with the tightest operating discipline: workforce models that meet care minute targets without agency dependency, rostering capability that delivers continuity of carer and predictable cost, scheduling that translates care minute obligations into shift-level reality, and the operational rhythm that surfaces problems early enough to fix them. Operating excellence in aged care is no longer a strategic option. It is the difference between sustainable margin and structural margin compression.

This guide is the practitioner's framework for operating excellence in Australian aged care in 2026. It covers the workforce model, the rostering and scheduling discipline, the agency cost issue most providers struggle with, the Support at Home operating implications, the data and technology capability required to run a modern aged care operation, and the leadership rhythms that hold it together.

The operating environment in 2026

The pressure picture is consistent across the sector. The sector-wide care minute targets of 215 minutes of direct care per resident per day, including 44 minutes of direct registered nurse care, have been in place since 1 October 2024. The 24/7 RN coverage requirement has been in place since July 2023, with the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Journal reporting in early 2026 that around 88 per cent of homes are meeting their RN care minute requirements.

Funding has stepped up. The AN-ACC price increased from $282.44 to $295.64 per National Weighted Activity Unit on 1 October 2025. The hotelling supplement increased from $15.60 to $22.15 per resident per day on 20 September 2025. The Support at Home program with eight funding levels up to $78,106 per year replaced Home Care Packages from 1 November 2025.

The cost picture has stepped up further. Fair Work Commission Stage 3 award wage increases for aged care workers and a separate nurse award increase took effect on 1 October 2025, with the Department of Health identifying $6.25 and $1.88 per resident per day respectively as the funding attributable to those wage increases inside the AN-ACC price. Ageing Australia's December 2025 pre-budget submission noted that while headline AN-ACC funding rose 4.67 per cent, provider-modelled actual funding increases sit in the 1.7 to 2.9 per cent range once underlying cost movements are netted off.

The operating implication is straightforward. Providers cannot rely on funding indexation to absorb operational drift. The operating model has to be tighter than it was in 2023. Workforce productivity, care minute delivery efficiency, agency reduction, occupancy management, asset utilisation, procurement leverage, and overhead discipline all matter more.

The good news is that the levers are available. The providers who pull them outperform the providers who do not.

The workforce model: the central operating lever

Workforce is the largest cost line, the primary regulatory exposure, and the dominant determinant of care quality. The workforce model is therefore the central operating model lever in aged care.

A modern aged care workforce model has six components.

Workforce demand modelling. The starting point is a precise, role-by-role, shift-by-shift, site-by-site view of the workforce demand that the operating model needs to deliver. Care minute obligations, resident acuity, service mix, geographic distribution, and seasonal variability all shape the demand profile. Most providers we work with have a less granular demand view than they need. The gap shows up in chronic over-rostering in some areas, chronic under-rostering in others, and persistent reliance on agency to absorb the variance.

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

Workforce mix design. Permanent versus casual, full-time versus part-time, generalist versus specialist, on-site versus floating, regular versus relief. The right mix varies by site, service mix, and labour market. The wrong mix shows up as fixed cost rigidity, agency reliance, or care continuity problems. Designing the mix deliberately, rather than letting it accumulate by default, is one of the highest-return decisions a provider can make.

Recruitment and retention. The aged care labour market is tight, particularly for registered nurses and personal care workers in regional and outer-metropolitan locations. Recruitment strategy, employer brand, career pathway design, retention drivers, and the targeted use of overseas-trained worker pipelines all sit inside the workforce model. Retention is the most under-managed lever. A provider that reduces unwanted turnover by 20 per cent typically captures more margin improvement than a provider that runs a recruitment campaign.

Capability development. The Strengthened Aged Care Quality Standards include explicit expectations of clinical leadership, with registered nurses taking on broader oversight and mentoring responsibilities. Capability development cannot be left to ad hoc training programmes. The workforce model has to include the capability development rhythm that produces the leadership depth the regulatory environment expects.

Performance and engagement. Workforce engagement is the input that drives retention and quality. Performance management is what surfaces underperformance early. Neither replaces the other. Most providers run one or the other reasonably well. Few run both.

The integrated workforce model is what allows a provider to meet care minute targets, control agency cost, deliver continuity of carer, and protect margin simultaneously. Without it, the provider is solving the same problems repeatedly through tactical interventions.

Rostering and scheduling: where the workforce model becomes real

The workforce model lives or dies in the rostering and scheduling layer. Rostering produces the planned shift coverage. Scheduling handles the daily reality of variation. Both together determine whether the care minute target is hit on a given day, whether the RN cover is in place at 3am, and whether agency is filling a gap that should have been filled by the permanent workforce.

Most rostering and scheduling failures we see are not technology failures. They are process and discipline failures.

Rostering done badly looks like: rosters built three weeks out, then reworked twice before they are published. Permanent staff with stable shift patterns that no longer reflect resident acuity. Casual pool members allocated by who shouted loudest, not by skill and fairness. Shift swaps and overtime absorbed without governance. Roster compliance audited at month end, not at the point of breach.

Rostering done well looks like: rosters built from the workforce demand model, published with enough lead time to allow life planning, locked at a defined point with structured exception handling. Permanent shift patterns reviewed quarterly against acuity. Casual pool managed by skill match, fairness, and continuity of carer principles. Overtime and swaps governed through structured approval. Compliance visible in real time, not at audit.

The same pattern applies to scheduling. The gap between a roster as published and the workforce that turns up on the day is where care minute breaches and agency cost typically occur. Modern scheduling capability includes real-time shift coverage visibility, structured replacement protocols, decision-rights frameworks for site leaders, and the automation that allows replacement decisions to be made quickly enough to prevent agency calls.

For most providers, lifting rostering and scheduling maturity is the single highest-return operational improvement available. It does not require capital investment. It requires structured intervention into how the rostering and scheduling functions actually operate.

For more on the workforce planning, rostering and scheduling discipline across aged care and adjacent sectors, our Workforce Planning and Scheduling practice covers the operating layer in depth.

Agency cost: the persistent operating issue

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

Agency dependency is rarely a deliberate decision. It is the accumulation of small failures across recruitment, retention, rostering, casual pool management, and scheduling. Breaking out of it requires structured intervention rather than tactical cost cuts.

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

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

Support at Home operating implications

The Support at Home program changed the home care operating model from 1 November 2025. For providers operating in home care, the operating excellence agenda includes five home-care-specific considerations.

Travel time and geographic clustering. Home care economics live and die on travel efficiency. Geographic clustering of clients, route optimisation, and the trade-off between client preference for specific carers and travel efficiency are central operating decisions. Providers without active travel time management leak margin every day.

Continuity of carer. Client preference for continuity of carer is a quality dimension and a retention dimension simultaneously. Scheduling for continuity is harder than scheduling for availability, and most legacy home care scheduling approaches optimise for the wrong variable.

Skill-to-task matching. Support at Home covers a wider range of service types than Home Care Packages. Matching the right skill to the right task, while managing cost, requires scheduling discipline that many providers have not historically needed.

Pricing transparency and competitive positioning. Support at Home requires providers to publish standard prices for certain services. This creates a more transparent competitive environment than home care has previously operated in. The operating model must include the pricing decision-making capability to position competitively, and the cost model to know whether published prices recover delivery cost.

Last-minute changes and reactive scheduling. Home care operations live with frequent client-initiated changes: a hospital admission, a family visit, a change of circumstance. The scheduling operating model must absorb these without cascading through the rest of the day's service delivery.

The providers who execute Support at Home well are the ones treating it as a different operating model from Home Care Packages, not as a re-badged version of the old program.

Data, technology and the operational rhythm

Operating excellence in aged care requires data and technology capability that most providers have built up incrementally rather than designed deliberately. Care management systems, workforce management platforms, rostering and scheduling tools, time and attendance systems, payroll, and clinical documentation typically sit on a patchwork of platforms acquired over a decade.

The capability that the modern operating model requires covers four areas.

Workforce data integrity. Care minute reporting, the Care Minutes Performance Statement (now requiring external audit in the 2025-26 Aged Care Financial Report), AN-ACC reporting, and Strengthened Quality Standards evidence all rely on data flowing from rostering and time and attendance through to reporting. Data integrity at the source is what makes the reporting layer defensible.

Real-time operational visibility. Site leaders need real-time visibility of shift coverage, care minute delivery against target, agency usage, and exception events. The reporting horizon that worked five years ago (weekly or monthly) does not work under the current operating environment.

Decision support analytics. Demand modelling, scenario testing, workforce mix analysis, and agency reduction tracking all require analytical capability that goes beyond standard system reporting. Most providers we work with benefit from a focused investment in decision support analytics layered over their existing operational systems.

Integration discipline. The biggest data and technology constraint we see is integration. Disconnected systems produce reconciliation work, duplicate data entry, and reporting gaps that absorb leadership attention that should be spent on care delivery. Integration is rarely glamorous but it is consistently high-value.

For more on technology selection and the integration layer underneath the operating model, our Technology practice covers the selection and implementation discipline in depth.

The leadership operating rhythm

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

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

Daily. At site level, the shift handover, the day's care minute position, the day's agency usage, the day's exception events. Site leaders own this rhythm.

Weekly. At regional or cluster level, the weekly operational review covering care minute performance, agency cost trajectory, recruitment pipeline, and exception trends. Regional leaders own this rhythm.

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

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

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

Sector-wide failure patterns

In our experience advising Australian aged care providers, five operating failure patterns recur. All of them are avoidable.

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

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

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

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

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

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

How Trace Consultants can help

Trace Consultants advises Australian aged care providers on operating excellence across workforce planning, rostering, scheduling, agency reduction, and the broader operating model. Our positioning is deliberate: senior-led, partner-anchored, vendor-agnostic, with practical operating experience across residential, home care, and broader health supply chain.

Workforce planning, rostering and scheduling. Our Workforce Planning and Scheduling practice supports the demand modelling, workforce supply analysis, rostering design, agency reduction, and scheduling discipline that determine whether care minute targets are met sustainably and whether agency cost is controlled.

Operating model design. We work with provider leadership teams to design the integrated operating model across care delivery, workforce, financial, and technology dimensions. The deliverable is a coherent operating model the provider can execute, not a slide pack.

Procurement and supplier strategy. Our Procurement practice supports category strategy across agency, food services, consumables, clinical supplies, and supplier rationalisation.

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

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

Sector depth. Our work across the Health and Aged Care sector brings the operational substrate to make the recommendations practical and the delivery credible.

Explore our Health and Aged Care sector services →

Speak to an expert at Trace →

Where to begin

If you are an aged care provider scoping the operating excellence agenda, start with three questions. What is the current state of your workforce model against your care minute obligations, by home, by shift, by role, and where are the gaps? What is your agency cost line by site and by cause, and what proportion is structural versus operational? What is the rostering and scheduling discipline at site level, and where does it break down?

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

Frequently asked questions

What does operating excellence mean in aged care? The integrated discipline of workforce planning, rostering, scheduling, agency management, procurement, technology, and leadership rhythm that allows a provider to meet care quality and regulatory obligations sustainably while protecting margin. It is a discipline, not a one-off intervention.

Why does workforce model design matter so much in aged care? Workforce is the largest cost line, the primary regulatory exposure (through care minute obligations and 24/7 RN coverage), and the dominant determinant of care quality. The workforce model is therefore the central operating model lever. A weak workforce model shows up as agency dependency, care minute breaches, retention issues, and margin compression.

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

How do you reduce agency cost without compromising care? Quantify the current agency cost by site, role, shift type, and cause. Identify what is structural (insufficient permanent workforce) versus operational (sufficient workforce, poor deployment). Build permanent capacity where the gap is structural. Lift rostering and scheduling discipline where the gap is operational. Track the reduction at site level, not as an aggregated KPI.

What is the difference between rostering and scheduling? Rostering produces the planned shift coverage. Scheduling handles the daily reality of variation from that plan. Both are needed. Most rostering and scheduling failures are process and discipline failures, not technology failures.

How do care minute obligations affect the operating model? The 215-minute and 44-minute RN targets need to be delivered on a sector-wide average basis but the operating model must deliver them at home level, across the reporting period, with the data integrity to defend the Care Minutes Performance Statement in the Aged Care Financial Report. From the October to December 2025 quarter onwards, MM1 metropolitan non-specialised homes have a portion of funding linked to care minutes performance from April 2026.

What does Support at Home change about the home care operating model? Pricing transparency, eight funding levels rather than four, a wider service mix, and a more transparent competitive environment. The home care operating model needs to manage travel time, geographic clustering, continuity of carer, skill-to-task matching, and reactive scheduling discipline.

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

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

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

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

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

Explore our Health and Aged Care sector services →

Speak to an expert at Trace →

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

Warehousing & Distribution

WMS vs ERP Warehouse Module 2026

The 2026 decision framework for Australian businesses choosing between an ERP warehouse module and a dedicated Warehouse Management System.

WMS vs ERP Warehouse Module: Which Does Your Business Actually Need?

The most common decision facing Australian operations leaders considering warehouse technology is also the most poorly answered: do we use the warehouse module inside our ERP, or do we buy a dedicated Warehouse Management System? The ERP vendor will tell you their module is enough. The WMS vendor will tell you it absolutely is not. Both have a commercial interest in the answer. Neither is wrong in every case, but neither is right in every case either.

This guide is the decision framework that should sit between those two conversations. It covers the genuine capability difference between an ERP warehouse module and a dedicated WMS, the thresholds at which each becomes the right answer, the vendor pairings that work well in Australian operations, indicative cost ranges, and the SAP-specific situation that has made this decision unavoidable for many businesses through 2026.

The fundamental difference

An ERP warehouse module is software designed to integrate warehouse activity into the broader ERP data model. It sits inside the ERP, shares the ERP data model, and treats the warehouse as one function among many: finance, sales, procurement, manufacturing, warehouse. Its design centre is consistency with the rest of the ERP.

A dedicated Warehouse Management System is software designed from the ground up to direct, optimise, and record physical warehouse activity. It treats the warehouse as the entire problem. Its design centre is operational performance: pick rates, accuracy, throughput, slotting, labour productivity, and automation orchestration.

That difference in design centre shows up in three places that matter. The first is depth of warehouse-specific functionality (slotting algorithms, wave logic, task interleaving, labour standards, voice and vision picking, automation orchestration). The second is the user experience for warehouse operators (purpose-built mobile RF interfaces with task-directed workflows versus general-purpose ERP screens adapted for scanning). The third is the ability to handle the operational complexity of high-volume, multi-channel, or automated warehouses.

For simple warehouses, the difference does not matter much. For complex warehouses, it matters enormously.

When the ERP warehouse module is the right answer

The ERP warehouse module is typically the right answer when several of the following are true. Single-site or low-complexity multi-site operations. Under approximately 2,000 active SKUs. Order volumes that are predictable and not seasonally peaked. Limited or no warehouse automation. Standard pick-pack-ship flows without complex value-add or kitting. No 3PL or multi-client requirements. The warehouse is one function inside a broader business rather than the core operating engine.

In these conditions, the integration benefit of an ERP-embedded module (one data model, no integration build, native finance and inventory consistency, lower total cost) typically outweighs the capability gap. The warehouse is simple enough that you do not need the extra capability a dedicated WMS provides, and you would be paying for headroom you will not use.

The leading ERP-embedded warehouse modules considered in the Australian market include SAP EWM (embedded in SAP S/4HANA), Oracle NetSuite WMS, Microsoft Dynamics 365 Warehouse Management, and Oracle Fusion Warehouse Management. Each has its own strengths and limitations, which are covered later.

When a dedicated WMS becomes the right answer

A dedicated WMS becomes the right answer once any of the following thresholds are crossed. Active SKU count beyond approximately 2,000. Multi-site distribution where network-level inventory visibility, transfer optimisation, and consistent process management matter. Warehouse automation (conveyors, sortation, AS/RS, AMRs, goods-to-person systems, putwalls) that needs orchestration. Omnichannel fulfilment where the same DC handles bricks-and-mortar replenishment, ecommerce, and wholesale. 3PL operations with multi-client architecture, billing, and EDI requirements. Regulated environments (health, aged care, defence, food) requiring strict lot, batch, serial, and chain-of-custody control. High-throughput operations where pick rate, accuracy, and dock-to-stock time are commercially critical.

The compounding rule matters here. Crossing one threshold marginally does not necessarily require a dedicated WMS. Crossing two or three at once usually does. A single-site mid-market FMCG distributor with 3,000 SKUs but no automation, simple wholesale flows, and predictable volumes might be perfectly served by an ERP module. A single-site retailer with 1,500 SKUs but heavy omnichannel ecommerce volume, automation, and intense peaks will almost certainly outgrow an ERP module quickly.

The 2025 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Warehouse Management Systems identified six Leaders in the dedicated WMS space: Manhattan Associates, Blue Yonder, SAP, Oracle, Infor, and Infios (the new brand for what was Körber Supply Chain Software, rebranded in March 2025). These are the platforms most often considered when the ERP module is no longer enough.

The SAP situation: a forced decision through 2026

For Australian businesses running SAP, the WMS-versus-ERP-module question has become unavoidable. Mainstream maintenance for SAP Warehouse Management (LE-WM) ended on 31 December 2025, with SAP providing a final transition window to 31 May 2026 for specific on-premise customers per published SAP guidance. Beyond that, SAP WM customers must move to one of three options: SAP S/4HANA Stock Room Management (a basic warehousing continuation built on the LE-WM data model, with limited future investment per SAP's published position), SAP Extended Warehouse Management (SAP's strategic warehouse management product, embedded in S/4HANA or deployed as a decentralised solution), or a third-party WMS replacing the SAP warehouse functionality entirely.

This is one of the cleanest forced decisions on this question in the Australian market. SAP WM customers face a real choice in 2026: invest in Stock Room Management for basic continuation, step up to SAP EWM for SAP's strategic option, or use the migration as the trigger to evaluate whether a best-of-breed WMS is the right long-term answer. The right answer depends on warehouse complexity, automation roadmap, integration architecture, and whether the broader S/4HANA transformation is a forcing function or a constraint.

For Australian organisations facing this decision now, the worst answer is delay. The migration window is not large, the SAP EWM consulting market is finite, and the cost of running unsupported software past the deadline scales quickly.

What the major ERP warehouse modules actually do

The capability gap between ERP warehouse modules and dedicated WMS platforms has narrowed over the past decade. ERP modules are more capable than they were five years ago. Dedicated WMS platforms have also moved on, so the gap remains, but the location of the gap has shifted.

SAP Extended Warehouse Management (EWM) is SAP's strategic warehouse management product and is positioned by SAP as the long-term replacement for SAP WM. EWM is genuinely capable and is recognised in the Gartner Magic Quadrant as a Leader. It is particularly strong in process manufacturing, life sciences, chemicals, and industries with strict regulatory and traceability requirements. The trap with EWM is assuming it is the "free" option because it sits inside SAP. Implementation effort and configuration complexity are comparable to standalone WMS platforms, and the Australian SAP EWM consulting market is thinner than the broader S/4HANA market.

SAP S/4HANA Stock Room Management is SAP's continuation option for organisations on SAP WM that need basic warehouse functionality going forward. It reuses major parts of the LE-WM data model and covers basic warehouse processes. Per SAP's published roadmap, there is no further investment planned in Stock Room Management as EWM is the strategic solution. For organisations with very simple warehouses and no growth in complexity, Stock Room Management can be the pragmatic choice. For most others, it is a stop-gap.

Oracle NetSuite WMS is a warehouse management module within the NetSuite ERP platform that supports core processes including receiving, putaway, RF-scanned picking and packing, wave management, cycle counting, and shipping integration. For businesses already running NetSuite as their ERP, it provides a tightly integrated option with no separate integration to build. The publicly documented limitations cluster around 3PL multi-client operations, deep automation and robotics integration, advanced customisation, and very high-volume multi-location networks. For standardised single-site or low-complexity multi-site operations on NetSuite, it is a credible answer. For complex operations, the limitations show up quickly.

Microsoft Dynamics 365 Warehouse Management is the warehouse management capability within Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management. It has matured significantly and is increasingly considered for mid-market warehouses where the broader organisation is standardised on the Microsoft stack. Its capability is credible for standard distribution operations and has improved automation integration in recent releases.

Oracle Fusion Warehouse Management is Oracle's cloud-native warehouse management capability, separable from but well-integrated with Oracle Cloud ERP. It is a credible enterprise option, particularly for organisations already standardised on Oracle Cloud applications.

The pattern across all four is the same: the modules handle standard warehouse operations well and integrate natively with the ERP. They struggle, to varying degrees, with deep automation orchestration, 3PL multi-client complexity, high-throughput omnichannel operations, and the most specialised industry-specific use cases. Whether those struggles matter depends on the warehouse.

The decision framework: six tests

When advising Australian operations leaders on this decision, six tests typically separate "ERP module is enough" from "dedicated WMS required".

The SKU and throughput test. Under approximately 2,000 active SKUs and stable order volumes is typically ERP-module territory. Beyond that, the decision becomes more nuanced. Beyond approximately 10,000 active SKUs or high-volume daily order counts, a dedicated WMS is usually required.

The network test. Single-site or two-site low-complexity networks are typically ERP-module territory. Multi-site networks with significant inter-site transfer, network-level inventory optimisation, or differentiated DC roles usually need a dedicated WMS.

The automation test. Manual or lightly mechanised warehouses can run on ERP modules. Anything orchestrating conveyors, sortation, AS/RS, AMRs, or goods-to-person systems is typically a dedicated WMS decision. Some ERP modules can integrate to automation, but dedicated WMS platforms are usually purpose-built for it.

The channel complexity test. Single-channel wholesale or B2B distribution can typically be handled by an ERP module. Omnichannel fulfilment combining store replenishment, ecommerce, and wholesale from the same DC almost always benefits from a dedicated WMS, particularly for waveless or order-streaming fulfilment patterns.

The 3PL test. If you are a Third-Party Logistics provider, the answer is almost always a dedicated WMS with multi-client architecture. ERP warehouse modules are not designed for multi-client billing, EDI breadth, and per-client workflow configuration. For more on the 3PL-specific WMS decision, our Warehousing and Distribution practice covers the operational lens that informs this choice.

The regulatory test. Industries with strict lot, batch, serial, expiry, recall, chain-of-custody, or audit-trail requirements (health, aged care, food, defence, life sciences) often benefit from a dedicated WMS or from one of the more capable ERP modules (notably SAP EWM and Oracle Fusion Warehouse Management) configured to the regulatory requirement.

The right approach is to walk all six tests honestly. If five or six come back "simple", the ERP module is usually right. If three or more come back "complex", a dedicated WMS is usually right. If the answer is borderline, the deciding factor is typically the five-year roadmap. Buying for today's complexity is cheaper. Buying for the complexity coming in 24 to 36 months is wiser.

Vendor pairings: which dedicated WMS pairs well with which ERP

If the decision goes to a dedicated WMS, integration architecture becomes the next consideration. Some pairings are smoother than others.

SAP S/4HANA ERP paired with SAP EWM is the natural pairing where SAP is the strategic ERP standard. Where the warehouse complexity warrants more than EWM offers, or where the local EWM partner ecosystem is a constraint, organisations on S/4HANA also consider Manhattan Active Warehouse Management, Blue Yonder Warehouse Management, or Infios. All three have established integration patterns with S/4HANA.

Oracle Cloud ERP pairs naturally with Oracle Fusion Warehouse Management. Where complexity exceeds Oracle Fusion's capability, Manhattan and Blue Yonder are the dominant alternatives, with proven Oracle integration.

Oracle NetSuite pairs naturally with NetSuite WMS for simple operations. For more complex operations or 3PL use cases, NetSuite is most commonly paired with Microlistics, CartonCloud (for SME 3PLs and transport operators), Made4net, or Softeon.

Microsoft Dynamics 365 pairs naturally with Dynamics 365 Warehouse Management. For greater capability, Dynamics 365 is increasingly paired with Manhattan Active WM, Blue Yonder, or Infios at the enterprise end, and Microlistics at the mid-market.

Smaller ERPs (MYOB, Xero, Cin7, Unleashed, Pronto, Greentree, Attaché, and similar) typically lack credible embedded warehouse modules for anything beyond very simple operations. CartonCloud is a common pairing for SME 3PLs and transport operators. .Store, the Trace WMS platform, is designed specifically for mid-sized Australian businesses needing structured warehouse management with any ERP, on a low-code, ERP-agnostic architecture.

The integration architecture is rarely the deciding factor on its own, but it is rarely irrelevant. Smooth integration patterns reduce implementation risk, lower ongoing support cost, and improve the speed of future changes. Worth weighing in the selection.

Indicative cost comparison

Cost comparisons between ERP modules and dedicated WMS platforms are easy to do badly. The five-year total cost picture rarely matches the headline.

For an ERP warehouse module activated as part of an existing ERP environment, the incremental cost is typically the user licensing for warehouse operators, an implementation effort to configure the module and connect to RF devices, and potentially additional licensing for advanced capabilities. Indicative ranges sit at hundreds of thousands rather than millions for most mid-market deployments. For organisations going through an ERP transformation, the warehouse module configuration is often folded into the broader programme.

For a dedicated WMS implementation, the cost ranges previously published in our Australian WMS Buyer's Guide typically run $400,000 to $1.2 million for a mid-market single-site implementation, $1.5 million to $4 million for multi-site mid-market rollouts, and $5 million to $20 million-plus for enterprise-scale national programmes. Add 15 to 25 per cent of the total for integration to the ERP, the TMS, the ecommerce platform, and any automation kit.

On a five-year total cost of ownership basis, the gap between an ERP module and a dedicated WMS narrows considerably once integration, ongoing licensing, internal support, and the operational cost of complexity-driven workarounds are all in scope. The ERP module is rarely as cheap as it first appears. The dedicated WMS is rarely as expensive as it first appears. Both should be modelled properly before the decision is made.

Common failure modes in this decision

In our experience advising Australian operations leaders, three failure modes recur in this decision.

Choosing the ERP module by default because it is "already paid for". It is not. The implementation effort, the user licensing, the operational compromises required to fit the warehouse to the module, and the cost of later having to replace it are all real. The ERP module should win on fit, not on assumed inclusion.

Choosing a dedicated WMS for an operation that does not need it. A small single-site distributor with 1,500 SKUs, stable B2B volumes, and no automation buying a Tier 1 enterprise WMS will absorb capital and leadership attention they did not need to spend. The ERP module would have served them well.

Underestimating integration when going dedicated. A dedicated WMS that does not talk cleanly to the ERP, the TMS, and the ecommerce platform is worse than no WMS at all. Integration is not a checkbox. It is a designed, tested, performance-validated workstream that typically accounts for 15 to 25 per cent of programme cost.

Avoiding all three requires honest assessment of the operation today, the operation in five years, and the architecture that supports both.

How Trace Consultants can help

Trace Consultants advises Australian organisations across the full warehouse technology journey, including the WMS-versus-ERP-module decision. Our positioning is deliberate: vendor-agnostic, partner-led, and senior on every engagement.

Operating model and warehouse strategy. Before any technology decision, we work with the leadership team to define the future-state warehouse operating model: network footprint, role of each DC, target service levels, automation roadmap, and the role technology plays in supporting the commercial strategy. This sits inside our Strategy and Network Design practice.

Technology selection. We run vendor-agnostic selections across ERP warehouse modules and dedicated WMS platforms. Our role is to test the operation against the capability of both, identify the right answer for the next five years, and run a structured selection that includes scripted demonstrations, partner evaluation, and a defensible commercial outcome. This is delivered through our Technology practice.

Implementation oversight and programme assurance. The buyer-side role through implementation is as important as the selection itself. We sit on the client side of the table through detailed design, build, testing, and go-live, providing assurance on the partner, the technology, the data, the integration, and the change. This is delivered through our Project and Change Management practice.

Warehouse operations and labour productivity. Our Warehousing and Distribution practice covers the operational layer underneath the technology: DC design, slotting, pick path optimisation, labour productivity, and automation strategy.

.Store: Trace's WMS for mid-sized Australian businesses. Where the right answer is a structured, fast-to-deploy, ERP-agnostic platform sitting outside the ERP module, we offer .Store. Sitting alongside our broader operational technology suite, .Store is part of our Technology offering.

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Where to begin

If you are early in this decision, the first step is not a vendor demo. The first step is the six-test honest assessment: SKU and throughput, network, automation, channel complexity, 3PL, regulatory. Followed by the five-year roadmap question: where does the operation need to be in 24 to 36 months, and what does that demand of the technology?

If both point to the ERP module, configure and go. If both point to a dedicated WMS, run a structured selection. If the answer is borderline, the deciding factor is usually the trajectory of complexity, not today's state.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need a WMS or can I extend my ERP? ERP warehouse modules are typically credible for simple, low-volume, single-site operations with limited automation and under approximately 2,000 active SKUs. Once you cross multiple complexity thresholds (multi-site, automation, omnichannel, high SKU count, 3PL, regulatory complexity), a dedicated WMS becomes the right answer.

Is SAP EWM the right choice if we run SAP S/4HANA? Often, but not automatically. SAP EWM is genuinely capable and is recognised as a Gartner Magic Quadrant Leader. The trap is assuming it is the cheap or low-risk option because it sits inside SAP. Implementation effort, configuration complexity, and partner capability are the deciding factors. Manhattan, Blue Yonder, and Infios are credible alternatives for S/4HANA customers where the warehouse complexity warrants more than EWM offers.

What is the difference between SAP WM and SAP EWM? SAP WM (LE-WM) was SAP's classic warehouse management module, integrated into ECC and supported in S/4HANA compatibility mode. SAP EWM is SAP's strategic warehouse management product, with significantly broader functional capability covering complex slotting, labour management, automation integration, and advanced fulfilment patterns. Per SAP's published roadmap, EWM is the long-term strategic solution.

What happens to SAP WM after 2025? Mainstream maintenance for SAP LE-WM in S/4HANA compatibility mode ended on 31 December 2025, with a final transition window to 31 May 2026 for specific on-premise customers per published SAP guidance. After that, customers must move to SAP S/4HANA Stock Room Management, SAP EWM, or a third-party WMS.

Does NetSuite WMS work for a 3PL? It is generally not the recommended answer for serious 3PL operations. NetSuite WMS is documented as having limitations around multi-customer billing, contract-specific workflows, value-added services, and high-volume multi-location 3PL scenarios. Most NetSuite-based 3PLs pair NetSuite with a dedicated 3PL WMS like CartonCloud, Microlistics, or one of the enterprise platforms.

When does an ERP warehouse module stop being enough? Typically when several complexity thresholds compound. Active SKUs beyond approximately 2,000, multi-site networks requiring optimisation, warehouse automation that needs orchestration, omnichannel fulfilment, 3PL operations, or regulatory environments requiring deep traceability. Crossing one threshold marginally rarely forces the decision. Crossing two or three usually does.

Is Microsoft Dynamics 365 Warehouse Management capable enough for a mid-market business? It can be, for standardised warehouse operations on the Microsoft stack. Its capability has matured significantly. For complex automation, omnichannel, or 3PL use cases, organisations typically pair Dynamics 365 with a dedicated WMS like Manhattan Active WM, Blue Yonder, Infios, or Microlistics rather than relying on the embedded module.

Will a dedicated WMS deliver more value than the cost difference? It depends on warehouse complexity. For simple operations, no. For complex operations, often yes. The value drivers are pick accuracy, throughput, labour productivity, inventory accuracy, and the operational data needed to manage the warehouse as a precision operation. Modelling the value case requires honest assessment of current performance versus achievable performance, not vendor claims.

Can I start with the ERP module and move to a dedicated WMS later? Yes, and many organisations do. The risk is that the operational data, master data hygiene, and process discipline built on the ERP module may not transfer cleanly to the dedicated WMS. The implementation effort can be larger than a greenfield WMS deployment because legacy assumptions and workarounds need to be unwound. Worth weighing in the decision.

The WMS-versus-ERP-module decision is rarely binary, and the wrong framing of the question creates the wrong answer. The right framing starts with the operation, walks the complexity tests honestly, and works forward to the five-year position. Then, and only then, does the platform conversation start.

If you are facing this decision now, particularly under the SAP WM transition pressure, the rigour of the assessment matters more than the choice between two credible options.

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Related reading: Warehousing and Distribution · Technology · Strategy and Network Design · Project and Change Management

Warehousing & Distribution

Best WMS for Australian 3PLs 2026

What makes a 3PL WMS different, how the major platforms compare for Australian 3PLs in 2026, and the selection framework that protects your implementation.

Best WMS for Australian 3PLs: A Vendor Comparison and Selection Guide

For most businesses, a Warehouse Management System is back-office infrastructure. For a Third-Party Logistics provider, the WMS is the product. It is what you sell, how you sell it, how you bill it, and what your clients judge you on. Get the WMS right and you can scale clients faster, run higher margins, and win business off competitors. Get it wrong and you are stuck servicing every new client with custom workarounds, leaking margin through billing errors, and losing clients to 3PLs whose platforms make their lives easier.

The Australian 3PL market is unforgiving. Margins are thin, client expectations are rising, ecommerce growth has rewritten what fulfilment means, and a generation of warehouse-savvy clients now expect cloud portals, EDI integration, and real-time visibility as table stakes. This guide cuts through the noise on WMS selection for Australian 3PLs in 2026: what makes a 3PL WMS different, who the credible vendors are at each tier, what to actually evaluate, what it costs, and where most 3PLs come unstuck.

What makes a 3PL WMS different from a standard WMS?

A standard WMS manages one business operating its own warehouse for its own purposes. A 3PL WMS manages many businesses operating in the same warehouse, with different rules, different stock owners, different rate cards, different reporting requirements, and different integrations. That single architectural difference creates a long list of capability requirements that standard WMS platforms either do not have, or have bolted on as an afterthought.

A 3PL WMS must credibly support:

Multi-client architecture. Each client's stock, orders, locations, business rules, and data are logically partitioned. One client's audit cannot see another client's data. SKU masters, units of measure, and product hierarchies are per-client. Business rules (FEFO, FIFO, allocation logic, replenishment triggers) are per-client. This is not a UI feature. It is a data model decision that has to be made early in a platform's design life.

Activity-based billing engine. Storage fees by pallet-day, location-day, or cubic-metre-day. Handling fees by line, unit, or carton. Value-add services like labelling, kitting, repackaging, and returns processing. Surcharges for after-hours, hazardous goods, refrigerated handling. Minimum monthly fees and tiered volume rates. Without a credible billing engine, the finance team is doing it in Excel, revenue is being captured incompletely, and there are too many client conversations about what was actually performed.

Client portal and self-service. Each client expects a branded view of their own stock, their own orders, their own service performance, and their own billing data. They want to place orders, run reports, and track shipments without picking up the phone.

EDI and API breadth. Every client comes with their own systems. A 3PL WMS will be integrating with NetSuite, Shopify, BigCommerce, Magento, SAP, Oracle, Dynamics, Cin7, Unleashed, Xero, MYOB, and a long tail of bespoke ERPs. The platform has to make new client integration cheap and fast, because client onboarding velocity is a primary growth lever for 3PLs.

Per-client service level reporting. DIFOT, order accuracy, dispatch time, inventory accuracy, dock-to-stock time, and exception rates need to report per client, not just at warehouse level. Quarterly business review conversations live or die on this data.

Configurable workflows per client. One client wants paper pick slips with a wet signature. Another wants voice-directed picking. A third wants RF scan with mandatory weight capture. A 3PL WMS has to handle all three concurrently in the same warehouse without bespoke development for each new arrangement.

If a vendor shortlist includes platforms that do not credibly do all six of these, they are not 3PL WMS platforms. They are warehouse management systems that are about to be misused.

The Australian 3PL WMS vendor landscape in 2026

Australia's 3PL WMS market splits into three tiers based on the scale and complexity of the 3PL operation. The decision is not "which is best". The decision is "which tier matches the business now, and where will it be in five years".

Tier 1: enterprise 3PL platforms

These are the platforms running some of the largest 3PL networks globally. In the Australian context, they are credible for 3PLs with national or multi-country operations, large enterprise clients with significant integration depth, and the scale to justify multi-million-dollar implementations.

Manhattan Active Warehouse Management is the cloud-native flagship from Manhattan Associates. Manhattan was named a Leader in the 2025 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Warehouse Management Systems and is widely regarded among consultants and analysts as one of the deepest platforms for complex, high-volume, multi-tenant 3PL operations. Its publicly documented capabilities include client partitioning, order streaming for waveless fulfilment, and AI-driven slotting and labour management. It is also expensive and demands a sophisticated buyer. For 3PLs running national networks for blue-chip retail and FMCG clients, it is hard to beat.

Manhattan SCALE is the second Manhattan product relevant to 3PLs, particularly for mid-to-large 3PLs that need deep billing capability via Manhattan Billing Management. SCALE remains in active use across many 3PLs internationally and continues to be supported alongside Manhattan Active WM.

Blue Yonder Warehouse Management was named a Leader in the Gartner Magic Quadrant for Warehouse Management Systems for the fourteenth consecutive time in 2025, and was publicly announced as a preferred WMS provider for GXO. For Australian 3PLs aligned with global platform standards, particularly those servicing multinational clients, Blue Yonder is a credible enterprise option.

Infios WMS is the new brand for what was Körber Supply Chain Software, which rebranded as Infios in March 2025 at a launch event in Melbourne. The Infios WMS portfolio includes platforms with a long heritage in 3PL deployments globally (including HighJump-derived products). Infios also now includes MercuryGate TMS following the 2024 acquisition, which matters for 3PLs running integrated warehouse-transport operations.

Tier 2: mid-market and Australian-relevant 3PL specialists

Microlistics WMS 3PL is one of four product variants from Microlistics (alongside Enterprise, Chilled, and Express), and is specifically designed for multi-site, multi-client 3PL operations. Microlistics is Melbourne-headquartered and has been owned by ASX-listed WiseTech Global since 2017. It is one of the few WMS platforms designed and built in Australia for the Australian market, with local engineering, local support, and integration into the WiseTech CargoWise ecosystem. For Australian 3PLs in the mid-market segment, particularly those with cold chain, multi-site, or freight-forwarding-adjacent operations, Microlistics is typically a default consideration.

Tecsys Elite WMS was positioned as a Challenger in the 2025 Gartner Magic Quadrant. Tecsys publicly positions the platform around healthcare, 3PL, and complex distribution. For 3PLs with healthcare clients carrying strict regulatory, traceability, and chain-of-custody requirements, Tecsys is one of the few platforms in market that directly targets that complexity.

Softeon and Made4net are credible mid-market options with international 3PL deployments, particularly for ecommerce-heavy 3PLs requiring high-throughput pick-pack operations and modern automation orchestration. Their Australian footprint is smaller than the platforms above, which is worth weighing in any selection.

Tier 3: cloud-native SME 3PL platforms

CartonCloud is an Australian-built cloud platform designed specifically for small-to-mid 3PLs and transport operators. The platform combines WMS, TMS, and billing in a single integrated cloud product, prices on a subscription model suited to small 3PLs, and is positioned around fast client onboarding. For Australian 3PLs at the smaller end of the market, particularly those with a transport-and-warehouse blend, CartonCloud is often the right answer. It can also be a credible component of a hybrid model where SME clients are serviced on CartonCloud and enterprise accounts on a Tier 1 platform.

.Store is the Trace Consultants WMS platform, built for mid-sized Australian businesses including 3PLs that need structured warehouse management without enterprise-scale complexity or cost. It is built on low-code principles, is ERP-agnostic, and sits inside Trace's broader operational technology suite covering planning, workforce scheduling, DIFOT tracking, and network analytics.

Microsoft Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management is increasingly considered by businesses standardised on the Microsoft stack. For complex multi-client 3PL operations, it usually requires additional capability layered on top, and is more commonly seen as an in-house logistics platform than a pure 3PL WMS.

What to actually evaluate beyond the feature list

Standard vendor demos focus on functional capability. For a 3PL, functional capability is necessary but not sufficient. The factors that determine whether a WMS investment pays back are operational and commercial.

Client onboarding speed. One of the biggest constraints on 3PL growth is how fast a new client can be stood up. Ask each vendor: from contract signature with a new client, how many calendar days until they are live and shipping? Ask for references. For a simple client, the answer should be days. For a complex one, weeks. If the answer is two to three months as standard, the platform is a growth handbrake.

Integration template library. A modern 3PL WMS should have pre-built integration patterns or templates for the major ecommerce platforms (Shopify, BigCommerce, Magento, WooCommerce), the major ERPs (NetSuite, SAP, D365, Oracle, Cin7, Unleashed), the major freight platforms (carrier integration layers), and the major EDI standards. Each custom integration avoided per client is a faster onboarding and a higher gross margin.

Billing flexibility and audit trail. Can the platform bill a client for storage at one rate in one location and another rate in another, with seasonal surcharges, minimum monthly fees, and tiered volume discounts? Can value-add services be charged with full audit traceability? Can a billing run itemise every charge so a client can audit it line by line? If any of these is "with customisation", it will hurt later.

Client portal capabilities. Is the portal white-labelled? Can each client get a branded URL? Can clients enter orders, run reports, raise queries, and access ePOD documents? Is it mobile-friendly? In 2026, 3PL clients increasingly expect this as a default, not a premium.

Local implementation partner depth. A platform with limited local consulting capacity is a risk regardless of how good the global product is. The named consultants who will deliver the implementation, their CVs, and references from comparable Australian projects should all be part of the evaluation. The platform might be excellent. If the local delivery team is thin, the project will struggle.

Roadmap alignment. Where is the vendor investing? AI-driven slotting, robotic orchestration, predictive labour, embedded carbon reporting? A three-year roadmap should align with where the 3PL is going.

Commercial flexibility. Most 3PLs do not have predictable volumes. Volumes scale with new client wins and contract losses. Subscription models that scale with usage are usually better than fixed enterprise licences. This is worth negotiating hard.

For a broader view on how WMS selection fits into operating model design, the Warehousing and Distribution practice page covers the operational lens we apply to every WMS engagement.

Indicative WMS cost ranges for Australian 3PLs

Cost depends on scale, complexity, platform tier, and the depth of integration and automation in scope. The ranges below are indicative based on typical Australian programmes and are intended as a planning guide, not a quotation.

Small 3PL (single site, under 20 active clients, under $20 million revenue): cloud platforms in this segment typically sit in the $30,000 to $150,000 per year subscription range, with implementation services of $50,000 to $200,000 depending on configuration and integration scope.

Mid-market 3PL (multi-site, 20 to 100 active clients, $20 million to $100 million revenue): platform implementations typically run $500,000 to $2.5 million all-in, with annual platform costs running 15 to 25 per cent of implementation cost on an ongoing basis.

Large 3PL (national or multi-country, 100-plus active clients, $100 million-plus revenue): Tier 1 implementations typically run $2 million to $10 million-plus depending on the number of sites, the depth of integration, and the level of automation being orchestrated.

These ranges include software, implementation services, integration build, data migration, training, hardware (scanners, mobile devices, printers), and contingency. They do not include the operational cost of the change programme inside the business: project team time, client communications, parallel running, and the productivity dip during stabilisation. Budget another 20 to 30 per cent for those costs.

The cost line that 3PLs most consistently underestimate is integration. A 3PL with 40 active clients has at least 40 active integrations, and each new client adds one or two more. The right thing to budget for is integration capability over the life of the platform, not just integration project cost at go-live.

Where 3PL WMS implementations underdeliver

In our experience advising Australian operations leaders, 3PL WMS implementations underdeliver for five recurring reasons. None of them are about the platform.

Billing configuration is underestimated. 3PLs often assume their billing rules will configure straightforwardly. They rarely do. Real-world 3PL rate cards have legacy quirks, client-specific exceptions, and grandfathered arrangements that are not in any contract. Cleaning up the rate card during implementation is mandatory work and is typically larger than initial estimates suggest.

Client onboarding effort is underestimated. Migrating active clients onto a new WMS is a series of mini-projects, not one project. Each client has integrations to rebuild, data to migrate, workflows to configure, and people to retrain. Phasing the cutover by client is usually smarter than a big-bang go-live, and very few implementation plans start that way.

Integration debt accumulates. Treating client integrations as one-off project tasks rather than building a re-usable integration framework. The first client integration takes a week. The fortieth should take days. If it does not, the platform investment is being undermined by accumulating technical debt.

The operating model is not redesigned. Implementing a new WMS without redesigning the operating model means digitising current workarounds. Implementation is the opportunity to reset pick strategy, slotting, replenishment, and labour model. Doing both at once is harder, but doing the WMS without the operating model rarely captures the value.

Client communication is treated as an afterthought. 3PL clients are paying for service continuity. A WMS change that disrupts their experience without proper communication damages relationships. A 3PL WMS go-live is a client management exercise as much as a technology exercise.

The common thread: these are leadership, design, and delivery challenges, not technology challenges.

How Trace Consultants can help

Trace Consultants advises Australian 3PLs across the full WMS journey, from operating model design through vendor selection to implementation oversight and post-go-live optimisation. Our positioning is deliberate: vendor-agnostic, partner-led, and senior on every engagement.

3PL operating model and proposition design. Before any vendor conversation, we work with the leadership team to define the operating model: target client segments, service levels, pricing architecture, network footprint, and the role technology plays in the commercial proposition. This sits inside our Strategy and Network Design practice.

WMS selection and procurement. We run vendor-agnostic selections across the Tier 1, Tier 2, and Tier 3 platforms relevant to Australian 3PLs. We are not paid by any vendor, and our recommendations are based on fit, not relationship.

Implementation oversight and programme assurance. Implementation success depends on the buyer being a strong, informed client. We sit on the client side of the table through detailed design, build, testing, and go-live, providing assurance on the partner, the technology, the data migration, the integration build, and the change. This is delivered through our Project and Change Management practice.

Warehouse operations and labour productivity. Our Warehousing and Distribution practice covers the operational layer underneath the WMS: DC design, slotting, pick path optimisation, labour productivity, and automation strategy.

.Store: Trace's WMS for mid-sized Australian businesses, including 3PLs. Where the right answer is a structured, fast-to-deploy, ERP-agnostic platform rather than a Tier 1 enterprise build, we offer .Store. Sitting alongside our broader operational technology suite, .Store is part of our Technology offering.

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Where to begin

If you are an Australian 3PL operator early in the WMS journey, start with three honest answers. What is the operating model gap the current platform cannot close, in commercial terms? How will the client mix and service offering look in five years, and what does that demand of the platform? What is the client onboarding velocity today, and what does it need to be to hit growth targets?

If those answers point to a platform change, the next step is a structured selection. Not a shortlist of three vendors and four demos. A proper evaluation that starts with the operating model, defines the requirements, scripts the demonstrations, and assesses the implementation partner separately from the platform.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best WMS for a small Australian 3PL? For 3PLs at the smaller end of the market with a limited number of clients, CartonCloud is often a strong fit given its Australian build, cloud-native architecture, integrated WMS and TMS, and subscription pricing. .Store is a credible alternative where structured warehouse management with adjacent planning and workforce capabilities matters.

What is the best WMS for a mid-market Australian 3PL? Microlistics WMS 3PL is typically a default consideration given its Australian engineering, local support, and purpose-built 3PL design. Infios is a leading mid-market option globally and is increasingly visible in the Australian market following its 2025 rebrand. Tecsys is a strong fit where healthcare 3PL is part of the client mix.

What is the best WMS for a large Australian 3PL? Manhattan Active Warehouse Management and Blue Yonder are the most-deployed Tier 1 platforms in this segment globally. Infios is a credible third option. Manhattan SCALE remains in active deployment among mid-to-large 3PLs using Manhattan Billing Management.

Is CartonCloud capable enough for a serious 3PL? It is a credible, well-built platform within its segment. It is positioned for SME 3PLs and transport operators, not for national 3PL operations running blue-chip retail or FMCG accounts at scale. Matching the platform to the operation matters more than picking the most-discussed name.

How much does a 3PL WMS cost in Australia? Indicative ranges by 3PL scale are covered in the cost section above. Small 3PLs typically spend tens of thousands to low hundreds of thousands to implement plus an annual subscription. Mid-market 3PLs typically spend several hundred thousand to a few million all-in. Large 3PLs typically spend several million on Tier 1 programmes.

Can a 3PL WMS handle billing, or do we need a separate billing system? Modern 3PL WMS platforms generally include native billing engines, though the depth of capability varies. Manhattan SCALE with Manhattan Billing Management, Infios, Microlistics WMS 3PL, CartonCloud, and Tecsys all market native billing capability. Selections in 2026 should generally target a single integrated WMS-and-billing platform unless there is a strong reason to separate them.

How long does it take to onboard a new client on each platform? Onboarding speed varies significantly by platform, by integration complexity, and by the maturity of the 3PL's own onboarding process. SME-focused cloud platforms are positioned around days-to-weeks. Mid-market and Tier 1 platforms typically take weeks to months depending on integration depth. Onboarding speed is one of the most important commercial metrics to validate during selection with reference customers, not just vendor claims.

Is Microlistics still independent? Microlistics has been owned by ASX-listed WiseTech Global since 2017. It continues to operate as a distinct product line with development and support based in Melbourne.

What did Körber rebrand to? Körber Supply Chain Software rebranded as Infios in March 2025, with the global launch event held in Melbourne. The underlying WMS platforms continue under the Infios brand alongside MercuryGate TMS.

Can a 3PL run multiple WMS platforms? Yes, and some do. A hybrid model where one platform handles SME clients and a Tier 1 platform handles enterprise accounts can be commercially sensible. The trade-off is operational complexity: two platforms means two sets of training, two sets of integrations, and two sets of reporting. Worth modelling carefully before committing.

A 3PL's WMS is its product. It is what clients buy, how the operation runs, how revenue is captured, and what determines whether the business can scale or stalls at its current size. The right platform, well-implemented, becomes a competitive advantage that compounds for a decade. The wrong platform, badly implemented, becomes the constraint that limits every commercial conversation.

If you are evaluating a WMS for your 3PL operation in 2026, the rigour of the selection matters more than the choice between two credible vendors at the same tier.

Explore our Warehousing and Distribution services →

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Related reading: Warehousing and Distribution · Technology · Strategy and Network Design · Project and Change Management · Procurement

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.
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Procurement Cost-Out Programs for Indirect Spend & Services

Indirects and services quietly swallow budgets—cleaning, security, maintenance, IT, freight, labour hire, professional services. Here’s how to run a procurement cost-out program that sticks, and how to take it to market with confidence.
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In Conversation at Trace: David Carroll on operating models, co-design, and making change stick

In the first edition of In Conversation at Trace, Management Consultant David Carroll reflects on operating model design, co-design, and what it takes to turn strategy into execution across government, defence, and private enterprise.
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Why Planning your Loading Dock Is the Missing Piece in Your Logistics Strategy

Dock scheduling software, like Mobiledock, can optimise loading dock operations by managing delivery times, reducing bottlenecks, and aligning resources. This article explores the cost-saving benefits, such as labour reduction and improved efficiency.
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What Makes a Management Consultant Great vs. Good: The Shift Towards Specialisation

The difference between good and great management consultants lies in their ability to offer specialised, tailored solutions. Discover how Trace Consultants helps businesses succeed with a specialised approach across supply chain strategy, forecasting, warehouse design, and more.
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Interview with Shanaka Jayasinghe: The Critical Role of BOH Logistics in Designing Sustainable Hospital Facilities

By considering these logistics principles, we can build hospital facilities that ensure consistency in patient care, clinical outcomes, and efficient operations for staff and patients.
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Sustainable Changes to Operating Models to Support Large Scale Cost Reduction Programs: An Interview with James Allt-Graham, Partner of Trace Consultants

Discover sustainable strategies for cost reduction with insights from James Allt-Graham, Partner at Trace Consultants.
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Navigating the Future of Planning: A Conversation with Mathew Tolley on Software Selection Excellence

Dive into an exclusive interview with Mathew Tolley, where we unravel the secrets to successfully selecting advanced planning software.
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Australia's Defence Supply Chains: Acqusition may win battles, but only Sustainment can win a war.

Dive into the critical role of Australia's defence supply chains in ensuring military readiness. This blog explores the importance of sustainment over acquisition, delving into heavy asset management, MRO logistics, and the key attributes that secure a competitive edge in uncertain times. Learn how demand planning, service delivery, and innovative logistics execution keep the ADF battle-ready.
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Interview with Tim Fagan: Navigating IT Transformation in Australian Businesses

Join us in a conversation with Tim Fagan on how Australian businesses are improving supply chain performance and reducing costs through tactical IT changes and best of breed systems.
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Interview with Mathew Tolley: Enhancing Supply Chain Resilience Amidst Geopolitical Shocks

Join industry expert Mathew Tolley in discussing how Australian businesses can fortify their supply chains through strategic n-tier assessments and resilience-building practices.
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Interview with Emma Woodberry: Driving Sustainability Through Supply Chain Optimisation

Join Emma Woodberry in exploring how retailers and manufacturers can enhance sustainability and reduce transport costs through strategic supply chain optimisation.
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