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Mathew Tolley

Trace Partner
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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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Technology

Warehouse Automation: When to Invest in Australia

Warehouse Automation: When to Invest in Australia
Tim Harris
April 2026
Not every warehouse needs automation. But many Australian businesses that do need it are making the decision badly. Here's how to get it right.

Warehouse Automation: When to Invest and How to Get the Decision Right

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

The technology is compelling. Autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) that navigate dynamically through a facility. Automated storage and retrieval systems (AS/RS) that increase usable space by up to 40 percent. Goods-to-person systems that can improve picking productivity by 200 to 300 percent. Robotic palletising. Automated sortation. AI-powered warehouse execution systems that optimise workflows in real time.

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

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

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

When Automation Makes Sense

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

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

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

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

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

How to Build the Business Case

The business case for warehouse automation must be built on rigorous analysis, not vendor projections.

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

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

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

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

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

The Australian Context

Several factors specific to the Australian market affect the automation decision.

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

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

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

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

Where Businesses Get It Wrong

Automating a broken process. If your warehouse processes are poorly designed, inconsistent, or undocumented, automating them will produce automated inefficiency, not automated efficiency. The prerequisite for automation is a well-designed process. If your receiving, putaway, picking, packing, and dispatch processes have not been optimised for the current operation, optimise them first. The improvement from process redesign alone is often 15 to 25 percent, and it makes the subsequent automation more effective.

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

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

Underinvesting in WMS. Automation equipment executes tasks. The warehouse management system (WMS) orchestrates the operation: directing work, managing inventory, optimising workflows, and integrating with the ERP. Investing in automation equipment without a capable WMS is like buying a high-performance engine and putting it in a car with no steering. The WMS investment should precede or accompany the automation investment, not follow it.

A Phased Approach for the Australian Mid-Market

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

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

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

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

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

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

How Trace Consultants Can Help

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

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

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

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

Process optimisation. Before automation, we optimise your warehouse processes to ensure you are automating an efficient operation, not an inefficient one. This step alone often delivers 15 to 25 percent improvement in throughput and accuracy.

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Where to Start

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

The organisations that get the best outcomes from warehouse automation are the ones that treat it as an operational investment decision, not a technology purchase. They build the business case from the operation up, not from the vendor brochure down. That discipline is the difference between an automation investment that delivers a 24-month payback and one that becomes an expensive piece of infrastructure that never quite lives up to its promise.

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Warehousing & Distribution

Contract Management: Stopping Procurement Savings Leakage

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Where Savings Leak

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

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

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

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

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

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

Why It Happens

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

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

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

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

How to Fix It

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

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

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

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

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

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

Where Leakage Is Worst: Categories to Watch

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

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

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

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

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

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

The Government Dimension

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

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

The Maths of Getting It Right

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

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

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

How Trace Consultants Can Help

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

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

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

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

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

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Where to Start

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

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

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Procurement

How to Select Procurement Technology in Australia

How to Select Procurement Technology in Australia
Mathew Tolley
April 2026
Procurement technology is a significant investment. Most selection processes are vendor-led rather than requirements-led. Here's the framework that works.

How to Select Procurement Technology in Australia

Procurement technology is a significant investment. Enterprise source-to-pay platforms from vendors like SAP Ariba, Coupa, JAGGAER, Ivalua, and GEP can cost $200,000 to over $500,000 annually in licensing alone, with implementation costs of $300,000 to $1 million or more on top. Mid-market procure-to-pay tools are less expensive but still represent a material commitment of budget, time, and organisational change capacity. The Gartner Magic Quadrant for Source-to-Pay Suites in 2026 evaluated 13 providers, reflecting a market that is mature, competitive, and confusing for buyers.

The problem is not that good technology does not exist. It does. The problem is that most procurement technology selection processes are vendor-led rather than requirements-led. Organisations attend vendor demonstrations, get excited about capabilities they may never use, and select a platform based on feature lists and sales presentations rather than a rigorous assessment of what their procurement function actually needs, what their organisation can realistically implement, and what level of technology matches their current process maturity.

The result, more often than anyone in the industry likes to admit, is an expensive platform that is underutilised, poorly adopted, and delivers a fraction of its promised value. This article covers how to select procurement technology properly: what to assess before you talk to vendors, how to evaluate platforms, what drives total cost of ownership, and where organisations consistently get it wrong.

Start with Process Maturity, Not Technology

The single most important principle in procurement technology selection is that technology should match the maturity of the procurement function it is designed to support.

An organisation with no structured procurement processes, no spend visibility, no category management discipline, and no contract management framework does not need an enterprise source-to-pay suite. It needs to build the foundational processes first, possibly using relatively simple tools, and then invest in technology that automates and enhances those processes once they are established.

An organisation with a mature procurement function, structured category management, active supplier management, and a well-governed contract portfolio is ready for a platform that provides spend analytics, automated workflows, supplier collaboration, and strategic sourcing support.

Buying technology ahead of process maturity is one of the most expensive mistakes in procurement. The platform sits underutilised because the organisation does not have the processes, data, or people to use it effectively. The vendor blames the client for poor adoption. The client blames the vendor for overselling. The investment delivers a fraction of its potential.

Before talking to any vendor, assess your procurement function's maturity across five dimensions: spend visibility (do you know what you spend, with whom, on what terms?), process standardisation (are procurement processes consistent across the organisation?), supplier management (do you actively manage supplier performance and relationships?), contract management (are contracts stored, tracked, and actively governed?), and analytics capability (can you generate insights from your procurement data?). Your technology selection should address the gaps identified in this assessment, not leapfrog them.

What Procurement Technology Actually Does

The procurement technology market is segmented into several categories, and understanding the distinctions matters for selection.

Source-to-pay (S2P) suites cover the full procurement lifecycle: sourcing events (RFx management, auctions, supplier evaluation), contract management, requisitioning and purchasing, catalogue management, invoice processing, and payment. The major enterprise players are SAP Ariba, Coupa, JAGGAER, Ivalua, and GEP SMART. These platforms are designed for large organisations with dedicated procurement teams and the implementation capacity to deploy a comprehensive suite.

Procure-to-pay (P2P) platforms focus on the transactional side: purchase requisitions, approvals, purchase orders, goods receipt, invoice matching, and payment. Tools like Procurify, Precoro, and Basware sit here. P2P platforms suit organisations whose primary need is controlling and automating the purchasing process rather than managing strategic sourcing.

Spend analytics tools provide visibility into procurement spend: what is being spent, with which suppliers, across which categories, and at what prices. Some organisations deploy standalone spend analytics before investing in a broader platform, which is a sensible approach because spend visibility is the foundation for every other procurement improvement.

Specialist tools address specific procurement disciplines: contract lifecycle management (CLM), supplier risk management, e-sourcing, and catalogue management. These can be deployed as standalone solutions or integrated with a broader S2P or P2P platform.

The right choice depends on what your procurement function needs most urgently and what your organisation can realistically implement. A mid-market Australian business with $50 million in addressable spend does not need an enterprise S2P suite that was designed for a $5 billion multinational. A P2P tool with good spend analytics and contract tracking may deliver everything that organisation needs at a fraction of the cost and implementation effort.

How to Run the Selection Process

A rigorous technology selection process follows a structured methodology that separates requirements definition from vendor evaluation.

Step 1: Define requirements. Before engaging any vendor, document what you need the technology to do. This should be expressed as business requirements (what outcomes the technology must deliver) rather than feature requirements (what buttons it must have). For example, "provide consolidated spend visibility across all business units within 30 days of transaction" is a business requirement. "Must have a drag-and-drop dashboard builder" is a feature requirement. Business requirements ensure you are evaluating platforms against what matters to your organisation, not against what the vendor is best at demonstrating.

Step 2: Assess the market. Research the platforms that are relevant to your size, sector, and requirements. The Gartner Magic Quadrant, Spend Matters SolutionMap, and G2 reviews provide useful starting points. Shortlist three to five platforms that appear to match your requirements and request demonstrations.

Step 3: Structure the demonstrations. Do not let vendors run their standard demonstration. Provide each vendor with a scripted scenario based on your actual procurement processes and ask them to demonstrate how their platform handles it. This ensures you are comparing platforms on the same basis and that the demonstration reflects your reality, not the vendor's best-case scenario.

Step 4: Evaluate total cost of ownership. Licensing fees are only part of the cost. Implementation (which for enterprise platforms can take 6 to 18 months), data migration and cleansing, integration with your ERP and finance systems, training, change management, and ongoing administration all contribute to total cost. Request detailed cost breakdowns from each vendor, including professional services for implementation, and build a five-year total cost of ownership model that includes all elements.

Step 5: Check references. Speak to organisations of similar size and complexity that are using the platform. Ask about implementation experience, time to value, user adoption, ongoing support quality, and whether the platform has delivered its promised benefits. Vendor-provided references will be positive; ask for references that the vendor does not provide as well.

Step 6: Negotiate commercially. Procurement technology is a competitive market, and pricing is negotiable. Multi-year commitments, phased rollouts, and volume-based pricing all provide levers. Do not accept the first commercial proposal. The organisations that negotiate effectively on procurement technology save 15 to 30 percent on the vendor's initial quote.

The Australian Context

Several factors specific to the Australian market affect procurement technology selection.

Integration with local ERP environments. The Australian mid-market is heavily weighted toward SAP, Oracle, Microsoft Dynamics, and NetSuite as ERP platforms. The procurement technology you select must integrate cleanly with your ERP for purchase order generation, goods receipt, invoice matching, and payment processing. Native integrations are always preferable to custom-built connectors, which are expensive to build and expensive to maintain through ERP upgrades. Ask vendors specifically about their integration with your ERP platform, not about their integration capabilities in general.

GST and Australian tax compliance. Procurement technology needs to handle Australian GST correctly, including the nuances of taxable and GST-free supplies, input tax credits, and the GST treatment of imported goods and services. Platforms designed primarily for the US or European market may not handle Australian tax requirements natively, requiring configuration or workarounds that add complexity and risk.

Local support and implementation capability. Enterprise procurement platforms are global products, but implementation and ongoing support are local. Assess whether the vendor has an Australian implementation team or relies on global partners. Time zone differences, local market knowledge, and the ability to provide on-site support during implementation all matter. Some vendors have strong Australian presence; others rely on implementation partners whose quality varies.

Government procurement requirements. For organisations that sell to or procure on behalf of government, the technology must support Australian government procurement compliance requirements: AusTender reporting, Indigenous procurement tracking, modern slavery reporting, and the specific documentation and approval workflows required by Commonwealth and state procurement frameworks. Not all global platforms handle these requirements out of the box.

Phased implementation suits the Australian mid-market. Many Australian organisations are mid-market by global standards. A phased approach, starting with spend analytics and P2P automation before expanding to strategic sourcing and supplier management, allows organisations to build capability and demonstrate value before committing to the full suite. This approach also reduces implementation risk and spreads the cost over a longer period, which is often more palatable to Australian boards that are cautious about large technology investments.

The Build vs Buy Decision

Some organisations, particularly those with strong internal IT capability, consider building their own procurement workflows using low-code or no-code platforms, Power Apps, or custom development on top of their ERP. This can work for simple P2P automation: purchase requisitions, approvals, and PO generation. It rarely works for the more complex capabilities that dedicated procurement platforms provide: spend analytics, sourcing event management, contract lifecycle management, and supplier performance tracking.

The build approach has lower upfront cost but higher long-term maintenance cost, and it creates a dependency on internal developers who may move on. The buy approach has higher upfront cost but lower maintenance cost, and it provides access to vendor innovation and regular feature updates. For most Australian organisations, the buy approach is the better long-term decision for anything beyond basic P2P automation. The exception is organisations with genuinely unique requirements that no commercial platform addresses, which is rarer than most IT teams believe.

Where Organisations Get It Wrong

Buying the biggest platform because it feels safer. Enterprise S2P suites are powerful, but they are designed for organisations with the scale, budget, and internal capability to deploy and maintain them. A mid-market organisation that buys an enterprise suite because it is the "market leader" will pay enterprise prices, face enterprise implementation timelines, and often achieve mid-market adoption, which means a poor return.

Underestimating implementation effort. The vendor demonstration makes everything look simple. The reality of implementation, data migration, ERP integration, process redesign, user training, and change management, is not simple. Organisations that budget for the licence but not for the implementation end up with a partially deployed platform that frustrates users and undermines the business case.

Ignoring user adoption. The best procurement platform in the world delivers zero value if procurement staff, budget holders, and approvers do not use it. User adoption is driven by the platform's ease of use, the quality of training, the strength of change management, and whether the platform genuinely makes people's jobs easier. Platforms that are powerful but difficult to use will see low adoption, workarounds, and a return to email and spreadsheets.

Selecting technology before fixing data. Procurement technology depends on clean, consistent master data: supplier records, product catalogues, cost centres, and approval hierarchies. Organisations that implement procurement technology on top of dirty data get automated chaos rather than automated efficiency. Data cleansing and governance should be a prerequisite for technology implementation, not an afterthought.

Failing to plan for the ongoing operating model. Procurement technology requires ongoing administration: maintaining catalogues, managing user access, updating workflows, monitoring system performance, and managing vendor releases and upgrades. Organisations that do not plan for this ongoing effort find that the platform degrades over time as catalogues become outdated, workflows become misaligned with actual processes, and the system gradually loses relevance.

Letting IT drive the selection. Procurement technology should be selected by the procurement function, with IT providing technical input on integration, security, and infrastructure requirements. When IT leads the selection, the evaluation tends to prioritise technical architecture, vendor roadmap, and integration elegance over the practical question of whether the platform will make procurement staff more effective and procurement processes more efficient. The best selection processes are led by procurement with IT as a key stakeholder, not the other way around.

Not accounting for supplier onboarding. Every procurement platform requires suppliers to interact with it in some way: submitting invoices through a portal, responding to sourcing events, maintaining catalogue content, or providing compliance documentation. Supplier adoption is often the bottleneck. If your key suppliers will not use the platform, its value diminishes significantly. Assess supplier readiness as part of the selection process and build supplier onboarding into the implementation plan.

How Trace Consultants Can Help

Trace Consultants helps organisations select and implement procurement technology that matches their maturity, their requirements, and their capacity to sustain it.

Procurement maturity assessment. We assess your procurement function's current maturity and identify the technology requirements that will deliver the highest value, ensuring you invest in technology that matches your readiness.

Technology selection support. We manage the end-to-end selection process: requirements definition, market assessment, vendor shortlisting, structured demonstrations, total cost of ownership analysis, reference checks, and commercial negotiation.

Implementation oversight. We provide independent oversight of procurement technology implementations, ensuring the project stays on track, the integration with your existing systems is properly managed, and the change management programme drives genuine adoption.

Data readiness. We lead the data cleansing and governance workstream that ensures your master data is fit for purpose before the new platform goes live.

Explore our Technology advisory services →Explore our Procurement services →Speak to an expert at Trace →

Where to Start

If you are considering procurement technology, start by being honest about where your procurement function sits today. If you do not have spend visibility, structured processes, or clean master data, fix those first. They are cheaper to fix than a technology implementation, and they are prerequisites for the technology to deliver value.

If your procurement function is mature enough for technology investment, run a proper selection process. Define your requirements before you talk to vendors. Evaluate total cost of ownership, not just licence fees. Check references. And negotiate hard, because this is a competitive market and every vendor wants your business.

The organisations that get the most value from procurement technology are the ones that treat it as an enabler of a well-designed procurement function, not as a substitute for one.

Read more insights from Trace Consultants →Contact our team →

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