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Investing in Supply Chain Technologies – What Options Exist
Across Australia and New Zealand, supply chain leaders are being asked to do more than ever before. They are expected to reduce cost, improve service, manage risk, support sustainability goals and respond quickly to disruption — often with limited additional resources.
Technology is frequently positioned as the answer.
Vendors promise greater visibility, smarter decisions, automation, and resilience. Boards and executives see technology as a lever to modernise operations and future-proof supply chains. Yet despite significant investment across the region, many organisations remain dissatisfied with the outcomes.
Systems are implemented but under-used. Tools generate data but not insight. Planning platforms struggle to gain adoption. Operational teams revert to spreadsheets and workarounds.
The issue is rarely the technology itself. More often, it is how technology is selected, designed and embedded into the supply chain operating model.
This article explores the main categories of supply chain technologies available today, how they are typically used, where organisations see value, and what needs to be considered before investing.
Why supply chain technology investment has accelerated
Several forces are driving increased investment in supply chain technologies across the region.
Persistent disruption
Supply chain disruption has become the norm rather than the exception. Volatile demand, supplier instability, labour shortages and transport constraints have exposed the limitations of manual planning and fragmented systems.
Rising cost pressure
Inflationary pressure has increased scrutiny on:
- Inventory levels and working capital
- Transport and warehousing costs
- Procurement spend
- Labour productivity
Technology is increasingly seen as a way to improve efficiency without reducing service.
Higher service expectations
Customers, patients, students and internal stakeholders expect faster response times, greater transparency and more reliable service — all of which require better data and coordination.
Maturing digital capability
Cloud platforms, low-code tools and integration technologies have lowered barriers to adoption, making advanced capability more accessible than in the past.
The risk of “technology first” thinking
While investment is increasing, many organisations approach supply chain technology in the wrong order.
Common pitfalls include:
- Selecting tools before defining the problem
- Replicating broken processes in new systems
- Underestimating change and adoption effort
- Over-engineering solutions for current maturity
- Implementing multiple disconnected tools
Supply chain technology should enable better decisions and execution — not add complexity.
Core categories of supply chain technologies
Supply chain technology is a broad landscape. Understanding the main categories helps organisations focus investment where it will have the greatest impact.
Demand planning and forecasting technologies
Demand planning tools aim to improve forecast accuracy by combining historical data, statistical models and business inputs.
They support:
- Sales forecasting
- Demand sensing
- Scenario planning
- Alignment between commercial and operational teams
Modern tools often incorporate machine learning to detect patterns and respond to changes more quickly than manual approaches.
However, value is heavily dependent on:
- Data quality
- Clear ownership of the forecast
- Integration with supply and inventory decisions
Without these foundations, forecasting tools often become expensive reporting layers rather than decision-making engines.
Inventory optimisation technologies
Inventory optimisation tools focus on balancing service levels with working capital.
They support:
- Safety stock calculations
- Service level targeting
- Multi-echelon inventory optimisation
- Network-wide inventory visibility
These tools are particularly valuable for organisations with:
- Large product ranges
- Long or variable lead times
- Multiple stocking locations
Success depends on aligning inventory policy with real service requirements rather than theoretical targets.
Supply planning and advanced planning systems
Supply planning technologies help organisations determine how to meet demand given capacity, constraints and supply availability.
They are commonly used in:
- Manufacturing
- FMCG
- Healthcare and pharmaceuticals
- Complex distribution networks
These tools enable:
- Constraint-based planning
- Scenario analysis
- Trade-off evaluation between cost, service and capacity
The challenge lies in maintaining data accuracy and avoiding excessive complexity that planners cannot realistically manage.
Sales and Operations Planning (S&OP) and Integrated Business Planning (IBP) platforms
S&OP and IBP platforms are designed to align demand, supply, finance and strategy.
They support:
- Cross-functional planning
- Executive decision-making
- Scenario modelling
- Financial reconciliation
Technology alone does not deliver S&OP maturity. Value is realised when tools reinforce clear governance, accountability and decision rights.
Procurement and spend analytics technologies
Procurement technologies have evolved significantly in recent years.
Key capabilities include:
- Spend visibility and classification
- Category analytics
- Supplier performance tracking
- Contract management
- Procure-to-pay workflows
Spend analytics tools are often the starting point for cost reduction programs, providing insight into:
- Fragmented spend
- Contract leakage
- Supplier concentration
- Demand management opportunities
Procurement tools are most effective when tightly aligned with operational demand and service requirements.
Warehouse management systems (WMS)
Warehouse management systems underpin:
- Inventory accuracy
- Picking and packing efficiency
- Labour productivity
- Order fulfilment performance
Modern WMS platforms support:
- Automation integration
- Advanced picking strategies
- Real-time visibility
- Performance tracking
However, warehouse technology must align with:
- Physical layout
- Volume profiles
- Workforce capability
A mismatch between system design and warehouse reality is one of the most common causes of underperformance.
Transport management systems (TMS)
Transport management systems are used to plan, execute and monitor freight movements.
They support:
- Carrier selection
- Route optimisation
- Freight cost visibility
- Delivery performance tracking
For organisations with significant freight spend, a well-configured TMS can deliver both cost and service improvements.
The biggest challenge is integration — with carriers, warehouses and order systems.
Workforce planning, rostering and scheduling technologies
Labour is one of the largest cost drivers in supply chains.
Workforce technologies support:
- Demand-based labour forecasting
- Rostering and scheduling
- Skill mix optimisation
- Productivity tracking
These tools are increasingly used across:
- Warehousing and logistics
- Manufacturing
- Healthcare and aged care
- Service operations
Value is maximised when workforce tools are integrated with demand and volume forecasts rather than operating in isolation.
Asset management and maintenance technologies
Asset-intensive organisations are investing more heavily in asset management systems.
These tools support:
- Asset registers and hierarchy
- Preventative maintenance scheduling
- Reactive maintenance tracking
- Compliance and reporting
Improved asset visibility enables better planning, reduced downtime and more informed capital decisions.
Low-code, no-code and workflow automation tools
One of the fastest-growing areas of supply chain technology is low-code and no-code platforms.
These tools enable organisations to:
- Automate manual workflows
- Capture operational data
- Build lightweight applications
- Integrate systems without heavy custom development
They are particularly effective for:
- Bridging system gaps
- Supporting frontline teams
- Rapidly deploying targeted solutions
Used well, they complement core enterprise systems rather than replacing them.
Visibility, control towers and analytics platforms
Supply chain visibility tools aim to provide end-to-end insight across:
- Demand
- Inventory
- Orders
- Transport
- Suppliers
Often referred to as “control towers”, these platforms aggregate data from multiple systems and present it in a single view.
Value comes from:
- Exception-based management
- Faster response to issues
- Better coordination across functions
Without clear use cases, however, they risk becoming expensive dashboards with limited operational impact.
How to prioritise supply chain technology investment
With so many options available, prioritisation is critical.
Organisations should consider:
- Where performance is constrained today
- Which decisions are slow, manual or poorly informed
- Where data gaps create risk or inefficiency
- What capabilities the organisation can realistically adopt
Technology should be sequenced to support maturity rather than overwhelm it.
The importance of integration and architecture
Technology value is rarely created by a single system.
Most supply chain improvements depend on:
- Data flowing between systems
- Clear master data governance
- Simple, stable integration architecture
Fragmented technology landscapes increase cost and complexity while reducing insight.
Change management and adoption
One of the most underestimated aspects of supply chain technology investment is change.
Successful adoption requires:
- Clear ownership and accountability
- Training aligned to real workflows
- Visible leadership support
- Early demonstration of value
Without this, even the best technology will fail to deliver its potential.
Measuring return on investment
Supply chain technology ROI is often overstated upfront and under-measured after implementation.
Effective measurement focuses on:
- Decision quality improvement
- Cycle time reduction
- Inventory and working capital outcomes
- Service performance
- Labour productivity
Technology should be assessed on outcomes, not activity.
How Trace Consultants can help
Trace Consultants supports organisations across Australia and New Zealand to invest in supply chain technologies with confidence and clarity.
Our support commonly includes:
- Supply chain technology strategy and roadmap development
- Business case development and investment prioritisation
- Independent technology selection and vendor evaluation
- Operating model and process design
- Data and integration planning
- Implementation support and change enablement
We focus on aligning technology investment with real operational needs, ensuring systems support better decisions, not just better reporting.
As a technology-agnostic advisor, we help organisations choose solutions that fit their context, maturity and ambition — rather than chasing tools for their own sake.
Final reflections
Supply chain technology investment is no longer optional. The question is not whether to invest, but how to invest well.
Organisations that succeed:
- Start with clear problems, not products
- Design processes before systems
- Sequence investment based on maturity
- Focus relentlessly on adoption and outcomes
Those that struggle often do the opposite.
In an environment of ongoing disruption and pressure, technology can be a powerful enabler — but only when grounded in operational reality and supported by disciplined execution.
Ready to turn insight into action?
We help organisations transform ideas into measurable results with strategies that work in the real world. Let’s talk about how we can solve your most complex supply chain challenges.







