When automation actually pays off
The automation hype problem
Every business wants automation. Very few have a clear answer to the question: what exactly are we automating, and what is the expected return?
The three conditions for automation ROI
In our experience, automation delivers measurable return when three conditions are met: the task is repetitive, the inputs are structured, and the error cost is high.
Where automation usually fails
Automation fails when teams try to automate judgment-heavy work, when the inputs are inconsistent, or when the process changes faster than the automation can be updated.
A simple framework for evaluating automation opportunities
Start with time: how many hours per week is this task consuming? Multiply by fully-loaded labour cost. That gives you the annual value of full automation.
The North Logistics case
Our work with North Logistics automated document processing for 2,000+ shipments per day. The inputs were consistent (structured PDFs), the error cost was high (lost contracts), and the volume was high. All three conditions met.
Conclusion
Automation is not a strategy. It is a tool. The strategy is identifying where human judgment is essential and where it is being wasted on pattern recognition a machine can do faster and more accurately.
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Greatbase
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Notes from the studio — web design, software, automation, and marketing as we actually practise them. Posts are written by the team and signed in the studio voice.
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