Insights · Case Study July 2026

Automated business reporting: 15 hours a week, back.

WFAN — Insights 5 min read Published July 2026

A Melbourne multi-site food business was losing hours every week collectively pulling business-critical information out of multiple systems. We automated the business reporting layer so the answers come to the team — instantly. Here's how the build worked, phase by phase.

15hrs/wk
Reclaimed across the team
3+
Systems unified into one answer
0
Manual report runs remaining

The problem: answers trapped in systems

Like most established businesses, this one's operational data lived in several places — and none of them talked to each other. The business runs multiple sites, so every question came with a multiplier: per store, per system, per week.

Answering a simple question meant someone logging into multiple systems, exporting, cross-referencing and formatting. Multiply that across a team and a week, and whole days were disappearing into information retrieval — skilled people doing lookup work.

What the lookup work actually looked like

The pattern will be familiar to anyone running a multi-site operation:

None of it was anyone's job description. All of it was everyone's week.

This is the standard failure mode of manual business reporting: the numbers are stale by the time they're read, every export is a chance to introduce errors, one person becomes the bottleneck, and decisions wait on data that already exists. Reporting automation removes exactly that layer — the retrieval, not the judgement.

The build: automated business reporting that runs itself

Following the ATTACK Method, we started by auditing where the hours actually went (Assess) and putting a number on each recurring information task (Track). That number is the whole game — once you know a report costs the team ninety minutes a week, the build decision makes itself.

The pattern was clear: the same questions were being answered manually, over and over. So we built the answers into the infrastructure (Transition): an automated reporting workflow — data flows that pull from each source system, consolidate, and put business-critical information in front of the team the moment they need it — no exports, no cross-referencing, no chasing.

Critically, we didn't flip a switch and walk away. The old manual process ran alongside the new one until the numbers proved it out (Adapt) — the team could compare the automated answers against their own workings and build trust in the system before depending on it. Only then was the manual process formally retired (Cut).

Our team can now access business-critical information instantly, instead of spending hours collectively pulling it from multiple sources.General Manager · Melbourne multi-site food business

What stayed manual — on purpose

Automation done well doesn't try to automate judgement. Decisions about what the numbers mean — staffing, ordering, maintenance priorities — stayed exactly where they were: with the people who run the business. What changed is that those decisions now start from live information instead of last week's spreadsheet.

The results: what reporting automation saved

This is what process automation looks like in practice: not replacing people, but taking the lookup work off them so their hours go where judgement is actually needed.

Could this work for your business?

If your team answers the same operational questions every week by logging into more than one system, the short answer is yes. The build pattern above — audit the lookup work, put a number on it, automate the flows, run old and new in parallel, then retire the manual process — transfers to almost any multi-system SMB: trades, retail, hospitality, professional services.

The honest caveat: it's only worth building when the recurring cost is real. That's why we start with a free consultation — to put a number on your version of the problem before anyone commits to anything.

Try this today

You don't need us for the first step. Open a note and list every operational question your team answered more than once last week — sales by site, hours rostered, invoices outstanding, stock on hand. Next to each, write which system the answer lives in and how many minutes it takes to pull by hand.

Anything on that list that takes more than ten minutes and repeats weekly is a reporting automation candidate — and the list itself is exactly what the Assess step produces. If you'd rather build that capability in-house than hire it, that's what our AI enablement work teaches.

Frequently asked questions

What is automated business reporting? +
It's connecting your source systems — point of sale, accounting, rostering, inventory — so reports compile and deliver themselves instead of being built by hand. The information reaches the people who need it on a schedule or on demand, always current, with no exports and no copy-paste.
How long did a build like this take? +
Most WFAN automation builds are live within one to three weeks, because we build directly in the client's existing tools — no long discovery phase, no agency overhead.
Would this work with our systems? +
Almost certainly — we work across tools like Xero, Shopify, HubSpot, Slack, Google Workspace, Microsoft 365 and Notion, and for data-sensitive businesses we offer hybrid and fully local deployments where records never leave your network.
What does something like this cost? +
Every WFAN build is a fixed fee agreed in writing before work starts — no hourly billing. The first consultation is free, and you'll get an honest read on whether automation is worth it for your workflow.
Is reporting automation worth it for a small business? +
If your team spends more than a couple of hours a week compiling the same information, usually yes. The maths is simple: hours spent × hourly cost × 52 weeks. We only recommend a build when that number comfortably exceeds the cost of building and maintaining the automation.
Melbourne · Australia-wide remote

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