Measuring the ROI of Business Process Automation
How to calculate the genuine return on investment from business process automation. A practical framework covering direct cost savings, error reduction, capacity release, and the hidden costs of manual processes.
Beyond the Spreadsheet: Quantifying Automation Value
Business process automation projects are easy to justify in principle — nobody argues that manual, repetitive work is a good use of skilled employees. But securing budget requires quantified ROI projections, and too many automation business cases focus narrowly on direct labour savings while ignoring the broader value of automation.
A comprehensive automation ROI model should capture four categories of value. Direct cost savings: the salary and overhead cost of the manual effort being automated. Error reduction: the cost of mistakes in manual processes — rework, customer complaints, compliance penalties, and the operational disruption of correcting errors. Capacity release: the value of what employees do with the time freed by automation, whether that is handling increased volume without hiring or redirecting effort to higher-value activities. And speed improvement: the business value of faster processing, whether that means faster customer service, quicker regulatory submissions, or accelerated cash collection.
redskios helps organisations build honest automation ROI models as part of our digital transformation practice. We start by measuring the current process — actual time, actual error rates, actual volumes — rather than relying on estimates. This baseline makes the post-automation improvement genuinely measurable and allows you to demonstrate concrete ROI to stakeholders after implementation.