Manual Reconciliation Overhead
Definition
Transition from spreadsheets to formal systems highlights time lost in reconciling ore reserves, stockpiles, and production data manually.
Key Findings
- Financial Impact: 20-40 hours/month per geologist at AUD 150/hour (AUD 36,000-72,000/year per site)
- Frequency: Monthly stockpile reconciliations and production reporting
- Root Cause: Lack of single source of truth for survey, drill-blast, load-haul data
Why This Matters
The Pitch: Metal Ore Mining wastes 20-40 hours/month per site on manual grade control reconciliation. Integrated production software cuts this to zero.
Affected Stakeholders
Geologists, Production Engineers, Site Supervisors
Deep Analysis (Premium)
Financial Impact
Financial data and detailed analysis available with full access. Unlock to see exact figures, evidence sources, and actionable insights.
Current Workarounds
Financial data and detailed analysis available with full access. Unlock to see exact figures, evidence sources, and actionable insights.
Get Solutions for This Problem
Full report with actionable solutions
- Solutions for this specific pain
- Solutions for all 15 industry pains
- Where to find first clients
- Pricing & launch costs
Methodology & Sources
Data collected via OSINT from regulatory filings, industry audits, and verified case studies.
Related Business Risks
Grade Control Dilution Losses
Poor Ore Block Accuracy
Gemeindevereinbarung Compliance-Verstöße und behördliche Sanktionen
Manuelle CDA-Dokumentation und Stakeholder-Verwaltung verursacht Projektverschiebungen
Unvollständige Stakeholder-Daten führen zu suboptimalen CDA-Vereinbarungen und Community-Konflikten
Capacity Loss from Assay Bottlenecks
Request Deep Analysis
🇦🇺 Be first to access this market's intelligence