Why Your Team is Struggling with Excel (and How to Fix It)
The Productivity Gap in Western Australian Offices
Walking through any office in the St Georges Terrace business district, you will see a common sight: professional staff spending hours manually wrestling with spreadsheets.
Despite being the most ubiquitous tool in the modern workplace, Microsoft Excel remains one of the most underutilized assets in the Western Australian corporate sector.
The reality for many Perth businesses is that “knowing Excel” has become a checkbox on a resume that rarely reflects actual proficiency.
When a team member says they are proficient, they often mean they can enter data and perform basic addition. However, in 2026, the demands of the WA mining, energy, and professional services sectors require far more than basic data entry.
The “productivity gap” is the distance between how a team currently uses Excel and how they could be using it if they understood the automation tools built directly into the software. This gap costs WA businesses thousands of dollars every month in wasted labor and, more dangerously, in the high risk of human error.
The Hidden Costs of Manual Workarounds
The primary reason Perth teams struggle isn’t a lack of effort; it is a reliance on “legacy habits.” Many employees are still using methods they learned a decade ago, unaware that Excel has undergone a revolution in the last three to five years.
- The “Manual Re-entry” Trap
We frequently see staff exporting data from a system like SAP, Xero, or an ERP, only to spend the next three hours manually reformatting it. They are deleting rows, bolding headers, and manually calculating subtotals. This is “busy work” that adds zero value to the business. In a city like Perth, where the cost of professional labor is high, paying an analyst to spend 20% of their week reformatting data is a significant drain on resources.
- Broken Links and “Hard-Coding”
In high-stakes industries like engineering or finance, a single hard-coded number – a number typed directly into a cell instead of being calculated by a formula – can lead to catastrophic reporting errors. When spreadsheets are passed between departments (e.g., from the site office in the Pilbara to the head office in Perth), these “hidden” numbers often result in incorrect budget forecasts or safety data.
- The VLOOKUP Ceiling
While many staff know VLOOKUP, very few are aware of more robust alternatives like XLOOKUP or the transformative power of Power Query. VLOOKUP is fragile; if a user inserts a new column into the data source, the entire report breaks. This leads to the “Friday Afternoon Panic,” where staff spend hours trying to fix a spreadsheet that was working perfectly that morning.
