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Where Manual Work Hides — and Why It Limits Growth

By Mark Pickett Updated
Where Manual Work Hides — and Why It Limits Growth

Manual work rarely feels strategic.

It feels like:

  1. “Just double-checking.”
  2. “A quick spreadsheet.”
  3. “We’ve always done it this way.”

Individually, none of these seem significant. But as distributors grow, small manual steps compound. What once felt manageable quietly becomes the constraint.

Growth doesn’t usually break systems.

It exposes effort.

Where Manual Work Typically Hides

Manual effort rarely appears as a deliberate design choice. It emerges in practical, well-intentioned ways.

1. Data Re-Entry

Customer updates entered in multiple systems.

Orders re-keyed between tools.

Pricing changes adjusted more than once.

Each step feels necessary. But repeated handling increases errors, delays, and inconsistencies — especially as order volume rises.

2. Spreadsheet “Bridges”

Spreadsheets are often used to:

  1. Track job costing adjustments
  2. Monitor inventory exceptions
  3. Reconcile pricing discrepancies
  4. Manage special orders

They’re flexible and fast. But when critical information lives outside core systems, visibility declines and processes become harder to scale.

3. Tribal Knowledge Dependencies

Many distributors rely on informal knowledge to keep things running.

“One person knows how that process works.”

“One person catches those issues before they ship.”

As complexity increases, dependency on individuals creates fragility.

4. Manual File Handling

Vendor price lists.

Customer uploads.

Inventory adjustments.

When files must be downloaded, cleaned, formatted, and imported manually, teams spend time managing data instead of using it. As frequency increases, so does overhead.

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Why Manual Work Becomes a Growth Constraint

Manual processes scale linearly. Growth does not.

As volume increases:

  1. Error rates rise
  2. Exception handling expands
  3. Rework becomes more common
  4. Managers spend more time troubleshooting

The result isn’t dramatic failure.

It’s gradual erosion of capacity.

What Small Changes Can Unlock

Reducing manual work doesn’t require disruption.

Many distributors begin by:

  1. Identifying where information is handled more than once
  2. Reducing reliance on spreadsheets for operational tracking
  3. Improving how systems share data
  4. Simplifying how external files enter core workflows

Individually, these changes are incremental. Together, they reduce errors, improve predictability, and free up time.

Where to Start

Ask a simple question:

Where is the same information handled more than once?

Addressing even one friction point can create meaningful breathing room.

Because creating capacity isn’t about doing more.

It’s about removing what no longer needs to be done manually.

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Mark Pickett

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