What Is Paying People to Type the Same Thing Twice Costing You?
Most owners ask what new software costs. The better question is what the current process is already costing them, quietly, every day.
The same job written on a printout, a notepad, and three different sheets. Each time the same information gets re-entered, you pay for it again.
An owner asked me a version of this recently. He had a team that stayed busy all day and a business that still could not answer basic questions about itself. Busy people, unclear numbers. That gap is where the money hides.
The cost that looks like work
Here is why this stays invisible. It does not look like waste. It looks like work. Everyone is typing. Everyone is busy. The cost is buried inside salaries you already pay, so it never shows up as a line item.
But it is real, and the research has measured it. Manual data entry costs businesses an average of $28,500 per employee a year. Count the people in your business who spend their day moving information from one place to another. The one who takes the order. The one who enters it. The one who closes it. The one who builds the report. You are paying a large share of each of those salaries to move one piece of information through a relay.
A third of the day, gone
The numbers get sharper. The average worker spends close to a third of their day on repetitive data entry, moving information from one system to another. Read that as an owner. A third of every salary in a coordination role may be going to re-typing data that already existed somewhere else.
You are not paying them to think, to sell, or to serve customers for that third of the day. You are paying them to be a human copy machine.
The cost of doing it twice
It is rarely single entry. It is duplicate entry. The same information typed into a second system, then a third, then copied into a report. Studies put the cost of that duplicate entry at roughly $50,000 a year in lost productivity for a small business.
And here is the line that describes nearly every business I walk into. The staff know they are doing redundant work. They have accepted it as just how business works. That acceptance is the most expensive part, because once waste is normalized, nobody questions it, and the owner pays for it every year without ever seeing the bill.
The errors hide in the same place
Re-typing does not only cost time. It costs accuracy, and accuracy costs money twice. You pay once for the person to type it wrong, and again for someone to find and fix it. Every handoff in a relay is a new chance for a number to drift, and the most dangerous drift is the one that reaches a payment.
Why it happens, and what fixes it
None of this is a people problem. It is a structure problem. The tools do not talk to each other, so people become the connection between them. Every spreadsheet, every chat group, every separate login is a gap a human has to bridge by hand. Your staff are not the problem. They are compensating for systems that were never connected.
The fix is not another tool to add to the pile. It is connecting what already exists, so the data flows once, from one source, instead of being re-typed at every step. One place the data lives, everything else reading from it, no human bridging the gaps by hand.
The busiest team in the building can still be the most expensive thing you own. Busy is not the same as productive. Sometimes busy is just the sound of the same work being done four times.
I wrote the full breakdown, with every number and the research behind it, for my community.
Read the full piece at www.buymeacoffee.com/girlgoneverde.
Then count how many times one piece of information moves through your your desk before it lands.
Mindful Dollar | Nasly Duarte | Doing More With Less | mindfuldollar.blogspot.com
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