working man with multiple screens

How many systems do you actually need to stay on top of your properties?

As a facilities manager, you rarely lack information. What you often lack is time to find it. Energy data in one system, contracts in another, maintenance plans in a third – and a handful of spreadsheets holding it all together. It works. But it costs more than you might think.

Regulatory demands are growing – and they require answers, not approximations

The EU Energy Directive, tightened accessibility requirements, CSRD reporting and auditors who expect documentation that actually stands up to scrutiny – the demands for traceability and reporting have never been higher. When data is scattered across different systems, there is a real risk that the answers you provide do not reflect reality. Not because you have made a mistake, but because the information is fragmented and difficult to reconcile. With a consolidated system, reporting is not a project you piece together before every audit. It is a matter of a few clicks.

What does a fragmented system landscape actually cost?

The visible costs – licence fees, support agreements – are straightforward to calculate. What rarely appears in the budget is:

  • Integrations that require maintenance every time a supplier updates their platform
  • Time spent retrieving, comparing and quality-assuring data from different sources
  • Onboarding of new staff who need to learn four systems instead of one
  • Errors that arise when the same information exists in multiple places – but does not always match

When you calculate hours per week, multiply by the number of staff and factor in years, the picture is often clear.

Collaboration works better when everyone is looking at the same thing

One of the most underrated benefits of a consolidated system is what happens to collaboration. When the operations manager, finance controller and facilities coordinator all work from exactly the same information, much of the friction in day-to-day work disappears – fewer misunderstandings, shorter meetings and decisions that can be made straight away rather than waiting for “the right version” to be produced.

Where to start?

Begin by mapping where information is created, where it is duplicated and where it is actually used. Often it becomes clear that a couple of systems cover most needs – and that the rest remain out of habit rather than genuine necessity.

From that picture, it becomes much easier to see what a consolidated system would free up – in time, in money and in control. Would you like to see what that could look like for your organisation? Book a call with us and we will start from your portfolio and your everyday reality.

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