29/05/2026
People ask how long before automation pays for itself.
The honest answer is: faster than most expect. Slower than vendors claim.
Here's what the first three months actually look like for a typical 10-person SME.
Month one: you don't save anything.
This is the bit nobody puts in their brochure.
Month one is scoping, process mapping, and build. If the data needs cleaning, that happens here too. The automation isn't running yet. The retainer is. That's the reality and it's worth knowing upfront.
Month two: the clock starts.
Two or three workflows go live. Maintenance triage. Rent chasing. Compliance tracking. The team is still getting used to it. There are edge cases nobody anticipated. A couple of things need adjusting.
Conservative estimate: 8 to 10 hours a week recovered across the team.
At a blended hourly cost of £15.50 that's roughly £1,900 in recovered staff time over the month.
Retainer cost: £500.
Month two net position: £1,400 ahead.
Month three: it compounds.
The workflows are stable. The team trusts them. Two more automations go live.
Time saved climbs to 16 to 18 hours a week.
Monthly saving: £3,200 to £3,600.
Retainer cost: £500.
Month three net position: £2,700 to £3,100 ahead.
Cumulative position after three months: roughly £4,100 to £4,500 net gain against £1,500 in retainer costs.
That's a full payback on month one within six weeks of go-live.
The model isn't complicated. The maths isn't tight enough to call it a forecast. But as a directional view of what to expect, it holds up consistently across the clients we work with.
One caveat worth repeating.
None of this works if the process isn't defined before we build. Month one exists for a reason.
If you want to run the same numbers against your operation before committing to anything, that's exactly what the free audit covers.
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