Labour Shortage stories
Private markets firms could cut paperwork as the Berlin start-up targets manual fund accounting, treasury and transfer agency work.
North American oil and gas, LNG and chemical plants can now use a certified robot to cut risky manual inspections and downtime.
The move could speed up threat triage and analysis for security teams, while limiting direct access to OpenAI models in customer workflows.
Identity and IoT monitoring gaps leave managed service providers with little public scrutiny, despite rising threats to clients' systems.
Firms facing a deepening hiring crunch may use specialist AI agents to handle routine accounting tasks as regulatory workloads rise.
A skills shortage and tight budgets are slowing gains as Australian builders boost weekly use of construction tech to 48 per cent.
Measured gains from AI and automation are pushing automotive plants to cut downtime, lift output and close a widening performance gap.
Australia's truck driver shortage is set to triple by 2029, pushing fleets towards data tools that could make autonomy viable.
Backup power demand is set to lift spending as operators add generators to shield data centres from outages and grid instability.
Rising AI workloads and technician shortages are pushing data centre operators away from fixed schedules towards condition-based upkeep.
Canadian contractors could cut payroll errors and compliance risk as Lumber enters a market short of skilled construction workers.
Funding will help the Cambridge company expand commercial deployment of robots that pick delicate fruit as labour shortages persist.
Most factory staff are hearing safety and policy changes only after they take effect, heightening the risk of delays, injuries and resignations.
The Queensland trials suggest drone herding could ease labour pressures on remote cattle stations, while keeping stockmen central to the task.
Labour shortages could slow repairs and raise outage risk, as TP Reach lets junior technicians get remote help from senior engineers on site.
Small firms are being squeezed as payroll gets harder and skilled staff near retirement, leaving software to fill the gap.
A veteran pipeline for data centre work is set to ease staff shortages as Salute and UHP target more than 10,000 recruits.
Aged care staff are spending half as long on morning rostering after an AI system recovered 15 hours a week at ECH.
Accounting firms may be able to widen client capacity without hiring as Meridian automates month-end close work and returns review-ready statements.
Hotel operators are shifting to joined-up planning tools as volatile demand and staffing pressure push software beyond room-rate management.