Australia’s productivity challenge is usually discussed in economic terms.
Governments debate policy settings. Economists analyse GDP growth. Businesses watch inflation, labour costs and interest rates.
But according to strategy and innovation expert Matt Tice, productivity is not just a national issue. It is a leadership issue.
Speaking at a recent Vistage webinar, Tice explored why Australia’s productivity growth continues to lag many comparable economies and what business leaders can do about it.
The message was clear: while CEOs cannot control economic conditions, they can control how effectively their organisations create value.
Productivity is More Than Working Harder
Productivity is often confused with efficiency.
Many organisations are highly focused on utilisation rates, activity levels and cost reduction. While these measures matter, they do not necessarily improve productivity.
Efficiency is about doing things right.
Productivity is about creating more value from the resources available.
A business can be extremely busy and highly efficient while still directing its efforts towards activities that generate relatively little value. Conversely, a team may appear less efficient on paper but deliver significantly stronger commercial outcomes.
For leaders, the challenge is shifting the focus from activity to impact.
The question is no longer “How busy are we?” but rather “Are we deploying our people, capital and time towards the activities that create the greatest value?”
Finding the Constraint
One of the most practical concepts discussed during the webinar was the importance of identifying organisational bottlenecks.
Every business has constraints that limit growth.
These may be operational processes, decision-making structures, workforce capability, customer acquisition challenges or resource allocation issues.
The mistake many organisations make is trying to improve everything at once.
The most productive organisations focus on the few constraints that have the greatest influence on overall performance.
As Tice noted, leaders operate in increasingly complex environments and are often managing dozens of competing priorities. The ability to identify and remove key bottlenecks can have a disproportionate impact on growth and productivity.
Technology Alone Is Not the Answer
Artificial intelligence is frequently presented as the solution to productivity challenges.
While AI undoubtedly offers opportunities, Tice cautioned against assuming technology alone will deliver meaningful gains.
The real value comes from applying technology to the right problems.
Leaders should focus AI and digital investments on areas that improve throughput, reduce constraints and enhance decision-making. Automating inefficient processes without rethinking how work is performed often delivers limited returns.
The businesses seeing the greatest benefit from AI are those using it to augment human capability rather than simply replace existing tasks.
This is particularly important in a labour market where skilled talent remains difficult to attract and retain.
Culture Drives Productivity
While systems, processes and technology matter, culture remains one of the strongest drivers of long-term productivity.
Organisations that encourage curiosity, accountability and continuous improvement are better positioned to adapt and evolve.
Employees closest to customers and day-to-day operations often have the clearest understanding of where inefficiencies exist. Creating an environment where these insights are encouraged and acted upon can unlock significant opportunities for improvement.
This requires leaders to move beyond traditional command-and-control approaches and create organisations capable of learning and adapting quickly.
The Leadership Imperative
Ultimately, productivity is about resource allocation.
Every organisation operates with finite time, capital and talent. The role of leadership is to ensure those resources are deployed where they create the greatest value.
That requires strategic clarity, disciplined decision-making and a willingness to challenge assumptions.
It also highlights the value of external perspectives. Many CEOs benefit from trusted advisers and peer networks that help challenge thinking, identify blind spots and maintain accountability around strategic priorities.
As Australia’s productivity debate continues, the most important question for business leaders may not be what governments can do to improve productivity.
It may be what they can do inside their own organisations.
For a deeper dive into Matt Tice’s insights on productivity, leadership and organisational performance, watch the webinar on demand.
