Elite sporting organisations are known for their relentless focus on performance. Players are monitored using advanced technology that tracks training loads, nutrition, recovery, and injury risk. Yet behind the scenes, many clubs still rely on outdated systems to manage the performance of their own staff.
While athletes benefit from sophisticated, data driven tools, administrative and operational teams are often evaluated through spreadsheets, emails, and paper based annual reviews. The result is a clear disconnect where performance analytics are cutting edge on the field but fragmented in the office.
According to Damien Durston from OneAdvanced, applying the same performance mindset across the entire organisation could unlock major improvements. Clubs already understand the value of data for athletes, but many have yet to extend that thinking to workforce management.
As clubs transition from community organisations into professional sporting enterprises, leaders are recognising the need for modern systems that provide clearer insights into workforce capability, productivity, and development.
Smarter decisions
Modern workforce management platforms can deliver real time insights into employee skills, performance trends, and talent development, helping organisations make smarter decisions about their people while reducing governance risks.
There is also a shift across the sports industry toward continuous feedback rather than traditional annual reviews. With clearer goals and regular check ins, employees can adjust their work in real time and stay aligned with the club’s success.
Some sporting bodies, including the AFL, are now taking a more holistic view of performance management that covers the entire organisation. Experts say clubs that apply the same data driven discipline off the field as they do on it could build stronger teams and more resilient sporting enterprises.