Quick Answer
If you manage 50 to 500+ staff and need to evidence WHS, aged-care or Fair Work compliance, buy asset management software for compliance capability first and features second. Understand the three software categories (point solution, EAM/CMMS, and GRC platform with an asset management module), score vendors against eight Australian-context criteria, watch for five red flags, and ask one decisive question in every demo: can you produce a complete compliance history for any asset in under five minutes, live, without preparation? A connected GRC platform with asset management usually delivers more compliance value than a standalone tool.
This buyer’s guide is written for Australian HR managers, compliance officers and operations leaders, not enterprise IT teams evaluating complex integrations.
If you manage 50 to 500+ staff and need a system that handles plant records, inspection schedules, maintenance histories and compliance documentation without a six-month implementation project, this asset management software buyer’s guide will help you find it.
The market has grown quickly. The global fixed-asset management software market was valued at $4.75 billion in 2024 and is projected to reach $12.85 billion by 2033, and in Australia, compliance-driven demand is accelerating, with around 74% of organisations globally expected to adopt automated compliance solutions by 2026.
Industry-specific platforms are growing faster than generic tools, because compliance managers have learned that a system built for their regulatory context outperforms one that needs heavy customisation to get there.
With a crowded market, knowing what to look for, and what to avoid, is what separates a good buying decision from an expensive one.
Source: Market Business Insights, Enterprise Asset Management Market Forecast 2025-2035.
Why HR and Compliance Managers Should Lead This Decision
In most Australian organisations, software procurement defaults to IT. For payroll or CRM, that makes sense.
For asset management software with a compliance mandate, it often produces the wrong outcome.
IT teams evaluate software through a technology lens: integrations, API availability, infrastructure and security architecture. These matter.
But for a system used to demonstrate WHS compliance, pass ACQSC aged-care audits, satisfy Fair Work record-keeping obligations and evidence due diligence to a board or regulator, the primary evaluation criteria are compliance-driven.
HR managers and compliance officers understand what a regulator asks for on site, what an audit finding looks like when maintenance records cannot be produced, and the difference between a system that generates compliance evidence as a by-product of normal operations and one that requires manual effort to assemble reports at audit time.
This guide is structured around compliance capability, not technical architecture.
The Three Categories of Asset Management Software
Before evaluating specific platforms, understand the three distinct categories in this space.
They are frequently confused in vendor marketing, and selecting the wrong category creates compliance gaps regardless of how well the system is implemented.
| Category | Point solution | EAM / CMMS | GRC platform with asset module |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary focus | Single function: asset tracking or register | Asset lifecycle, maintenance, plant management | Governance, risk, compliance, asset management as one module |
| WHS compliance support | Limited; tracking only, no inspection management | Strong for plant and maintenance compliance | Strongest; connects asset management to training, risk and incidents |
| Compliance training | Not included | Not typically included | Included; legally endorsed content |
| Implementation speed | Fast (days) | Moderate to slow (weeks to months) | Fast; compliance-focused deployments in days |
| Audit reporting | Basic asset reports | Maintenance and inspection reports | Full compliance evidence across all modules |
| Best fit (Australia) | Very small organisations (under 20 staff) | Asset-intensive industries (manufacturing) | Mid-size orgs (50 to 500-plus staff) with compliance obligations |
Source: Sentrient knowledge base; Market Business Insights EAM Market Forecast 2025.
For most Australian organisations with 50 to 500+ staff, particularly in healthcare, aged care, local government, NGOs and aviation, a GRC integrated asset management software delivers more compliance value than either a standalone point solution or a pure EAM platform.
The reason is the connection: asset records, inspection outcomes, staff training, risk management and compliance documentation all sit in the same governed system, retrievable in the same report.
Eight Evaluation Criteria for Australian Buyers
Use this as a scorecard when assessing the platforms on your shortlist.
| Evaluation criterion | What to look for in the Australian context | Red flag if missing |
|---|---|---|
| Australian WHS compliance awareness | Understands multi-jurisdiction complexity (nine Australian jurisdictions); adjusts inspection requirements by asset type and state; supports Regulation 213 and plant registration tracking | No understanding of the Australian regulatory context, forcing you to build compliance rules from scratch |
| Asset register capability | Current, complete, centralised register with all 12 compliance-grade fields; enforces naming conventions; supports real-time updates and disposal records | The register is built as a reporting output rather than a live operational system |
| Inspection and audit management | Configurable inspection templates per asset type; automated scheduling with reminders; timestamped sign-offs; corrective-action tracking to completion | Inspections recorded as a separate process disconnected from the asset record |
| Maintenance scheduling | Automated preventive schedules tied to asset records; records activity in real time; flags overdue tasks with named accountability | Maintenance managed outside the system, on paper, email, or a separate CMMS |
| Compliance training integration | Legally endorsed content covering WHS, aged care and HR, connected to staff records and asset-operator qualifications in the same system | No training module, requiring a separate LMS and manual record-matching |
| Reporting and audit readiness | Produce a complete asset compliance history (register, inspections, maintenance, operator certs) in minutes from a single system | Reports assembled manually from multiple sources before each audit |
| Implementation speed | Compliance-focused deployment operational within days, with out-of-the-box templates rather than custom builds for standard functions | Implementation timeline exceeds four weeks for basic compliance functions |
| Support model | Direct phone support from a local team, with a response when a compliance issue is urgent | All support via ticketing with SLA-based response times of 24 to 72 hours |
The last two criteria, implementation speed and support model, are frequently underweighted during evaluation and consistently cited as decision drivers afterwards.
Several Australian organisations have migrated from larger enterprise platforms specifically because those platforms could not provide human support when compliance urgency required it.
5 Red Flags to Watch for During the Buying Process
Vendors present well in demonstrations. The red flags that matter for Australian compliance buyers tend to emerge in specific questions rather than the overview pitch.
1. The demo shows features, but cannot show compliance reports
Any platform designed for compliance use should be able to demonstrate, live in a demo, how it produces an audit-ready report for a specific asset type.
If the vendor shows dashboards and menus but struggles to produce a retrievable compliance report on demand, treat that as a significant concern.
2. The platform is built for IT asset management, not physical plant
Many systems sold as ‘asset management software’ are built for software-licence management and IT inventory.
For WHS obligations around plant, equipment and infrastructure, these provide almost no compliance value.
Check explicitly for plant registration tracking, inspection management, competent-person sign-offs and maintenance scheduling for physical assets.
3. Implementation is measured in months, not weeks
For most mid-sized Australian organisations, a compliance-focused deployment should not require a months-long project.
If the standard timeline for a 150-person organisation is four to six months, you are likely looking at a platform that needs significant customisation, which introduces timeline, budget and capability risk.
4. No local support and no phone number
When a WHS regulator arrives, an ACQSC assessment begins, or an incident requires immediate documentation, you need support from people who understand the Australian regulatory environment and can respond in real time.
A vendor with no Australian presence and a global ticket queue is not positioned to help when it matters.
5. It cannot connect to your compliance training records
If the asset system and your training records sit in different platforms with no connection, you cannot demonstrate in a single report that the worker who operated a specific piece of plant held the required training.
That linkage matters in WHS investigations and ACQSC reviews. If a vendor cannot show how it works, it probably does not exist.
The Questions Every Australian Buyer Should Ask Before Signing
Use these in vendor conversations. The answers tell you more about compliance fit than any feature checklist.
| Question to ask the vendor | What a strong answer looks like |
|---|---|
| Does the system support Australian WHS plant registration tracking across multiple jurisdictions? | Yes, with state-specific requirements built in, not requiring manual configuration per jurisdiction |
| How are inspection schedules set and managed within the system? | Automatically, per asset type, with reminders and escalations, not manually managed by a coordinator |
| Can I produce a complete compliance history for one asset, in a single report, on demand? | A live demonstration is provided during the demo without prior preparation |
| What is the standard implementation timeline for a 100 to 150-person organisation? | Under four weeks for compliance-focused deployment; under seven days for module-by-module rollout |
| How do clients contact you for an urgent compliance issue? | By phone, to a named team member in Australia, during business hours, not a ticketing system |
| Does the platform include compliance training content? Is it legally endorsed for Australian workplace law? | Yes, with content reviewed by lawyers to align with Australian WHS and industry-specific obligations |
| What happens when an auditor asks for records in a format we have not used before? | A concrete answer about report customisation and support during audits, not a generic capability statement |
| How is the system priced: per user, per module, or per site? | Per user per year, with clear module pricing and no hidden implementation or support fees |
Source: Sentrient knowledge base; industry buyer-evaluation frameworks.
What Australian Buyers Consistently Cite as Decision Drivers
Across organisations that have evaluated and implemented asset management software in the Australian compliance context, a consistent set of decision factors emerges, and they differ from what technology buyers typically prioritise.
The organisations that make successful decisions tend to evaluate platforms against real compliance scenarios rather than feature lists.
They run the regulator-arrives test: how quickly can the system produce everything a WHS inspector or ACQSC assessor might ask for?
They check whether training records are connected to asset records. They test the support model before signing, not after.
The organisations that made regrettable decisions typically focused on feature breadth and integration architecture, selected a platform that looked comprehensive in the demo, and discovered post-implementation that producing compliance-ready reports required assembling data from multiple locations, and that urgent support questions went into a queue.
How Sentrient Positions Against This Buyer’s Guide
Sentrient is a Australian GRC platform built for businesses with 50 to 500-plus staff, used across healthcare, aged care, local government, NGOs and aviation, the industries where compliance-driven asset management requirements are most demanding and most scrutinised.
Against the eight criteria:
- Australian WHS compliance: Built for the Australian regulatory context, with content legally endorsed by lawyers to align with Australian workplace law and jurisdiction-specific requirements.
- Asset register: Centralised, current and connected: all 12 compliance-grade fields, real-time updates, disposal records, and accessible to the right people.
- Inspection and audit management: Configurable templates, automated scheduling, timestamped sign-offs and corrective-action tracking, all connected to the asset register.
- Maintenance scheduling: Automated preventive maintenance with named accountability, records created at the time of activity, and full maintenance history per asset.
- Compliance training: Legally endorsed training content covering WHS, HR and industry-specific obligations, connected to staff records and operator-qualification tracking.
- Reporting: Full compliance history across register, inspections, maintenance and training, reportable in minutes rather than assembled over days.
- Implementation: Seven days for compliance-focused deployments, with out-of-the-box templates and no custom build required for standard functions.
- Support: Melbourne-based team, phone support, direct access, not a ticketing system.
Sentrient is ranked among the top compliance management software solutions for Australian businesses (StackGo, 2025). Pricing is per user per year, with a clear module-based structure and no hidden implementation fees.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What should Australian HR managers look for in asset management software?
WHS compliance awareness, Australian jurisdiction support, inspection scheduling, maintenance records, compliance-training integration, local support and fast implementation, not just tracking features.
2. What is the difference between EAM software and a GRC platform with asset management?
EAM focuses on asset lifecycle and maintenance. A GRC platform connects asset management, compliance training, risk registers, incident management and audit reporting into a single, governed system.
3. How quickly should asset management software be implemented for a mid-sized Australian business?
Compliance-focused deployments should be operational within weeks, not months. Platforms that require custom builds for standard compliance functions create unnecessary timeline and budget risk.
4. Is cloud-based asset management software reliable for Australian compliance purposes?
Yes. Cloud-based solutions now represent about 68% of new EAM implementations globally. They offer accessibility, automatic updates and centralised records that on-premises systems cannot match for compliance.
5. Why does local support matter when choosing asset management software in Australia?
WHS investigations, ACQSC audits and compliance incidents require immediate responses. A local team reachable by phone is a material compliance capability; a ticketing system is not.
Buy for Compliance First, Features Second
The market has no shortage of capable platforms. The mistake most Australian HR and compliance managers make is evaluating them as feature lists rather than as compliance partners, and discovering post-implementation that the system that looked comprehensive in a demo cannot produce a coherent compliance history when a regulator asks for it.
The eight criteria here do not cover every consideration in a software selection, but they are the ones that determine whether a system delivers compliance defensibility or only the appearance of compliance.
The best time to apply them is before you sign. The second-best time is now, if your current system cannot pass the five-minute test.
Stop Evaluating. Start Comparing With the Right Questions.
Sentrient is a Melbourne-based GRC platform purpose-built for Australian businesses with 50 to 500-plus staff. Asset management, inspections, compliance training, risk and records, all in one system, with local phone support and seven-day implementation.
