← Blog  ·  May 20, 2026  ·  6 min read  ·  By Chase Brookshear
Operations

What Is an Operations Audit? A Small Business Owner's Guide

Most small business owners know something is inefficient. They can feel it — in the late nights fixing avoidable problems, the weekly "why did this happen again" conversations, the gnawing sense that their team is working hard but not working on the right things.

What they often don't know is exactly where the inefficiency lives, how much it's costing them, or what to fix first.

That's what an operations audit is for.

What is an operations audit?

An operations audit is a structured review of how your business actually operates — not how you think it operates, or how it's supposed to operate, but how work actually gets done day to day. It maps your workflows, identifies bottlenecks, surfaces manual tasks that should be automated, and produces a prioritized roadmap of what to fix first.

Think of it as a diagnostic before a prescription. No competent doctor prescribes treatment without understanding the problem first. No competent operations consultant builds systems before understanding your workflows.

What an operations audit covers

A thorough operations audit looks at five areas:

1. Workflow mapping

How does work flow through your business? What are the major processes — from lead intake to delivery, from purchasing to payment? Where do things get stuck, fall through the cracks, or require heroic manual effort to complete? This phase involves interviews with your team, observation, and documentation.

2. Time and cost analysis

Where is your team's time actually going? What tasks are being done manually that consume disproportionate time? We quantify each process: how long it takes, how often it happens, what it costs in labor. This turns vague feelings of inefficiency into concrete numbers.

3. Tool and systems inventory

What software are you actually using, and is it being used well? Most small businesses are paying for tools they underutilize, using tools in ways they weren't designed for, and missing integrations that would eliminate manual work. A systems inventory maps what you have and how it connects — or doesn't.

4. Automation opportunity assessment

Which manual tasks meet the criteria for automation — high frequency, consistent steps, rule-based logic? This is where the analysis turns into opportunity: each automatable task gets a time-savings estimate and a complexity rating so you know exactly which automations would deliver the highest ROI.

5. Prioritized roadmap

The deliverable isn't just a list of problems — it's a ranked action plan. High-impact, low-complexity wins first. Bigger structural changes second. Each item includes: what to build, what tool or approach to use, estimated time to implement, and projected time savings.

What you get at the end

At Brookshear Operations, a Systems Audit delivers:

You can take this roadmap and execute it yourself, hand it to an internal team, or continue working with us on the Build & Deploy phase.

The Systems Audit at Brookshear Operations starts at $1,500 and takes 1–2 weeks. Book a free 30-min call to find out if it's right for your business.

When should you get an operations audit?

An operations audit is most valuable in a few specific situations:

Operations audit vs. business consultant: what's the difference?

A general business consultant advises on strategy, direction, and organizational structure. An operations consultant focuses specifically on how work gets done — processes, systems, tools, and automation. The deliverables are different: strategy consulting gives you a direction; an operations audit gives you a map of your current state and a specific action plan.

For most small businesses, an operations audit is more immediately useful than a strategic engagement. You probably know your strategy — you need to know how to execute it efficiently.

How long does an operations audit take?

For most small businesses (under 50 employees), a comprehensive operations audit takes 1–2 weeks from kickoff to final deliverable. This includes:

The ROI of an operations audit

The most common outcome of a well-executed operations audit: clients discover they have 10–25 hours per week of work that could be automated. At $25–50/hour in labor cost, that's $13,000–$65,000 per year in recoverable time — see our guide on reducing operational costs with automation for a detailed breakdown of how to calculate your specific ROI. The audit itself typically costs $1,500–$2,500.

The math usually isn't hard to make work.

Ready to see what your operations could look like? Book a free 30-minute discovery call with Chase Brookshear. We'll talk through your current ops, identify your biggest bottlenecks, and tell you whether a Systems Audit makes sense for your business.

Free Resource

Get the Free Operations Audit Worksheet

A 2-page printable worksheet to find your biggest time-wasters and calculate what manual work is actually costing you. Free.

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