Why integrated execution is now a competitive necessity
Engineering, Procurement and Construction (EPC) organisations across Asia-Pacific are under intense pressure. Record investment in infrastructure, energy transition projects and urban development is colliding with rising costs, labour shortages and increasing scrutiny around delivery certainty.
Digital transformation is widely seen as part of the answer. Yet despite growing investment in digital tools, most EPC organisations remain constrained by fragmented execution models that limit visibility, increase risk and prevent intelligence from flowing across the project lifecycle.
A new IDC InfoBrief, sponsored by Octave, highlights a growing digital divide within the region’s EPC sector. While ambition is high, execution maturity remains uneven, and in many cases aspirational rather than operational.
Fragmentation remains the core challenge
IDC’s research shows that many EPC organisations continue to rely on manual processes well into delivery and handover. One third of respondents still use spreadsheets and checklists as primary execution tools, restricting scalability and responsiveness across large, complex projects.
This reliance on disconnected systems creates critical insight gaps. Two thirds of surveyed organisations do not use real-time dashboards or predictive analytics, limiting their ability to anticipate issues and intervene before delays or cost overruns escalate.
The problem is not a lack of digital tools, but a lack of integration. Data is generated at every phase of a project, from design through to commissioning, yet it rarely travels with sufficient context to support confident decision-making downstream.
The digital ‘last mile’ is still broken
The commissioning and handover phase, often referred to as the digital ‘last mile’, remains a persistent weak point. Only 13 percent of EPC organisations surveyed by IDC have fully integrated digital handover systems.
As a result, valuable data generated during design and construction is often disconnected from operations. Predictive maintenance insights fail to reach asset owners, diminishing the long-term value of supposedly smart assets and undermining return on investment.
In Asia-Pacific, where infrastructure assets are expected to operate reliably for decades under growing demand, this disconnect represents a significant missed opportunity.
Strategic ambition outpaces execution
Advanced Work Packaging (AWP) has emerged as a strategic priority for many EPC organisations in the region, driven by the need to improve material availability, reduce rework and increase schedule certainty.
However, IDC’s findings reveal a gap between ambition and supporting capability. Fewer than half of surveyed organisations have deployed the digital foundations required to deliver AWP outcomes consistently, such as integrated scheduling, real-time material visibility or execution-level analytics.
Interest in AI, digital twins and predictive tools continues to grow, yet only 13 percent of organisations have achieved real-time integration across systems. Without a connected digital backbone, predictive technologies cannot deliver the foresight and agility EPCs are seeking.
Supply chain integration lagging behind project complexity
Supply chain performance remains another pressure point. Only 30 percent of organisations use real-time dashboards to monitor cost and progress across suppliers and subcontractors.
In an environment characterised by volatile material availability and global logistics disruption, this lack of integration leads to cascading delays, resource misalignment and reduced delivery confidence.
Encouragingly, IDC notes that nearly half of organisations plan to adopt automated constraint analysis and planning tools within the next two years. However, without a unified approach to data and workflows, these investments risk becoming isolated improvements rather than enterprise capability.
From tools to lifecycle intelligence
The IDC InfoBrief draws a clear distinction between digital leaders and laggards. Leaders are defined not by the number of tools they deploy, but by their ability to connect data, workflows and decisions across the full project lifecycle.
These organisations use automated data capture, predictive cost forecasting and integrated project controls to enable proactive decision-making. Intelligence compounds from one phase to the next rather than resetting at each handover.
In contrast, organisations that continue to switch tools on a project-by-project basis face higher costs, reduced learning and limited ability to apply lessons across portfolios.
Real-world proof from Asia-Pacific
The Rozelle Interchange megaproject in Sydney illustrates the impact of an integrated approach. Faced with complex commissioning requirements and significant stakeholder oversight, the joint venture team adopted a connected digital completions platform to manage more than 140,000 tasks without paper.
By operating on a shared data environment rather than disconnected tools, the team improved transparency, reduced manual effort and delivered measurable time savings. The project demonstrates how lifecycle intelligence applied at scale can materially improve execution outcomes.
Integration as a competitive advantage
IDC’s central conclusion is clear. Digital maturity in EPC is no longer about adopting new technologies in isolation. It is about integrating them to create a connected core that supports predictable execution and operational agility.
For Asia-Pacific EPC organisations delivering increasingly complex, high-visibility projects, this shift is no longer optional. Building an integrated digital backbone is now a competitive necessity.
By dismantling silos and enabling intelligence to flow across design, build and handover, EPCs can improve delivery certainty, strengthen client confidence and position themselves for sustainable growth in a high-stakes regional market.
To learn more and access the IDC InfoBrief, visit us here.