As AI-driven job cuts ripple through Australian workplaces, one software company is making the opposite bet: that keeping humans on the phones is a selling point.
Simplifi, a workforce-management software company founded in New Zealand, is expanding into Australia with its sights on the healthcare, aged-care and disability sectors, Pulse+IT reports. What sets the pitch apart is a public pledge to keep a human customer-service team in place “in the face of AI job cuts”, rather than replacing support staff with chatbots.
A contrarian position
It is a pointed piece of positioning. Across software and services, the dominant story of 2026 has been AI trimming headcount, especially in support and back-office roles. Simplifi is wagering that in care-heavy, human-facing sectors, buyers actually value the reassurance of a person who answers the phone, understands the setting and can help under pressure. In aged care and disability services, where staff are stretched and the stakes are personal, that reassurance is not a small thing.
The company is candid that labour shortages define the sectors it is targeting, which is part of the logic. Rather than sell AI as a way to cut roles that are already hard to fill, it is pitching software that helps existing teams roster, manage and retain the people they have, with humans still on the other end of the line when something goes wrong.
Why it matters
Simplifi’s stance is a useful counterpoint to the prevailing narrative that every business must automate customer contact or fall behind. For Australia’s care economy, the more valuable use of AI may be in the back office, easing rostering and compliance, while deliberately protecting the human relationships that define good care. Whether “we keep humans” proves a durable differentiator or simply a launch-day talking point will depend on whether buyers pay for it. But it is a reminder that in some markets, choosing not to automate is itself a strategy.
Source: Pulse+IT.
















































