Most VMS platforms struggle with shift work because they were designed for project-based hiring, not hourly operations. When you run shift-based programs on these systems, five critical areas break down: shift creation becomes a manual nightmare, attendance capture lags behind reality, pay rules need constant workarounds, spend visibility arrives too late to matter, and supplier onboarding crawls at project speeds.
The result? Higher costs, frustrated suppliers, and operational chaos that compounds daily.
Let's start with a simple test. Open your VMS and try to create 200 shifts for next week across 15 locations with varying pay rates and requirements. If this takes longer than a few minutes, you've got your answer.
Most VMS platforms entered the market when contingent workforce meant consultants and project workers. They're built around job requisitions that run for weeks or months, not shifts that need to be posted, filled, and completed within days or hours.
This core problem creates issues that spread across your entire operation. Each breakdown point doesn't just cause inefficiency. It actively works against the speed and agility that shift work demands.
Manual shift creation is the first sign your VMS wasn't built for this. You're probably experiencing some version of this: your team spends hours each week copying and pasting shift details, adjusting dates one by one, and manually setting pay rates for each location.
The symptoms are obvious once you look for them. Your workforce coordinators spend more time in the system than managing actual workforce challenges. Shift posting happens in batches because individual creation takes too long. You delay posting shifts because the administrative burden feels overwhelming.
A UK courier company we work with was creating 300+ shifts weekly across their network. Before switching to a shift-specific platform, their team needed three full days just to get shifts posted. That's three days where suppliers couldn't see upcoming work, workers couldn't plan their schedules, and fill rates suffered because of compressed response times.
When they moved to JoinedUp, bulk shift creation with templates and automation cut this to under an hour. The business impact was immediate: a 68% increase in shift submission rates and 29% fewer cancelled shifts. Suppliers had more time to respond, workers had better visibility, and the workforce team could focus on strategy instead of data entry.
Shift work runs on real-time information. You need to know immediately if someone doesn't show up, if they're running late, or if they leave early. Traditional VMS platforms treat attendance as an afterthought. Something to be reconciled days or weeks later.
This creates a chain of problems. You can't redeploy workers quickly when gaps appear. You can't adjust schedules in real-time when demand changes. Most importantly, you can't catch attendance issues before they become billing disputes.
Look at your current process. How long does it take between a worker clocking in and that information appearing in your VMS? If it's more than a few minutes, you're operating without visibility.
Modern shift-focused platforms integrate attendance capture directly into workforce management. Workers clock in through mobile apps, supervisors get instant notifications of no-shows, and coordinators can respond to gaps within minutes instead of hours.
Shift work has complex pay rules. Night differentials, weekend premiums, overtime calculations, holiday rates. And these often vary by location, client, and worker category. Traditional VMS platforms handle this poorly because they weren't designed for the granular pay variations that hourly work demands.
You probably recognize these warning signs: your payroll team maintains separate spreadsheets to track premiums and differentials. You have manual processes to calculate overtime across multiple shifts. Pay disputes happen frequently because the system doesn't capture the complexity of your actual pay rules.
The UK courier case study reveals how hidden these problems can become. They discovered that NIC overpayments for under-21 workers had gone undetected for years. Their VMS couldn't handle the age-based payment rules properly, so errors compounded over time. A shift-specific platform with proper pay rule engines caught and fixed these automatically.
When pay rules work correctly from the start, you eliminate disputes, reduce administrative overhead, and ensure compliance with complex employment regulations.
In project-based hiring, spending happens over weeks or months. You have time to analyze, adjust, and optimize. Shift work operates on daily or weekly cycles. By the time traditional VMS reporting shows you're over budget, you've already committed to another week of excessive spending.
Real-time spend visibility isn't a nice-to-have for shift programs. It's essential for control. You need to see spending patterns as they develop, not after they've been locked in.
The same courier company that achieved a 70% cost reduction after switching platforms didn't just benefit from better shift management. They gained real-time visibility into spending patterns that let them optimize rates, adjust shift patterns, and negotiate better supplier terms based on actual data rather than historical reports.
When spend visibility matches the speed of your operation, you can make decisions that actually impact outcomes instead of just documenting what already happened.
Shift work demands supplier agility. New requirements appear quickly, seasonal patterns shift, and you need to activate new suppliers fast when demand spikes. Traditional VMS onboarding processes designed for long-term consulting relationships become roadblocks for shift work.
If it takes weeks or months to onboard new shift work suppliers, you're severely limiting your ability to respond to changing demands. These delays don't just affect individual programs. They limit your entire operational flexibility.
Shift-focused platforms streamline supplier onboarding with automated processes, digital document collection, and integrated compliance checking. What used to take weeks happens in days, expanding your effective talent pool when you need it most.
A VMS designed specifically for shift work fixes each of these problems:
Shift creation becomes scalable. Bulk creation tools, templates, and automation eliminate manual processes. You can create hundreds of shifts in minutes instead of hours.
Attendance connects to operations. Real-time mobile check-ins, instant notifications, and integrated gap management let you respond to attendance issues as they happen, not after they've disrupted service.
Pay rules work automatically. Comprehensive rule engines handle complex calculations, differentials, and compliance requirements without manual intervention or workarounds.
Spend visibility matches operational speed. Real-time dashboards and automated reporting give you the information you need to make decisions that actually affect outcomes.
Supplier onboarding matches business pace. Streamlined digital processes activate new suppliers quickly, maintaining the agility that shift work demands.
This changes more than just operations. It's strategic. When your VMS supports rather than fights against shift work, you can focus on optimizing programs instead of managing system limitations.
Recognizing these problems is the first step. The second is evaluating whether your current platform can be configured to handle shift work properly, or whether you need a purpose-built solution.
Start with an honest assessment of your current pain points. How much time does your team spend on manual processes that should be automated? How often do system limitations prevent you from responding quickly to operational challenges?
For organizations running significant shift-based programs, the business case for change often becomes clear quickly. The operational efficiencies alone typically justify the transition cost. Reduced administrative overhead, faster response times, better supplier relationships.
The courier company case study demonstrates the potential impact: 70% cost reduction, 68% increase in shift submissions, 29% fewer cancellations, and automatic resolution of compliance issues that had persisted for years.
When your VMS finally matches your operational reality, these improvements become possible for your programs too.