Can a decades-old company cut approval times, lower costs and tighten governance simply by rethinking how work flows?
This case study examines how established organisations in Singapore replaced paper-based work with secure digital workflows. Over the past few years, hybrid working and tighter compliance sped up their digital transformation.
We compare three real-world examples — media, manufacturing and hospitality — and extract a practical playbook you can adapt. This is framed as a commercial change, not just an IT upgrade.
What you’ll learn: how digitised inputs, automated routing, audit-ready storage and digital reporting delivered faster approvals, clearer accountability and lower handling costs. Later sections will show quantified savings, faster cycles and improved visibility for leaders and frontline teams.
Key Takeaways
- Digital workflows deliver measurable cost and time savings for business teams.
- Automation and audit-ready storage strengthen governance and compliance.
- Faster approvals and clearer accountability improve day-to-day management.
- A proven playbook can be adapted across media, manufacturing and hospitality.
- Success hinges on platform choice, process design and strong change management.
Why Singapore businesses moved to paperless operations in recent years
Rising digital audiences and faster commercial cycles forced many firms to rethink how routine paperwork flowed through the business.

Changing customer and reader behaviour driving digital-first work
Audiences now expect instant, consistent digital experiences. SPH saw readers shift from long-form print to bite-sized social updates, and Lianhe Zaobao drew over 90% of its digital audience from overseas.
That change made paper-heavy processes a commercial risk, as buyers and readers want faster responses and clearer service standards.
Operational pressure: tighter deadlines and distributed collaboration
Editorial and commercial teams face shorter publishing cycles and more distributed collaboration. Manual sign-offs and physical handovers slowed approval time and raised error rates.
Commercial gains: lower cost, better visibility and measurable performance
Digital workflows reduced handling costs and improved ownership across each process. Management gained real-time visibility of work-in-progress, which helped resource planning and performance reporting.
Market research showed similar drivers across the sector: hybrid work patterns, rising compliance and the demand for faster approvals made the shift relevant beyond one company.
Case study: Singapore Press Holdings’ “digital to the core” transformation
Faced with always-on publishing, SPH redesigned workflows to move information faster across teams.
Platform shift: SPH partnered with PointStar to migrate around 4,000 users to Google Workspace in six months. The change improved security, remote access and cross-team communication.

Collaboration in practice: editorial, radio, circulation and ad sales aligned via Google Meet group chats. Real-time coordination cut delays that once needed printed memos.
Workflow tools: an Apps Script engine digitised memos and centralised submissions for clear tracking and governance. AppSheet apps replaced legacy applications for claims and news planning, with vendor support handling feature requests.
- Faster onboarding and fewer administrative tickets let systems teams focus on larger projects.
- Data was embedded into daily work: Google Analytics fed BigQuery and Looker Studio dashboards for page views, return visits and conversion metrics.
Measured impact: the transformation cut paper-related costs by S$100,000 a year and raised decision quality by putting data and consistent reporting into team workflows.
Case study: Meiden Singapore’s automated invoicing and expense claims with SAP integration
Meiden’s finance team adopted an AI-driven solution to streamline invoicing and expense handling.
Background: FUJIFILM BI Singapore implemented Esker’s Accounts Payable automation solution and integrated it into SAP. The integration removed double-entry and strengthened end-to-end process integrity for accounting staff.
Accounts payable automation and improved visibility
Esker automated invoice capture and routing so the accounting team saw purchases and payments in one place. That visibility cut manual chasing and helped the team prioritise exceptions.
Fewer errors and reduced duplicate processing
The platform eliminated common human errors such as duplicate document handling. Finance gained more reliable information for month-end closes.
Mobile approvals and faster sign-off
Esker Anywhere™ enabled approvers to sign off on mobile. Managers could approve urgent invoices offsite, reducing approval time and removing paper sign-off.
Expense claims and supplier self-service
Expense processing moved from Excel and scanning to an automated flow that reduced 80% of paper use. Employees could track claim status and message the AP team inside the platform.
Suppliers uploaded invoices and checked payment status via a portal. That self-service cut inbound queries and freed staff for higher-value work.
- Result: clearer tracking, stronger control, and more productive accounting teams.
Case study: Paperless guest data capture in hospitality operations
High footfall at hotel lobbies turned simple check-ins into bottlenecks during peak hours. Long queues and repeated typing increased errors and slowed the guest journey.

Self-service data entry via LCD to reduce staff workload
Guests entered personal details—email, phone and address—directly on a centrally placed LCD display. This approach removed several repetitive administrative tasks from the front desk.
The result: fewer typing mistakes and faster intake. Staff no longer rekeyed forms from paper, so routine tasks were cut and employees could focus on higher-value service.
Automated transfer into the property management system
Information submitted at the kiosk was routed instantly into the hotel property management system. The automated transfer removed manual re-entry and strengthened record-keeping.
This ensured consistent capture of guest details and made audit retrieval straightforward.
Service outcomes: shorter wait times and a modern guest experience
Check-in time fell noticeably, improving the customer experience and aligning arrivals with modern expectations. Guests enjoyed a smoother way to begin their stay, and front-desk staff reported less pressure during peaks.
- Operational benefit: employees shifted from data entry to guest-facing services such as upgrades and problem resolution.
- Compliance: captured information was stored within the system, reducing risks from dispersed paper files.
- Scalable: the solution cut manual load and improved accuracy across high-throughput flows.
For teams seeking a tested digital route to faster guest services, see this practical example of end-to-end transformation with measurable gains: Amara Sanctuary digital transformation.
What paperless operations Singapore companies can replicate: practical playbook
Start by mapping each end-to-end process so teams can see every paper-heavy handover and rework loop.
Map the entire process first
Document every task, decision point and physical signature. Visual maps make bottlenecks obvious and show where time and rework concentrate.
Choose the right platform and apps
Set criteria: integration with existing systems, mobile access, permissions and audit logs.
Pick apps that support clear tracking and simple forms so users adopt the solution quickly.
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Prioritise high-volume processes
Scope by volume and risk. Start with invoicing, claims, onboarding, memos and approvals for fastest gains.
Implementation essentials
Use role-based training, internal champions and fast-response support during rollout. Communicate changes early and often.
Governance, security and measurement
Define access control, central repositories and retention rules. Track baseline cycle time, paper handling cost and rework rates to measure impact.
“Standardised forms, automated routing and clear ownership turn ad hoc tasks into measurable workflows.”
Scale with templates and continuous improvement: pilot, validate vendor fit, then extend using consistent approval matrices and performance reviews. For practical hosting and mail handling tied to this approach, consider virtual office services to reduce admin burden during transition.
Conclusion
, Real-world projects in media, manufacturing and hospitality delivered measurable gains when teams reworked how information flowed.
The case studies show that, over recent years, the right platform choices plus disciplined change management reduced cost, sped approvals and cut errors.
Practical steps are clear: digitise inputs, automate routing, centralise information and add simple tracking so management gains visibility without extra admin. Collaboration improved across teams, including sales and service groups, as workflows moved into shared spaces.
Next step: run light research, pick a high-volume process, validate adoption and scale. Choose solutions that integrate with existing systems, protect data and provide reporting to support decision-making and continuous improvement.
FAQ
What motivated businesses in Singapore to move to paperless systems?
How did Singapore Press Holdings manage a large-scale migration to Google Workspace?
What measurable benefits did SPH report after its transformation?
How does integrating Esker with SAP improve accounts payable?
Can mobile approvals reduce bottlenecks for finance teams?
What are the key steps to map a process before digitising it?
Which processes should be prioritised for digitisation?
How can organisations ensure staff adopt new systems?
What governance and security controls are essential for digital workflows?
How should success be measured after implementation?
How can hospitality venues capture guest data digitally without increasing staff workload?
What role does analytics play in a digital transformation?
Are legacy systems like SAP compatible with modern workflow tools?
What benefits do supplier portals provide?
How long does it typically take to see ROI from a digital workflow project?

Dean Cheong is a Singapore-based B2B growth strategist and the CEO of VOffice. He helps companies scale revenue through sharper sales execution, CRM implementation, and go-to-market strategy, backed by a strong foundation in business banking and finance from Nanyang Technological University and a track record of driving sustainable, performance-led growth.