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Hire vs. automate

AI Operations Analyst vs. Hiring: The 2026 Cost Comparison

What a operations analyst really costs, what the role can and can't be automated, and how an AI operations analyst compares to a human hire — with sourced salary and cost-to-hire data.

For high-volume, rule-based operations analyst work, automating with an AI operations analystis faster to deploy, costs a fraction of a hire, and runs identically every time — while a human hire is the right call for judgment, exceptions, and relationships. Most firms don’t choose one or the other: they automate the repetitive 80% and keep a person on the judgment. Here’s the cost math and the full comparison.

How much does a operations analyst cost?

The U.S. median wage for management analysts (the closest BLS occupation, SOC 13-1111) is about $101,858/year (2025 data). Aggregators title-match a more junior operations-analyst population lower (Salary.com ~$71,777, June 2026); BLS Management Analysts is the broad benchmark.

But base salary isn’t the real cost. The U.S. Small Business Administration puts the fully-loaded cost of an employee at 1.25–1.4× base salary once benefits and overhead are counted (BLS data shows benefits run about 30% of total compensation). That puts a single operations analyst at roughly $127,000$143,000/year all-in. Add the ~$4,700 average cost-per-hire and a ~36–44 daytime-to-fill (SHRM), plus ramp time before they’re fully productive.

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BLS median base, management analysts (2025)
~$0
Fully-loaded cost at 1.4× base (SBA)
~$0
Average cost-per-hire (SHRM)
Sources: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (OEWS 13-1111, 2025); U.S. Small Business Administration; SHRM. Figures are U.S. national; metro markets run higher.

AI operations analyst vs. hiring: full comparison

Hiring a operations analystCaddi
Year-one cost~$127,000–$143,000 fully loaded, + ~$4,700 to hireA fraction of one hire
Time to productive~36–44 days to fill, then weeks to rampLive in days
CapacityOne person, one task at a timeHundreds of runs in parallel
ReliabilityVaries; fatigue and manual errorDeterministic code, identical every run
Compliance & auditManual logs and tribal knowledgeSOC 2 Type II, audit-grade run history
Scaling with volumeHire the next backfillNo new seat, desk, or training cycle
Coverage~40 hrs/week, PTO, turnover riskUnattended, always-on
Hiring a operations analyst vs. automating the role with Caddi.
CaddiQuick win — live in days
RecordLive & saving hours
Hiring a operations analystRolled out in parallel, over time
Procure + security reviewRollout + change managementROI proven
Automation proves ROI in days; a hire proves it after sourcing, filling, and ramp.

When should you still hire a operations analyst?

Automation isn’t the answer to every part of the role. Keep a person — or keep your current person — for the work that needs discretion and judgment: exceptions and edge cases, sensitive conversations, non-standard requests, and owning the relationship with the partners and clients the role supports. The point isn’t to replace the person; it’s to stop spending their hours on the repetitive work when deterministic code can do it faster and more consistently.

How Caddi automates operations analyst work

Caddi runs the repetitive operations analyst workflows as deterministic code across the stack you already own. You record the workflow once; Caddi builds it and runs it unattended, the same way every time.

Record the operations analyst workflow once; Caddi runs it as deterministic code across your stack.
0 hrs
Saved per month at the average Caddi customer
>0 FTEs
Worth of capacity, automated
The average Caddi customer saves 904 hours a month — more than five full-time hires, automated.
Automate the repetitive 80% of the operations analyst role and keep your best person on the judgment. See what the AI operations analyst runs or grab the operations analyst job description template.

Sources: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics, Management Analysts (SOC 13-1111), 2025; U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employer Costs for Employee Compensation; U.S. Small Business Administration, “How Much Does an Employee Cost You?”; SHRM (cost-per-hire and time-to-fill).

Frequently asked questions

How much does a operations analyst cost?

The U.S. median wage for management analysts (BLS SOC 13-1111) is about $101,858/year (2025). Fully loaded with benefits and overhead at 1.25–1.4× base (per the SBA), that's roughly $127,000–$143,000/year, plus an average ~$4,700 cost-per-hire and ~36–44 days to fill (SHRM).

Can operations analyst work be automated?

Yes. The high-volume, rule-based parts of the role are exactly the cross-system work an AI operations analyst automates with Caddi, running as deterministic code across the systems you already use. Judgment and exceptions stay with a person.

Is automated operations analyst work reliable and compliant?

Caddi uses AI only at design time to build the automation; production runs as deterministic code calling your systems via API, with every run logged for an audit trail you can defend. Caddi maintains SOC 2 Type II compliance.

Should I hire a operations analyst or automate the role?

For high-volume, rule-based operations analyst work, automating is faster to deploy and a fraction of the fully-loaded cost of a hire, and it runs identically every time. A human hire is the right call for judgment, exceptions, and relationships. Most firms automate the repetitive 80% and keep a person on the judgment.

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