Western Australia’s business environment is changing, both in pace and complexity. While growth in our state remains strong, the way organisations achieve and sustain that growth is shifting. Evolving regulatory environments, rapid technological change, and rising expectations around governance, transparency and resilience are reshaping how businesses operate, and in turn, what they need from their advisers.
Across the market, there is growing recognition that risk can no longer be managed in isolation. Instead, it needs to be embedded across strategy, technology, finance and operations. This is particularly evident in Western Australia, where large‑scale capital projects, digital transformation initiatives and complex supply chains intersect with global regulatory and geopolitical pressures. As a result, we are seeing demand shift toward advisers who can work across disciplines and engage at a senior level, alongside more traditional service models.
In response to the changing business environment, many organisations are investing more time and resources into strengthening internal governance frameworks, reviewing controls and ensuring risk considerations are integrated into decision‑making. Areas such as cyber security, data governance, internal audit, ESG reporting, and financial resilience are no longer treated as specialist issues, but as core components of organisational sustainability. For many, the challenge is not ambition, but the complexity of executing change while retaining clear oversight, confidence, and trust in the systems that underpin their organisation. This challenge is increasingly shaped by the adoption of advanced technologies, including artificial intelligence (AI), which is changing both the nature of risk and the speed at which decisions are made.
We are witnessing expectations of professional services firms evolving in parallel. Increasingly, organisations are seeking advisers who combine deep technical expertise with commercial understanding and can provide continuity through periods of growth and transformation. Experience matters more as strategic change introduces greater complexity and uncertainty, while agility and the ability to draw on multiple disciplines are increasingly valued alongside scale. This is particularly evident as organisations rely more heavily on data-driven and AI-enabled systems, requiring advisers to engage with risk in more continuous, integrated and technology-aware ways. This shift has required professional service firms to break down traditional silos and adopt more integrated ways of working, bringing together governance, controls, technology and financial insight to better reflect how clients now operate.
For the industry, growth in this context is less about size and more about capability, to ensure we are building teams that can operate confidently across an increasingly interconnected risk landscape.
The BDO Perth team has focused on strengthening its local capability to support our clients navigating increasing complexity. This includes services linked to risk, governance, financial transformation and indirect tax, all of which have become more demanding as regulatory and reporting expectations continue to increase.
Our recent partner appointments to the team reflect a deliberate focus on strengthening capability. These appointments are not about expansion for its own sake, but about building deeper technical expertise and leadership capacity in direct response to client needs.
We have also continued to develop our risk advisory capability in Western Australia, reflecting the fundamental shift in how risk is viewed. Risk functions are no longer viewed as purely defensive or compliance‑driven, they are increasingly critical enablers of strategic decision‑making. Clients are navigating heightened uncertainty and need advice grounded in a deep understanding of technology, regulation, organisational behaviour and commercial priorities, often simultaneously.
Looking ahead, these trends show little sign of easing. Digital transformation will continue to accelerate, regulatory environments will remain fluid, and stakeholder expectations around transparency and accountability will continue to rise. For Western Australian organisations, navigating this landscape will require ongoing investment and adaptability. For professional services organisations, it will require a sustained commitment to building capability, talent development and client‑focused delivery models.
As Western Australia enters its next phase of economic and organisational maturity, the professional services sector will continue to evolve alongside it — shaped not by growth for growth’s sake, but by the changing needs of the market it serves.
