Skip to Content
  • 오피스

    오피스

    미주
    • Atlanta
    • Austin
    • Bogota
    • Boston
    • Buenos Aires
    • Chicago
    • Dallas
    • Denver
    • Houston
    • Los Angeles
    • Mexico City
    • Minneapolis
    • Monterrey
    • Montreal
    • New York
    • Rio de Janeiro
    • San Francisco
    • Santiago
    • São Paulo
    • Seattle
    • Silicon Valley
    • Toronto
    • Washington, DC
    유럽, 중동, 아프리카
    • Amsterdam
    • Athens
    • Berlin
    • Brussels
    • Copenhagen
    • Doha
    • Dubai
    • Dusseldorf
    • Frankfurt
    • Helsinki
    • Istanbul
    • Johannesburg
    • Kyiv
    • Lisbon
    • London
    • Madrid
    • Milan
    • Munich
    • Oslo
    • Paris
    • Riyadh
    • Rome
    • Stockholm
    • Vienna
    • Warsaw
    • Zurich
    아시아, 호주
    • Bangkok
    • Beijing
    • Bengaluru
    • Brisbane
    • Ho Chi Minh City
    • Hong Kong
    • Jakarta
    • Kuala Lumpur
    • Manila
    • Melbourne
    • Mumbai
    • New Delhi
    • Perth
    • Seoul
    • Shanghai
    • Singapore
    • Sydney
    • Tokyo
    오피스 전체보기
  • 얼럼나이
  • 미디어 센터
  • 구독
  • 연락처
  • Korea | 한국어

    지역 및 언어 선택

    글로벌
    • Global (English)
    미주
    • Brazil (Português)
    • Argentina (Español)
    • Canada (Français)
    • Chile (Español)
    • Colombia (Español)
    유럽, 중동, 아프리카
    • France (Français)
    • DACH Region (Deutsch)
    • Italy (Italiano)
    • Spain (Español)
    • Greece (Elliniká)
    아시아, 호주
    • China (中文版)
    • Korea (한국어)
    • Japan (日本語)
  • Saved items (0)
    Saved items (0)

    You have no saved items.

    관심 있는 내용을 북마크하여 Red 폴더에 저장할 수 있습니다. Red 폴더 에서 저장된 내용을 읽거나 공유해보세요.

    Explore Bain Insights
  • 산업
    메인 메뉴

    산업

    • 우주항공, 방산 및 정부 서비스
    • 농업 관련 산업
    • 자동차
    • 화학
    • 인프라, 건설 및 건축 자재
    • 소비재
    • 금융 서비스
    • 헬스케어
    • 산업용 기계 및 장비
    • 미디어 및 엔터테인먼트
    • 금속
    • 광업
    • 석유 및 가스
    • 제지 및 패키징 산업
    • 사모펀드
    • 사회 및 공공 부문
    • 유통
    • 기술
    • 텔레콤
    • 운송
    • 여행·여가
    • 유틸리티 및 재생가능 에너지
  • 컨설팅 서비스
    메인 메뉴

    컨설팅 서비스

    • AI, 인사이트 및 솔루션
    • Customer Experience
    • Innovation
    • M&A
    • 운영
    • 조직
    • 사모펀드
    • 고객 전략 및 마케팅
    • 전략
    • ESG
    • Technology
    • 변화 혁신
  • Digital
  • 인사이트
  • 베인 소개
    메인 메뉴

    베인 소개

    • 업무 소개
    • 베인의 신념
    • 구성원 및 리더십 소개
    • 고객 성과
    • 주요 수상 경력
    • 글로벌 파트너사
    Further: Our global responsibility
    • 다양성과 포용
    • 사회 공헌 활동
    • Sustainability
    • World Economic Forum
    Learn more about Further
  • Careers
    메인 메뉴

    Careers

    • Work with Us
      Careers
      Work with Us
      • Find Your Place
      • Our Work Areas
      • Integrated Teams
      • Students
      • Internships & Programs
      • Recruiting Events
    • Life at Bain
      Careers
      Life at Bain
      • Blog: Inside Bain
      • Career Stories
      • Our People
      • Where We Work
      • Supporting Your Growth
      • Affinity Groups
      • Benefits
    • Impact Stories
    • Hiring Process
      Careers
      Hiring Process
      • What to Expect
      • Interviewing
    FIND JOBS
  • 오피스
    메인 메뉴

    오피스

    • 미주
      오피스
      미주
      • Atlanta
      • Austin
      • Bogota
      • Boston
      • Buenos Aires
      • Chicago
      • Dallas
      • Denver
      • Houston
      • Los Angeles
      • Mexico City
      • Minneapolis
      • Monterrey
      • Montreal
      • New York
      • Rio de Janeiro
      • San Francisco
      • Santiago
      • São Paulo
      • Seattle
      • Silicon Valley
      • Toronto
      • Washington, DC
    • 유럽, 중동, 아프리카
      오피스
      유럽, 중동, 아프리카
      • Amsterdam
      • Athens
      • Berlin
      • Brussels
      • Copenhagen
      • Doha
      • Dubai
      • Dusseldorf
      • Frankfurt
      • Helsinki
      • Istanbul
      • Johannesburg
      • Kyiv
      • Lisbon
      • London
      • Madrid
      • Milan
      • Munich
      • Oslo
      • Paris
      • Riyadh
      • Rome
      • Stockholm
      • Vienna
      • Warsaw
      • Zurich
    • 아시아, 호주
      오피스
      아시아, 호주
      • Bangkok
      • Beijing
      • Bengaluru
      • Brisbane
      • Ho Chi Minh City
      • Hong Kong
      • Jakarta
      • Kuala Lumpur
      • Manila
      • Melbourne
      • Mumbai
      • New Delhi
      • Perth
      • Seoul
      • Shanghai
      • Singapore
      • Sydney
      • Tokyo
    오피스 전체보기
  • 얼럼나이
  • 미디어 센터
  • 구독
  • 연락처
  • Korea | 한국어
    메인 메뉴

    지역 및 언어 선택

    • 글로벌
      지역 및 언어 선택
      글로벌
      • Global (English)
    • 미주
      지역 및 언어 선택
      미주
      • Brazil (Português)
      • Argentina (Español)
      • Canada (Français)
      • Chile (Español)
      • Colombia (Español)
    • 유럽, 중동, 아프리카
      지역 및 언어 선택
      유럽, 중동, 아프리카
      • France (Français)
      • DACH Region (Deutsch)
      • Italy (Italiano)
      • Spain (Español)
      • Greece (Elliniká)
    • 아시아, 호주
      지역 및 언어 선택
      아시아, 호주
      • China (中文版)
      • Korea (한국어)
      • Japan (日本語)
  • Saved items  (0)
    메인 메뉴
    Saved items (0)

    You have no saved items.

    관심 있는 내용을 북마크하여 Red 폴더에 저장할 수 있습니다. Red 폴더 에서 저장된 내용을 읽거나 공유해보세요.

    Explore Bain Insights
  • 산업
    • 산업

      • 우주항공, 방산 및 정부 서비스
      • 농업 관련 산업
      • 자동차
      • 화학
      • 인프라, 건설 및 건축 자재
      • 소비재
      • 금융 서비스
      • 헬스케어
      • 산업용 기계 및 장비
      • 미디어 및 엔터테인먼트
      • 금속
      • 광업
      • 석유 및 가스
      • 제지 및 패키징 산업
      • 사모펀드
      • 사회 및 공공 부문
      • 유통
      • 기술
      • 텔레콤
      • 운송
      • 여행·여가
      • 유틸리티 및 재생가능 에너지
  • 컨설팅 서비스
    • 컨설팅 서비스

      • AI, 인사이트 및 솔루션
      • Customer Experience
      • Innovation
      • M&A
      • 운영
      • 조직
      • 사모펀드
      • 고객 전략 및 마케팅
      • 전략
      • ESG
      • Technology
      • 변화 혁신
  • Digital
  • 인사이트
  • 베인 소개
    • 베인 소개

      • 업무 소개
      • 베인의 신념
      • 구성원 및 리더십 소개
      • 고객 성과
      • 주요 수상 경력
      • 글로벌 파트너사
      Further: Our global responsibility
      • 다양성과 포용
      • 사회 공헌 활동
      • Sustainability
      • World Economic Forum
      Learn more about Further
  • Careers
    최근 검색어
      최근 방문 페이지

      Content added to saved items

      Saved items (0)

      Removed from saved items

      Saved items (0)

      Brief

      Operating Models in Mining: Start at the Asset

      Operating Models in Mining: Start at the Asset

      Why centralization should be the exception, not the default.

      글 Richard Gosper, Stuart Love, and Michael Withers

      • 읽기 소요시간
      }

      Brief

      Operating Models in Mining: Start at the Asset
      en
      한눈에 보기
      • Value in mining is created at the asset, and operating models perform best when decision rights and accountability stay close to operations.
      • Centralization should be the exception, justified only by clear scale benefits, standardization that creates value, or genuinely scarce expertise.
      • Overly centralized models tend to fragment accountability and disconnect decision making from operations, making it harder to translate operational improvements into real economic value.
      • The highest-performing models keep authority close to operations, with lean corporate centers that enable rather than run the business.

      Across decades of work with large global mining companies, one pattern stands out: They oscillate—repeatedly and expensively—between centralized and decentralized operating models.

      These shifts are rarely subtle. Changes in senior leadership, periods of cost pressure, or major transformation programs often trigger decisive moves toward one end of the spectrum. Functions are pulled into corporate or commodity teams, centers of expertise are created, and assets are asked to “focus on execution.” At the other extreme, aggressive decentralization can fragment the organization, duplicating effort, stretching scarce expertise, and eroding the benefits of scale and consistency.

      Although there is no single operating model that works in every context, one principle consistently holds true in mining: Value is created at the asset. Operating models perform best when capability, decision making, and accountability are aligned as closely as possible to operations, meaning where decision rights and accountability reside, not simply where the work is done.

      This view is somewhat at odds with prevailing perspectives in the industry. We find that surprising. In our experience, mining companies deliver stronger outcomes when they start from a default of localization—treating assets as businesses with clear accountability for performance—and centralize only where there is a clear and compelling reason to do so.

      Recent benchmarking helps explain why this matters (see Figure 1). Relative to other industries, mining company operating models appear to perform strongly in providing strategic clarity, as well as clear organizational structures and processes. However, they underperform in outcomes such as inspiration and adaptability, as shown in Figure 3 below. That pattern is telling. The challenge is not setting direction or creating structure but rather ensuring that such elements remain relevant enough to the asset to preserve ownership, responsiveness, and the ability to adapt. The further that day-to-day accountability is removed from the asset, the harder it is to sustain performance.

      Figure 1
      Mining company operating models outperform relative to other industries in components such as strategic clarity and organizational structure

      Note: The 16 largest global mining companies were compared to 1,300 of the world’s largest companies and scored in key categories

      출처: Bain Synthetic Org Navigator, March 2026

      Start at the asset

      The starting point is simple: If a supporting capability has a direct and material impact on day-to-day operational performance, it should be aligned as closely as possible to the operation, with clear accountability to the asset.

      The more closely a capability is aligned to the asset, the better it addresses local constraints, trade-offs, and opportunities. Decisions are faster, accountability is clearer, and performance is easier to own. This mirrors what we see in effective private equity, where asset-intensive businesses are run as discrete units with clear decision rights, appropriate resourcing, and full accountability for returns.

      This is not an argument against centers of excellence, shared services, or enterprise-level capability. It is an argument about sequencing and burden of proof. In mining, localization should be the default. Centralization should be the exception.

      Centralize by exception

      In our experience, there are only three defensible reasons to centralize a capability in a mining operating model (see Figure 2).

      Figure 2
      Mining companies should centralize by exception
      출처: Bain & Company

      1. Scale benefits clearly outweigh the need for localization

      Centralization can create value where scale effects are real and material, such as when the work is highly repeatable, transactional, or benefits disproportionately from aggregation.

      However, scale alone is not sufficient justification. In mining, local context matters deeply. The more a capability depends on knowledge of the ore body, equipment, workforce, or operating rhythm, the faster scale benefits diminish. Centralization only makes sense when the value of scale clearly exceeds the cost of distance from operations.

      2. Standardization or coordination that creates real value

      Some activities benefit from standardization because variation erodes value. Common standards can reduce risk, improve comparability, and simplify interfaces across the organization.

      The challenge is that standardization is often pursued too broadly. In many cases, variation exists for good reason, driven by differences in asset type, mining method, or system bottlenecks. Standardization should be applied selectively, where consistency adds more value than local optimization, and revisited over time rather than assumed to be permanent.

      In some contexts, the benefit is not consistency but coordination across interconnected assets. We see this most often in multisite operations that share processing or logistics infrastructure. Where assets feed a common plant, rail network, port, or blending system, optimizing each site independently can suboptimize overall throughput, recovery, or realized price.

      It’s often better to optimize the whole system rather than each asset on its own. The economic objective shifts from maximizing individual asset performance to maximizing system value. Capabilities such as integrated planning or system-level scheduling may need to be centralized above the asset to optimize the whole rather than the parts. Even then, the scope should be tightly defined, with operational accountability remaining firmly at the asset.

      3. Expertise is scarce or constrained

      In certain areas, the limiting factor may be talent. When expertise is genuinely scarce, pooling it can create more value than duplicating it across assets.

      Talent constraints should inform how an operating model is implemented, not define the target state. The operating model should first be designed around what best serves the business and the asset, and only then be adjusted for the availability of capabilities, whether within the organization or in the market. Scarcity should be tested regularly; what begins as a sensible response to limited expertise can quietly become a permanent center long after the original constraint has eased.

      Centralization is not binary

      Deciding to centralize a capability is only part of the question. The next decision is how broadly that capability should be shared.

      Capabilities can be shared within a single asset, across multiple assets, at a regional level, at a commodity level, or across an entire group. Each step up the organization increases scale and distance.

      Similarity matters. The more similar the operations, the greater the potential value of shared capability. The more dissimilar they are, the more likely it is that centralization will dilute impact rather than enhance it. This is particularly relevant where organizational boundaries are drawn along commodity lines, even though operating models, bottlenecks, and technical requirements may differ materially from asset to asset. 

      Implications for asset performance and leadership

      Centralized operating models in mining make a clear trade-off: Scale and consistency are prioritized over local ownership. The result is often fragmented accountability, siloed optimization, and performance improvements that look positive in individual metrics but fail to translate into economic value.

      This trade-off shows up in the benchmark data. As Figure 1 shows, mining companies appear relatively strong on some operating model components such as strategic clarity, organizational structure, and process discipline. But on certain operating model outcomes, including inspiration and adaptability, mining companies are weaker (see Figure 3). That pattern suggests the industry is not struggling to create order. The challenge is ensuring that operating models do not become so optimized for control and consistency that they weaken local ownership, responsiveness, and the conditions required for sustained performance at the asset.

      Figure 3
      Compared with other global businesses, mining company operating models are weaker in outcomes such as inspiration and adaptability

      Note: The 16 largest global mining companies were compared to 1,300 of the world’s largest companies and scored in key categories

      출처: Bain Synthetic Org Navigator, March 2026

      Asset leadership roles are reshaped in the process. General managers remain accountable for outcomes but are increasingly asked to execute decisions made elsewhere, shifting the role from owning performance to managing compliance and weakening both asset performance and the leadership pipeline.

      High-performing models avoid this trade-off by keeping authority close to operations, while centers remain lean and enabling, allocating capital, setting a small number of nonnegotiable standards, and building capability. Work may be delivered remotely, but accountability stays with the asset, and centers earn their place by supporting performance rather than running the business.

      Implications

      As mining companies face growing complexity, tighter margins, and rising execution risk, operating models matter more than ever. Although there are many viable ways to organize, the most robust starting point is clear: Value is created at the asset.

      Designing operating models from the ground up—and centralizing only where there is a compelling reason to do so—strengthens accountability, improves decision making, and drives better performance. Centralization should not be the aspiration. It should be the exception, applied thoughtfully and challenged often.

      저자
      • Headshot of Richard Gosper
        Richard Gosper
        파트너, Brisbane
      • Headshot of Stuart Love
        Stuart Love
        파트너, Perth
      • Headshot of Michael Withers
        Michael Withers
        파트너, Melbourne
      문의하기
      관련 산업
      • 금속 및 광업
      • 에너지와 천연자원
      관련 컨설팅 서비스
      • 성과 개선
      • 운영
      • Operating Model & Org Design
      COO insights
      Mining Operational Excellence: From Basics to Breakthroughs

      Mining companies can unlock lasting value by getting the fundamentals right and knowing where innovation makes the greatest impact.

      자세히 보기
      COO insights
      Industrial Automation: From Control to Intelligence

      AI is reshaping the automation value pyramid into an hourglass.

      자세히 보기
      에너지와 천연자원
      Inside Bain's Latest Survey of Energy and Natural Resources Executives

      Bain partners discuss how companies are navigating market volatility, geopolitical shifts, and the evolving economics of the energy transition.

      자세히 보기
      성과 개선
      How Covid-19 Is Fundamentally Altering Retail Store Operations

      As a recessionary environment takes hold across many categories, retailers need a strong response.

      자세히 보기
      COO insights
      The Secret to Scaling Circular Supply Chains

      Most companies are betting on circularity. Very few are building the supply chains that make it work.

      자세히 보기
      First published in 5월 2026
      태그
      • 금속 및 광업
      • 성과 개선
      • 에너지와 천연자원
      • 운영
      • COO insights
      • Operating Model & Org Design

      프로젝트 사례

      운영 A Mining Company Optimizes Capex with a Different Way of Working

      See more related case studies

      전략 New products propel profitability for metals manufacturer

      See more related case studies

      전략 A roadmap for portfolio growth

      See more related case studies

      베인에 궁금하신 점이 있으신가요?

      베인은 주저 없이 변화를 마주할 줄 아는 용감한 리더들과 함께합니다. 그리고, 이들의 담대한 용기는 고객사의 성공으로 이어집니다.

      급변하는 비즈니스 환경에서 살아남기 위한 선도자의 시각. 월간 Bain Insights에서 글로벌 비즈니스의 핵심 이슈를 확인하십시오.

      *개인정보 정책을 읽었으며 그 내용에 동의합니다.

      Privacy Policy를 읽고 동의해주십시오.
      Bain & Company
      문의하기 환경정책 Accessibility 이용약관 개인정보 보호 쿠키 사용 정책 Sitemap Log In

      © 1996-2026 Bain & Company, Inc.

      문의하기

      무엇을 도와드릴까요?

      • 프로젝트 문의
      • 채용 정보
      • 언론
      • 제휴 문의
      • 연사 초청
      오피스 전체보기