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The 2026 Frontline Operations Report

From strategy to execution: The operational gap you can’t afford to ignore

The gap between your best location and your worst isn’t a talent problem. It’s an execution problem.

The 2026 Frontline Operations Report reveals what’s driving performance variance across locations, and why the same strategy, the same standards and the same investment produce different results depending on where they land.

Built on responses from 1,594 frontline employees, managers and corporate leaders, this report identifies the systemic gaps between what leadership builds and what operations delivers, and what those gaps are costing in revenue, customer experience and brand consistency.

Closing those gaps doesn’t require more hiring. The capacity is already inside your operation.

Download the 2026
Frontline Operations Report

2026 Deskless Report Lp Graphics Aspect Ratio 3 4

The execution gap is real

Same strategy. Different results. Here’s why.

Your best and worst locations have the same strategy. The same products. The same promotions. The same training programs. One of them is delivering. The other is re-executing and doing the same work twice, losing margin on every shift.

The question is no longer whether frontline workers want to do the job. It’s whether the operation around them is built to let them do it consistently.

What’s driving the gap:

  • 38% of frontline teams say tasks need to be redone—rework isn’t a quality metric, it’s a capacity tax that compounds across every location, every day
  • 46% of location managers say new initiatives arrive without enough support to execute them
  • 54% of task assignments happen verbally, with no verification, no audit trail and no visibility into whether instructions reached the floor

None of these are people problems. They’re operating system problems. And they’re recoverable through operational improvements, not the labor line.

What the 2026 data reveals

5 areas where your operation needs to act now

The visibility gap is costing you more than you know

60% of frontline workers cite short staffing as their primary execution barrier, but only 35% of corporate leaders say the same. Leadership is 25 to 33 points more optimistic about frontline conditions than the people doing the work across every metric in this report.

When resources and operational investments are shaped by that perception, they’re being allocated against an incomplete picture. You can’t fix a problem you can’t see at the right scale.

Graphic showing 60%. 60% of frontline employees cite short staffing as their primary execution barrier.
Bar chart titled "How often changes arrive without enough support." Data for "Often or very often" includes: Regional managers at 52%, Location managers at 46%, Frontline employees at 40%, and Corporate leaders at 36%.

Launches are landing at half power

46% of location managers say new initiatives arrive without adequate support to execute them well. 52% of regional managers—the people responsible for making those initiatives happen—report the same.

Each launch that lands poorly makes the next one harder. Trust erodes. Workarounds become standard. A promotion designed to drive 8% comp sales that executes well in 65% of locations isn’t delivering 8%. It’s delivering a fraction of it, unevenly, while the window to course-correct has already closed.

Communication breakdowns are undermining your strategy

87% of managers say they communicate updates effectively. Only 56% of frontline workers agree. That 31-point gap is where strategy becomes inconsistency: shift by shift, location by location.

59% of frontline workers prefer hearing updates directly from their manager. Communication strategies that bypass that channel, or treat managers as just another distribution point, are strategies that don’t reach the floor.

A circular flow diagram featuring four icons representing data analytics, target goals, timed reports, and a dashboard interface.
Donut chart showing 54%. Text: 54% of task assignments still happen verbally.

Your digital infrastructure isn’t keeping up

54% of task assignments still happen verbally with no verification, no audit trail, and no visibility into whether instructions reached every person they needed to reach. The same initiative can land 10 different ways across 10 different locations, and headquarters won’t know which version is running until it shows up in performance data.

Fragmented systems and limited tools create a strategy problem, not just an IT one. The organizations closing the execution gap fastest are connecting the tools they have and making them smarter.

Manager capacity compounds every other problem

59% of frontline workers rely on their manager as their primary communication channel, but managers are stretched beyond coaching capacity. When that system is overtaxed, execution variance compounds across every location, every launch, every shift.

The manager is the operating system of the frontline. When managers have the time, tools and support to lead instead of cover gaps, every other metric in this report improves. When they don’t, every gap gets wider.

Icon of a large circle connected to three smaller green-colored circles, representing a manager overseeing a team.

The cost of doing nothing

Performance still varies significantly from location to location, shift to shift, launch to launch and that variance has a measurable cost.

For a 500-location retailer, recovering just 5 hours of rework time per location per week returns roughly $2.5 million in labor annually. That’s capacity already inside your operation, being lost to execution gaps, not headcount shortfalls.

The organizations closing that gap are making deliberate operational changes:

  • Making execution visible before it becomes a problem, with verified task completion, launch readiness gates and a single daily view of whether strategy actually reached the floor
  • Building confident, ready teams at every location, with hands-on preparation before go-live, not training completion as a proxy for readiness
  • Managing change like the constant it is, with structured playbooks, go/no-go gates and feedback loops that close with a visible response
  • Deploying AI inside the flow of work, not beside it, so intelligence reaches the right person at the right moment.
  • Supercharging managers instead of just supporting them, by protecting coaching time, reducing tool reconciliation and giving managers the intelligence to spot problems before customers do.

Inside the report

Original data from 1,594 frontline employees, managers and corporate leaders across retail, food service, hospitality, grocery and service operations that sheds light on:

  • The performance variance gap: Where high-performing and underperforming locations diverge, and why
  • Launch execution data: Where new initiatives fall apart after the slide deck goes out
  • The importance of training and communications in building confident, ready teams at every location
  • Specific actions operations leaders can take now to close the gap between strategy and business results
Preview of The Frontline Operations Report 2026. Features sections on closing the consistency gap and executive summaries for five key insights regarding staffing, launch readiness, manager effectiveness, AI operations, and task execution.
Cover of "The Frontline Operations Report 2026: From strategy to execution: The operational gap you can't afford to ignore," brought to you by Axonify.

Who this report is for

  • COOs and Chief Customer Officers managing operations and experience at scale
  • Operations VPs and regional leaders accountable for comp sales performance and brand consistency across locations
  • Operations and HR leaders responsible for ensuring the frontline is enabled and that product launches and operational changes land in the field
  • Any leader whose performance review includes a frontline question they can’t fully explain with the data they have

About the research

The Frontline Operations Report is Axonify’s annual study on the gap between what leadership builds
and what operations delivers.

Built from original research across frontline employees, managers and corporate leaders in retail, food service, hospitality, grocery and service operations, the report surfaces the execution barriers, performance drivers and systemic gaps that determine whether strategy produces consistent results, or consistent intentions.

Each year, the report gives HR and operations leaders the data to stop explaining variance and start closing it.

Download the 2026
Frontline Operations Report

Find out what’s actually behind your numbers