In This Blog:
- ➤1. There’s No Such Thing as an All-in-One Project Manager (Not Everywhere, Anyway)
- ➤2. What Are the Types of Project Managers for Australia’s Fastest-Growing Industries? (Top 6 Focus)
- ➤ #1. Agricultural Project Manager
- ➤ #2. Construction, Engineering, and Trades: The Pre-Construction Coordinator
- ➤ #3. Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals, and Allied Health: The Virtual Practice Manager
- ➤ #4. Finance and Accounting Project Manager
- ➤ #5. Creatives, Marketing, and Entertainment Coordinator
- ➤ #6. Technology and IT Project Manager
- ➤3. How Australian Businesses Are Approaching the PM Scarcity
- ➤5. FAQs for the Types of Project Managers in Industries in Australia
- ➤6. Not ANY Project Manager. The Right One.
Bottlenecks and frequently missed deadlines. Messy handovers. Employees working through disconnected workflows. Team-wide panic when nobody’s sure who to ask for updates.
At this point, you don’t need further signs to see that our business is in dire need of a project manager.
But what does a project manager do? And the best industries for project management?
You check online. You read comments from fellow AU business owners and notice one thing:
They’re frustrated.
One project manager job post and 200 applications come in, only to find out none are the right fit for their business. Let alone for their sector.
Which type of PM handles NDIS billing? Coordinating a subcontractor tender schedule? Do you need a different project manager for creatives and another for marketing? What about sectors like agriculture? Engineering?
It seems like a generic PM title isn’t cutting it for them. Neither will it for you.
That’s what this article picks up on: PM role-specific breakdowns built around the six Australian industries where project managers are in high demand. Here’s what each role looks like in practice, and where businesses may have more hiring flexibility than they’re aware of.
Which industry is best for project management?
There isn’t a single “best” industry for project management. Demand depends on business growth, operational complexity, and coordination requirements. In Australia, sectors such as agriculture, construction and engineering, healthcare and allied health, finance and accounting, creative and marketing services, and technology continue to create strong demand for project managers due to increasing administrative load and delivery pressure. Each industry values different strengths, from compliance and stakeholder coordination to delivery management and workflow oversight. The better question for businesses is not which industry is best, but which type of project manager best fits how their industry operates.
There’s No Such Thing as an All-in-One Project Manager (Not Everywhere, Anyway)
SEEK projects that the next five years will see a 9.3% increase in openings for the role.
So why are so many AU SMBs having trouble hiring project managers? Or when they do, they find out after onboarding that the new PM hires are unable to fulfill what the business’s operations need. That they’re not the right fit for their specific industry.
It’s because most AU job ads list generic duties. Plan. Execute. Monitor. Organize. Then there’s the ever-enduring phrase: “great with time management and coordination.”
These don’t tell candidates what it is you’re really looking for, specific to your business and industry. Neither do they tell you and your team how this role will fit into your workflow structure.
Explaining the “Versatile Project Manager”
Before we get down to the finer points, there’s a caveat in between the lines. We want to make clear that there are spaces for project managers who don’t have an industry-specific background or experience in their resumes. Where the responsibilities are more “general-administrative” and process-driven than sector-specific.
But when talking about Australia’s main sectors (which we’ll be breaking down in the next section), industry context changes everything.
Tools. Responsibilities. Working knowledge. Compliance obligations. Add these to the daily rhythm of an industry-specific PM, and the description of a versatile PM becomes miles different from the job profile you should be writing.
Illustration: Andrew owns a local, mid-sized construction subcontracting firm in Brisbane. He hired a PM with four years of experience in digital marketing agencies. Strong organiser, great communicator. Spent the first three months learning what a subcontractor quote register was and why Aconex matters.
But the training and on-the-job learning were taking much too long, while contracts kept pouring in, one after the next.
Incompetence? That wasn’t it. But there was something lacking. In translation, and in application. Had he hired a PM from a construction background, things would have been running smoothly from week two.
Related Read: The project management role isn’t the only thing growing in demand in AU markets. Renewables are, too: Agrivoltaics Hubs, Solar Farm Lease, and Solar Panel Recycling.
What Are the Types of Project Managers for Australia’s Fastest-Growing Industries? (Top 6 Focus)
This is what separates our guide from other online articles on AU SERP. Here’s a list aimed at the 6 industries that have been seeing a consistent acceleration in growth. That momentum’s making the following project manager types highly in demand, well into the coming decade.
#1. Agricultural Project Manager
Agribusiness has always been one of Australia’s strongest export engines. Agricultural, fisheries, and forestry exports were worth over A$71 billion in 2023 to 2024 (ABARES – Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences).
Being among the most export-dependent industries in the country, the PM needed here should be capable of keeping the complex external network running without a hitch. Freight forwards. Customs brokers. International buyers. Compliance bodies. All moving in sequence.
The top markets this sector exports to? China, Japan, South Korea, Indonesia, and the US. The transport and distribution network alone is heavy with administrative load that most agricultural operators don’t have a dedicated person for.
Core Daily Tasks:
- Coordinating with freight forwarders and cold chain logistics providers
- Managing export documentation and DAFF/EXDOC lodgements (phytosanitary certificates, biosecurity declarations)
- Tracking vendor contracts and managing seasonal timelines (planting, harvest, storage, export windows)
- Liaising with international buyers on order timelines, certifications, and delivery confirmations
- Tracking compliance with importing country requirements, which vary by market
The Specialization Part of the Role
There are no universal templates for export documentation in Australian agriculture. Each importing country has its own biosecurity and food safety requirements (per product), and those requirements change.
There’s also coordinating domestic logistics from regional properties to port. Obligations only an agriculture project manager can take on with precision.
DAFF’s EXDOC system (Export Documentation) is the primary portal for lodging phytosanitary certificates. For businesses exporting meat, dairy, or seafood, there are DAFF-registered establishment requirements and audit obligations that require an experienced eye.
Tools for Agricultural Project Manager Jobs:
What To Do: Is your agribusiness managing more than 3 active export markets? Still relying on email and too many spreadsheets to coordinate logistics? That alone should tell you it’s time to hire an agricultural project manager.
#2. Construction, Engineering, and Trades: The Pre-Construction Coordinator
In this sector, do project managers don hard hats? No, most don’t. The AIPM (Australian Institute of Project Management) states that half of the project management roles in construction and infrastructure are less on-site.
That means tons of overwhelmingly administrative, document-heavy work behind the scenes. Less hard hat-wearing. The same goes for pre-site duties.
Core Daily Tasks:
- Coordinating subcontractor quotes and tender packages
- Managing permits, council approvals, and scheduling across trades
- RFI management and document control
- Tracking progress claims and payment schedules
- SWMS compilation and compliance tracking
- Maintaining project registers (variation logs, defect lists, site instructions)
Tools for Engineering and Construction Project Manager Jobs:
What To Do: Jot down all of the tasks your current project manager handles per week. If you don’t have a PM, list the tasks of the person/s filling that function. Take note of the ones that are done on a platform, like RFI tracking, schedule updates, permit documentation, and subcontractor correspondence.
These are staffable remotely. Boots-on-the-ground tasks belong on a separate list and with a different manager.
#3. Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals, and Allied Health: The Virtual Practice Manager
A project manager is often called a different name in small allied health practices and NDIS service providers: “virtual practice manager.” Different names on paper. Same responsibilities.
Health qualifications aren’t required since the role isn’t clinical. What the healthcare project manager does is free clinicians from tasks that have nothing to do with helping patients face-to-face, daily. Everything administrative and operational is theirs to oversee.
Attention to compliance detail. Familiarity with the platforms and systems used day to day. Coordinating everyone involved, from suppliers to hospital leadership, without things falling out of step.
“
There are 600,000+ participants under the NDIS’s wings as of 2026.
Participant Growth Tracking
As expected, the number of registered NDIS providers followed suit. In step with this growth is an administrative burden piling up, especially among smaller providers who typically don’t have a separate workforce for operations.
Core Daily Tasks:
- NDIS billing and claims: matching services to agreements, coding correctly, lodging through myplace, and reconciling against plan budgets
- Scheduling and telehealth coordination across clinics and practitioners
- Practitioner credentialing and compliance (AHPRA renewals, NDIS Quality and Safeguards documentation)
- Referral processing and participant intake
The Specialization Part of the Role
There’s such a thing as the most difficult part of the job as a virtual practice manager. And that’s NDIS billing. Everything in the Support Catalogue has to be billed under the correct funding category. Within the approved price limit. One error in detail and claims may be rejected. Funds are recovered much later than scheduled.
Make that scenario the backdrop of a practice with over 30 participants. That’s dozens of individual budgets to manage and keep up to date. Dozens of service records and claims. Teams need to constantly coordinate and align them. All at once, and at any given time.
The compliance obligations under the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission? Another difficult task. Registered providers should meet NDIS compliance requirements. Screening records need upkeep with current info.
The top three challenges in small NDIS providers? Admin burden, pricing, and workforce shortages. (Summer Foundation 2024 report)
Tools for Healthcare Project Manager Jobs:
What To Do: Does your practice have more than 30 NDIS participants? Does your admin team process claims by hand? Then you need a project manager with NDIS billing experience, or a related healthcare administration background.
#4. Finance and Accounting Project Manager
This PM role doesn’t manage client deliverables in the traditional sense. “Traditional,” as in launch dates, external deliverables, and client presentation. Instead, the PM brings order into the operational rhythm of the practice as a whole. The flow of reporting cycles, approvals, budgets, and day-to-day decision-making.
There’s real staffing pressure in this sector. CA ANZ’s (Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand) most recent survey echoes it. It found vacancy fill rates for tax roles at 59%.
What’s the typical threshold when defining a shortage in the country? %67.
The problem’s being compounded by: fewer graduates and fewer Professional Year enrolments. There’s also a wave of experienced accountants retiring in the next few years.
Senior staff have no choice but to do production work instead of advisory work. Less time spent on high-value work, and growth slows to a crawl. But a finance project manager can turn things around and make sure the right work reaches the right people at the right time.
Core Daily Tasks:
- Managing client onboarding docs (engagement letters, ID verification)
- Tracking tax season wins
- Tracking ATO lodgement deadlines
- Coordinating data entry and reconciliation flows
- Planning staff capacity (esp. in peak periods)
- Administering workflow software (job creation, task assignment, time tracking)
Tools for Finance Coordinators and Accounting Project Manager Jobs:
What To Do: Highlight your EOFY (End of financial year) slowdowns. In most AU accounting firms, the six weeks before June 30 expose processes left hanging without an overseer.
A remote PM takes the workflow responsibilities from the hands of your senior accountants, so they continue to do billable work instead of organizing client documents.
#5. Creatives and Marketing Coordinator
Marketing and creative agencies were among the first Australian industries to operate fully remote, and the PM role here reflects that. No office logistics to manage. No site to coordinate.
The project manager enables and supports the movement of creative output from initial draft to final, and then to approval. Everything should go on like clockwork, without veering off timelines or pushing the team towards near-burnout. And while tracking it all manually.
Agencies with multiple client accounts often face the same problem on repeat. Work gets cut off somewhere, and the team being “slow” isn’t the cause. Nobody’s facilitating handoffs or tagging campaign deadlines. Communications aren’t centralised either within teams or between teams and clients.
The creatives and marketing project manager’s role is outside the creative realm. Account management isn’t it either. It’s more operational, from tracking deliverables, blockages, and what’s up next in decision-making, before the next step can happen.
Core daily tasks of the PM in this sector:
- Tracking asset delivery through the production pipeline (brief to live)
- Managing client feedback and revision rounds
- Allocating designer and copywriter capacity
- Coordinating campaign launch timelines across channels
- Maintaining brand asset libraries and platform access
Tools for Creatives Project Managers and Marketing Coordinators:
What To Do: If your creative team’s managing over 4 or 5 client accounts concurrently, and your manager frequently gets pulled in to assist with managing asset versions and deliverables, there’s your opening for a PM.
#6. Technology and IT Project Manager
Sometimes referred to as delivery and scrum facilitators, tech PMs in Australia are at the head of delivery infrastructure, behind software development. Whether the team works in Agile, Scrum, Kanban, or some hybrid of the three, the PM’s job is to keep developers unblocked. They make sure sprints are on track and stakeholder expectations are realistic.
Australia’s tech sector has its own version of the talent squeeze. The Tech Council of Australia has flagged a persistent shortage of mid-level digital and delivery roles. Many dev teams now operate across multiple time zones and locations because of it.
That makes the PM function here fully remote. Distributed teams need someone who catches backlogs and tracks what’s slipping away from deadlines. Someone who’s responsible for translating technical progress into something the business side can use to make growth decisions.
Core Daily Tasks:
- Running Scrum ceremonies (standups, sprint planning, retrospectives)
- Maintaining and prioritising the product backlog
- Tracking sprint progress and flagging blockers
- Reporting progress to stakeholders in business-readable terms
- Coordinating release management and UAT
Tools for IT and Tech Project Managers:
What To Do: A dev team spending the first 20 minutes of every standup checking last week’s blocks needs a PM. A dedicated Scrum-experienced PM whose value is in upping productivity by being on top of blocks and backlogs.
A Quick Note: These six industries were selected because they’re among the sectors currently showing sustained demand and hiring pressure for project management in Australia. Aerospace, energy, telecommunications, and logistics are also seeing growing demand for PM talent, but for this guide, we’ve focused on the industries where SMB hiring conversations and operational bottlenecks are appearing most consistently.
Scarcity in the Top Industries for Project Managers in 2026
The shortage isn’t happening in a single sector. Most of Australia’s industries, even in the big 6 mentioned here, is going through it, one way or another. Apart from this, there are local salaries to contend with: SEEK puts the average Australian project manager salary between $140,000 and $160,000. Before superannuation. Before all the add-ons, you can do away with and reinvest in business operations if you have an offshore PM.
That’s where Remote Staff supports AU SMBs. We’ve been placing project management professionals with Australian businesses across these six sectors for over 18 years. The screening process is built around demonstrated platform experience and taking vetting seriously. You’re getting the same quality PM at a friendlier cost, just because it’s a different market pool location.
Payroll, onboarding, and HR support are handled on our end, so the administrative load of the hire doesn’t land on your desk on top of everything else.
Learn How to Calculate Outsourcing Cost in Australia, and read about Payday Super 2026 and Modern Slavery Act Australia, so you stay compliant in all areas of your business.
FAQs for the Types of Project Managers in Industries in Australia
What skills should a project manager have?
A project manager should combine coordination, planning, communication, and decision-making with an understanding of the industry they work in. Apart from keeping schedules on track, strong PMs manage risks, align stakeholders, and maintain momentum when priorities shift. In sectors like healthcare, construction, finance, and technology, familiarity with sector-specific platforms, compliance requirements, and operating workflows can matter just as much as leadership ability. The strongest project managers understand both execution and context.
When should a business hire a project manager?
A business should consider hiring a project manager when growth starts creating delays, handover issues, missed deadlines, or confusion around ownership of tasks. Teams spending too much time chasing updates or coordinating work manually are often already performing project management functions informally. Bringing in a dedicated PM introduces structure, visibility, and accountability before operational friction begins affecting customers or revenue. The decision is usually less about company size and more about complexity.
Is project management the same across every industry? (can you be a project manager in any industry? )
No. While the fundamentals of planning, coordination, and delivery stay consistent, project management responsibilities change depending on the sector. Agricultural PMs may manage export documentation and supplier timelines, while healthcare PMs coordinate billing and compliance, and technology PMs oversee delivery cycles and sprint execution. Industry context influences the tools used, the risks involved, and what success looks like in practice.
What industries can you be a project manager in?
Project managers work across almost every industry, but the responsibilities, tools, and knowledge expected from the role vary depending on the sector. Common industries include agriculture, construction and engineering, healthcare and allied health, finance and accounting, creative and marketing agencies, and technology and software delivery. Some project managers specialise deeply within one industry, while others support broader operational and coordination functions across multiple sectors. The right fit depends less on the title itself and more on how closely the PM’s experience matches the business’s workflows and operating environment.
Not Just Anyone for Project Management Industries. The Right One.
Australian SMBs in niche industries should step away from asking “What is the role of a project manager?” You should ask whether your business is expecting one person to solve problems that take a detour from their skill set.
When on the subject of the best industries that require project managers, adding people isn’t just a concern about “addition.” And for Australian businesses hustling to reach the right PM for their industry, they know this all too well.
Now, you do, too. It’s time to hire the project manager who fits the way your business already runs, within its industry. Call us or Request a Callback.
Need more roles for your growing team? Hire marketing automation expert, outsource construction estimating, hire overseas sales team, and more with Remote Staff.
Vaune Everis Cura has always been a writer in the truest sense, drawn to the art both as a personal creative pursuit and as a profession. Her experience penning content across digital marketing spaces and collaborating with business owners and market shapers has broadened her craft to include strategic direction and SEO insight. Having spent years with the InterContinental Hotels Group before stepping boldly into freelancing, she understands that at the centre of it all are genuine, meaningful brand–customer relationships built on purposeful, human content.





















