In This Blog:
- ➤What Is The Role Of An OBM? The Straightforward Definition
- ➤What an Online Business Manager Is Not
- ➤What Does an Online Business Manager Actually Do? (Day-to-Day Responsibilities)
- ➤The Cost of Carrying the Business Alone: What Happens If I Don’t Have an OBM?
- ➤How Much Does an Online Business Manager Charge?
- ➤Why Australian SMBs Are Hiring Their OBM Remotely
- ➤FAQs About Online Business Managers Australia
- ➤Beyond the Owner’s Desk
Your business has been getting more of so many things recently. More clients. More staff. Tons of moving pieces. Definitely more wins.
That’s always welcome news.
The ripple effect? More things wind up piling on your already full desk and online calendar, from approvals that need your stamp to snags that need untangling. It’s almost as if the business now depends entirely on you to stay on its feet every day.
That may sound like it’s the right pace of things. But the goal shouldn’t be to become more involved as your business grows. It’s to be less indispensable to its day-to-day inner workings.
Often, that means not only seeing your workforce increase in number, but also hiring a specific specialist. Hiring for the role of Online Business Managers.
What does an Online Business Manager do? What are this role’s key responsibilities that help lift the daily operations pile-up from your desk?
Let’s first understand what the role is.
What is an Online Business Manager Australia? (What is an OBM?)
An Online Business Manager (OBM) in Australia is an operations professional who helps growing businesses run more efficiently by coordinating people, systems, and priorities behind the scenes. Australian business owners often hire an OBM when daily approvals, projects, and team management begin limiting the time available for strategy and growth. An OBM may work locally or remotely, supporting businesses across industries through operational leadership, process improvement, and accountability. For many Australian SMEs, the role provides experienced operational support without requiring the owner to oversee every moving part personally.
What Is The Role Of An OBM? The Straightforward Definition
An Online Business Manager, or OBM for short, runs the operational side of a business, freeing up time and attention from the owner, who can then focus on business vision and growth decisions. This operational side includes documenting workflows and standard operating procedures, managing product launches and cross-team rollouts, leading weekly accountability meetings, and turning business performance data into clear recommendations for the owner.
The Visionary and the Integrator: Which One’s the OBM?
The framing here is taken from the Traction/ EOS model by Gino Wickman (American entrepreneur, business coach, and the creator of the EOS itself—Entrepreneurial Operating System).
It’s a mental model familiar to many AU SME owners. Most just don’t know it has a name.
The Visionary is basically the owner. You. Generating ideas and charting the course. The one who builds relationships. The Integrator is the OBM. This specialist sees those ideas and directions through, turning them into accountability and timelines across the team.
Most business owners are natural Visionaries. Their minds are wired for it. Ideating and envisioning where those ideas go, or where current plans should be, is second nature to them.
That takes a lot of mental room and sustained mental effort. The kind of thinking that should be uninterrupted. Which is why few are wired, or have the time, to also be the Integrator.
What an Online Business Manager Is Not
So many roles sound so alike because of the overlap that sometimes occurs among different tasks. Understand what an OBM is by recognizing what it isn’t.
Not an Executive Assistant (EA)
An Executive Assistant manages an executive’s schedule. Anything from correspondence to travel. Anything along the lines of administrative tasks like documentation and record-keeping, processing expense claims, preparing presentations and reports, etc.
Not a Virtual Assistant (VA)
Managing emails, updating a website, booking appointments, and preparing meeting notes are a VA’s turf. The OBM decides what needs to get done operationally. They delegate work where it should be and follow through until completion.
Instead of being accountable for individual tasks, they’re responsible for making sure the business and its functions keep moving.
Not a Project Manager (PM)
A Project Manager is responsible for seeing to it that projects are completed within an agreed scope. That they’re in lockstep with the budget and timeline. The OBM oversees the business’s operational priorities, including people and processes. They align these without requiring constant direction from the owner.
Not an Operations Manager (OM)
Operations Managers typically oversee the day-to-day performance of a department or business function. An OBM works directly with the business owner. The bridge between the owner’s vision and the team’s daily execution. They make sure the owner doesn’t have to explain the same priorities over and over again.
How the Roles Differ at a Glance:
Illustration: Take Priya, who runs a 14-person e-commerce brand in Melbourne. She’s the only one who knows how her inventory system and fulfilment partner’s portal. Even their email marketing platform is hers to keep a close eye on. Her operations coordinator keeps orders moving, and her marketing contractor runs campaigns.
But when the stock stops syncing or a process breaks, everyone turns to Priya because she’s the only one who knows what connects to what. Six weeks after hiring a remote OBM, the program went live. What changed was that someone else took ownership of the moving parts, keeping the work moving until it crossed the finish line.
Extra Read: Learn about other roles growing in demand in Australia today— Best Industries for Project Management and What Does a Project Manager Do? And know the difference between a Chief of Staff vs Operations Manager.
What Does an Online Business Manager Actually Do? (Day-to-Day OBM Responsibilities)

An OBM’s work falls into four core areas. Most cover all four to some degree, though the balance tips to what your business needs most (and what industry it’s in).
Operations Management
The foundation of the role. An OBM improves the way work gets done, in teams and departments, and documents it. In practice, this is the work of converting informal habits and knowledge, and unwritten ways of thinking into standard processes.
Should anything be amiss or anyone not be available at any given moment, anyone can go back to those processes and know what to do next.
It also includes ongoing maintenance: updating SOPs as the business changes and retiring processes that no longer serve a purpose before they quietly become dead weight.
Typical daily responsibilities:
- Writing and maintaining SOPs for recurring tasks (order processing, client onboarding, refund handling)
- Setting up and managing tools like Asana, Notion, or a CRM to support daily workflows
- Auditing existing processes to find gaps, bottlenecks, or steps that rely on one person’s memory
- Standardising how recurring decisions get made so the same question doesn’t keep landing on the owner’s desk
- Reviewing and updating SOPs as the business changes, so documentation doesn’t go stale
Project and Launch Management
Not the same responsibilities as a Project Manager’s. For OMBs, it isn’t about a project’s movement to completion. Instead, OBMs turn plans into work. They don’t simply monitor, but follow through with business priorities from launch to wrap-up. A product launch. Website rebuild. System migration.
It has to do with specialising in breaking a goal into smaller, specific goal posts. It’s assigning accountability for each task to the right person and tracking progress and potential roadblocks against deadlines. Without the owner personally checking every step.
The distinction from operations management? In project launch and management, the work ends with the deadline. It’s not a permanent fixture in business operations.
Typical Daily Responsibilities:
- Breaking a launch (new product or service, website rebuild) into milestones with owners and deadlines
- Planning and coordinating the move from different business systems
- Coordinating a new hire’s onboarding plan across the first 30, 60, and 90 days
- Tracking a marketing campaign rollout comes together as intended
- Flagging blockers early and reassigning tasks before a deadline passes
Team and Vendor Coordination
The OBM is the point of contact between the business owner and everyone else carrying out day-to-day work. Everyone, from internal staff to external contractors and vendors.
This function removes the owner as the first stop for day-to-day questions. With an OBM in place, traffic gets absorbed and resolved before it lands on the owner’s agenda. Except where it’s more complex and requires the owner’s response.
Typical Daily Responsibilities:
- Weekly check-ins with team members to track progress; surface issues where there are
- Checking on work that’s still in progress; checking on loose ends so the owner won’t have to chase after them
- Helping team members resolve everyday disagreements and friction so they won’t necessitate the owner’s arbitration
- Negotiating vendor contract terms and renewal dates
- Reviewing supplier or vendor invoices, spotting errors before payment goes through
Metrics and Reporting Oversight
Whether it’s revenue, conversion rates, project timelines, team productivity, or customer retention, OBMs regularly review data, the numbers that show how the business is performing. They interpret and present the owner with a recommendation rather than just placing raw data in front of the owner.
Founders don’t have time to zoom in on a dashboard and work out what all that data implies. The OBM does the analysis beforehand: what’s underperforming and what’s nailing targets. They then create a decision shortlist where the owner’s judgment is required
Typical Daily Responsibilities:
- Pulling weekly or monthly reports on revenue, conversion rates, retention, etc.
- Flagging underperformance in operations early; doesn’t wait until they’re too far along to adjust
- Building a simple dashboard, the owner can understand at a glance
- Going through all the raw data first, then bringing the owner only what needs their attention
- Tracking project completion rates against deadlines to catch slippage patterns early
What To Do: Take a good look at these areas in your business. Look at the four core responsibilities. Is there someone taking charge of them, so you don’t have to? More than one without a dedicated person is your signal. You need an OBM to look after all four.
The Cost of Carrying the Business Alone: What Happens If I Don’t Have an OBM?
Overwhelmed sounds like a staffing problem, right? Not always. It may be coordination. Or the absence of someone responsible for bringing all those people together. Hiring several sets of hands is just more headcount, more headaches, while functions and operations somehow still find their way back to the owner.
The owner’s still the only one who can give the nod. That’s the cost, which also becomes gridlocks of stuck operations, unable to proceed to the next phase, because they need owner approval. One by one.
The Data On Where An Owner’s Time Actually Goes:
The Alternative Board surveyed business owners on how they actually spend their work week versus how they’d prefer to spend it.
Owners know where their time should go. Almost none of them are getting there, because the urgent work, the emails, and the approvals, constantly steal the place of priority over strategic work meant to grow the business even more.
What this costs, in numbers:
Every hour an owner spends approving a refund, chasing a vendor, or resolving a scheduling conflict is an hour not spent on the work that grows the business.
- Owner’s time valued at AU$150/hour
- 10 hours a week lost to tasks that should belong to someone else
- AU$78,000 a year in displaced strategic capacity
That figure doesn’t include the slower decisions, the missed opportunities, or the team’s own loss of momentum while waiting on approvals that didn’t need to wait.
Once too much of the business lives with one person, hiring more people underneath them rarely fixes the problem. It simply gives more people someone to wait on.
How Much Does an Online Business Manager Charge?
By the hour. Retainer. Contract. These are generally what dictate the salary difference of an Online Business Manager in Australia. Although rates may vary slightly per business size and niche, the numbers below are what most Australian businesses can expect to see.
Online Business Manager Cost in Australia Comparison Tables
Contract and Freelance:
Most AU OBMs work on a retainer or set hours per week rather than a fixed salary. The role is usually brought in part-time before it becomes full-time, as performance is evaluated before the contract ends.
Full-time Business Manager Salary (Payrolled):
The typical range is from $87,958 (25th percentile) to $164,704 (75th percentile). Top earners reach $238,000 at the 90th percentile. (Glassdoor data). Sydney-based roles are roughly 6% above the national average.
The Full First-Year Cost of a Local Hire
Base salary isn’t the total. It’s not the full cost of hiring locally, and full-time. You’ve got Superannuation Guarantee to think about, and that’s at 12% as of July 1, 2025 (here’s a guide on rules and changes for Payday Super 2026 and beyond) LINK.
Bring payroll tax into the equation, which varies by state. Special mentions are leave entitlements and onboarding, along with training and tools specific to your operations.
A $110,000 base salary jumps to $140,000–$150,000 in real first-year cost.
What This Means For Budgeting
Full-time or part-time, these aren’t the main deciding factors. For many AU SMBs, it’s getting the same quality talent at a friendlier rate. They’re hiring outside local market pools. They’re going remote for their OBMs.
Why Australian SMBs Are Hiring Their OBM Remotely
To be straightforward, it’s the practical thing to do. Online Business Managers are on the low end in terms of local supply, yet are in high demand. And as the economic principle follows, salaries for OBMs are in a much higher tier now than it was a few years ago.
That’s why AU SMBs are choosing to hire remotely with partners like Remote Staff. We’ve been matching businesses with offshore professionals based on real experience and expertise. We do the candidate vetting, making sure they aren’t only qualified as OBMs, but can adapt to business needs specific to yours.
Onboarding, HR, payroll, and admin work are on us, too.
Why is the cost lighter than that of a local hire? It’s a different market pool and cost of living. But you get the same quality talent and specialisation. In most cases, as with our partners, we also vet for strong work ethic and team collaboration, for fruitful long-term working relationships.
We also help you stay compliant in all corners of your business. Learn about the Modern Slavery Act Australia and Payday Super Rules (not something applicable to offshore hires, but just so you know about it).
FAQs
What are the differences between an OBM and a VA? (VA vs OBM or Virtual Assistant vs Online Business Manager)
A VA is the tactical doer, completing the work assigned to them, such as updating your website, managing your inbox, or preparing documents. An OBM is the strategic planner who coordinates people, systems, and priorities so the business stays on track without the owner having to oversee every detail and step.
What is the difference between a Business Manager and an Operations Manager?
An Operations Manager spends most of their time keeping work organised so people can get on with their jobs. A Business Manager has a wider brief, keeping an eye on everything from staffing and finances to sales and the overall direction of the business. One is concerned with how the business works each day; the other with how the business is doing overall.
How much does an Online Business Manager cost in Australia? (What are the Online Business Manager Salaries in Australia?)
Experience tends to be the first rung of the salary ladder. Then there’s the scope of work. The size of the business and the industry it’s in, which can involve OBM responsibilities specific to it, are the next filter. In Australia, experienced Online Business Managers commonly charge around AUD $70–$120+ per hour.
Ongoing monthly retainers often start from AUD $1,000–$3,000+ for businesses needing regular operational support.
How many hours a week do I need an OBM for?
The answer differs from business to business. Some Australian SMBs only need an OBM for 10 to 15 hours a week to coordinate projects and manage day-to-day operations, which is considered part-time. Others hire part-time first, then transition the role to full-time as the business grows.
It depends on how much of the day-to-day work you want to take off your own plate, and how large your team is becoming (about to become).
Can an OBM work remotely for an Australian business?
Yes. In fact, that’s how most Online Business Managers work. Using collaboration tools, video meetings, and cloud-based business systems, an OBM can manage teams, oversee operations, coordinate projects, and support Australian businesses from anywhere, provided communication processes and expectations are clear.
Beyond the Owner’s Desk
Daily maintenance isn’t your responsibility. Especially not when your business is growing (or you see it growing even more). Your role as the business owner is direction.
Don’t exchange your leadership and time as the Visionary for tasks that are better handled by someone who specialises in doing the coordination and management. How do you let each room know what’s going on when you shouldn’t have every task approval and movement on your desk? Bring in an Online Business Manager.
The local market pool is scarce. Local SMBs, with too-high price tags. AU SMBs are doing so, and they’re working with companies to match up with remote OBMs. You should, too.
Find your OBM with Remote Staff today. Call us or Request a Callback.
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.





















