Why ERP Implementations Fail and How to Prevent It | Netodin
70% of ERP projects fail to meet objectives. Here are the 7 most common failure causes — with concrete steps to prevent them before and during implementation.
Read →ERP, CRM, analytics, and infrastructure guides for SMBs outgrowing their current stack.
70% of ERP projects fail to meet objectives. Here are the 7 most common failure causes — with concrete steps to prevent them before and during implementation.
Read →ERP go-live failures come from deferred decisions, not tech problems. Here's a 50-point checklist covering data, testing, training, and hypercare — with go/no-go criteria.
Read →Retail ERP must unify inventory, POS, demand forecasting, and omnichannel orders in one system. Here's what it must do — organized by retail business model and complexity.
Read →Generic ERP misses time tracking, project billing, utilization, and ASC 606 revenue recognition. Here's what professional services ERP must do and when PSA is also needed.
Read →73% of manufacturing ERP projects fail. Here's what manufacturing ERP must do — by production type — and how to evaluate systems that go beyond basic accounting.
Read →Food and beverage ERP must handle lot traceability, FSMA compliance, HACCP, allergen management, and recall readiness. Here's what the software must do and how to evaluate it.
Read →Multi-channel e-commerce outgrows spreadsheets fast. Learn when your business needs ERP, what features matter, and how to evaluate options without the noise.
Read →Generic ERP misses what wholesale distribution requires — multi-warehouse, EDI, landed cost, tiered pricing. Here's what distribution ERP must actually do.
Read →49% of ERP projects hit data migration problems. Here are 8 common mistakes — from migrating dirty data to skipping trial runs — and how to prevent each one.
Read →Configuration should be your default ERP setting. Here's a decision framework for when customization is justified — and how to manage the long-term cost.
Read →42% of ERP failures come from poor change management, not bad software. Here's the operations-focused guide to driving adoption before, during, and after go-live.
Read →Your ERP audit trail is your evidence in a SOX or GDPR audit. Here's what it must capture, how long to retain it, and how to verify your configuration is complete.
Read →Cloud ERP costs $40–$150/user/month with 3–6 month deployment. On-premise requires $50K–$500K upfront and 12–18 months. Here's the full TCO comparison.
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