ERP Implementation Best Practices to Avoid Costly Mistakes

Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) implementations are some of the most impactful initiatives a growing organization can take on—and also some of the riskiest if done without the right preparation. Based on insights from a recent expert-led webinar, this guide breaks down the critical dos and don’ts of ERP implementations, helping organizations avoid common pitfalls and set themselves up for long-term success.

This session brought together ERP, document management, and digital transformation leaders to share practical lessons from real-world experience—covering strategy alignment, ERP foundations, AI readiness, cybersecurity, and workforce adoption.

Why ERP Implementations Fail (How to Avoid It)

Many ERP projects struggle not because of the software itself, but due to poor planning, unrealistic expectations, or lack of internal alignment. A successful ERP implementation requires more than selecting the right platform—it demands clear ownership, clean data, disciplined scope management, and strong change management.

This article walks through proven best practices across five key areas:

  • Implementation preparation
  • Scope of work and planning
  • Data and integrations
  • Change management and communication
  • Software and growth considerations

1. Implementation Preparation: Start With the Right Foundation

Do: Treat Data as the Backbone of Your ERP

Data is the single most important factor in any ERP implementation. Your ERP will become the central system of record, often integrating with eCommerce platforms, HR systems, warehouses, and third-party logistics providers.

Key best practices include:

  • Decide which historical data is truly needed (not all data deserves to be migrated)
  • Clean and validate data before migration
  • Design data structures around reporting and analytics needs

 

Migrating years of outdated or irrelevant data often creates unnecessary complexity and cost.

Don’t: Underestimate the Effort Required

ERP implementations require meaningful time and focus from internal teams. Leaders who are already stretched thin often become bottlenecks if bandwidth isn’t planned properly.

Best practices:

  • Assign a dedicated internal project owner
  • Free up that person’s time to make decisions and gather inputs
  • Ensure leadership support and authority to move the project forward

2. Scope of Work: Crawl, Walk, Run

Do: Focus on Day-One Readiness

One of the most common mistakes is trying to fix everything at once. A successful ERP implementation prioritizes what is required on day one to:

  • Keep revenue flowing
  • Serve customers effectively
  • Maintain operational stability

 

Enhancements and optimizations can—and should—come later.

Don’t: Let Scope Creep Take Over

When every idea is treated as a must-have, timelines stretch, budgets balloon, and adoption suffers.

Ask critical questions:

  • Is this requirement essential at go-live?
  • Does it apply to 80% of use cases or only rare exceptions?
  • Does the ROI justify the added complexity?

 

A disciplined “crawl, walk, run” approach leads to faster go-lives and better long-term outcomes.

Get real-time visibility!

ERP connects finance, inventory, operations, sales, and reporting into one system.

3. Statements of Work: Not All Are Created Equal

Do: Read the Fine Print

Two ERP proposals can look similar on the surface while shifting risk very differently behind the scenes. Key areas where differences often appear include:

  • Data migration responsibilities
  • User acceptance testing and training
  • Go-live support coverage

 

Insufficient go-live support is a common red flag. Organizations should ensure adequate resources are available during the first critical weeks after launch.

Don’t: Assume Everything Is Included

If a requirement isn’t clearly documented in the scope of work, it may become a change order later. Clarify what is in-scope, out-of-scope, and future phase work before signing.

4. Change Management: People Determine Success

Do: Involve the Right People Early

ERP projects succeed when both leadership and “super users” are involved. While executives provide strategic direction, end users understand the day-to-day realities of processes.

Best practices include:

  • Involving subject matter experts early
  • Gathering feedback before final configurations
  • Creating clear communication around why changes are happening

Don’t: Ignore Adoption Risks

Resistance often shows up after go-live if users feel unprepared or unheard. Strong training, visible leadership support, and clear messaging around benefits help drive adoption.

5. Communication and Deadlines: Discipline Matters

Do: Establish a Consistent Cadence

Weekly status meetings help keep everyone aligned on:

  • Upcoming deliverables
  • Open risks and dependencies
  • Timeline and budget variance

 

Clear communication prevents last-minute fire drills and missed deadlines.

Don’t: Rely on Assumptions

Never assume the software will behave a certain way without validation. Confirm capabilities during demos, document requirements clearly, and ensure expectations align across teams.

6. Software Considerations: Think Beyond Features

Do: Use the Right Tool for the Job

Not every requirement should be solved through customization. A strong ERP strategy considers:

  • Native ERP functionality
  • Best-of-breed third-party applications
  • Custom development only when necessary

This approach minimizes cost, reduces technical debt, and improves maintainability.

Don’t: Ignore Future Growth

Your ERP should support where your business is going—not just where it is today. While you don’t need to buy everything upfront, ensure the platform can scale with your growth plans.

Explore BOOST Mentorship

Transform your team into NetSuite experts with our flexible expert-led training sessions.

Final Thoughts: ERP Success Is a Strategy, Not a Transaction

ERP implementations are not just IT projects—they are business transformation initiatives. Organizations that invest in preparation, partner collaboration, disciplined scope control, and change management consistently see better outcomes.

When done right, an ERP can become a growth engine—improving efficiency, visibility, and decision-making across the organization.

See full transcript

This transcript has been lightly edited for clarity and readability.

00:00 – 02:04 | Welcome & Webinar Overview

Liz Brison: 00:00

Hello everyone, and welcome to today’s webinar. We’re excited to talk about building a technology strategy for your business and about the collaboration between Go Virtual Office and Work Hero—two companies with deep expertise in technology and practical insights to share.

Liz Brison: 00:28

My name is Liz Brison, and I’ll be your host today. I always learn a lot from these webinars, and I encourage you to think about your top three takeaways that you can apply to your business after today’s session.

Liz Brison: 00:46

Please use the questions box in the GoToWebinar control panel to share questions, comments, or experiences. You can also let us know where you’re joining from and what you’re most looking forward to today.

02:04 – 03:15 | About Go Virtual Office & Work Hero

Liz Brison: 02:04

Go Virtual Office is an award-winning NetSuite provider helping companies enhance productivity, improve efficiency, and grow profits by unifying and automating business processes.

Liz Brison: 02:33

Work Hero, based in England, is an intelligent document management solution that brings scattered documents together into smarter workflows using tags, e-signatures, and co-authoring capabilities.

03:15 – 03:40 | Speaker Introductions

Liz Brison: 03:15

Our speakers today are Andy Dinkle, Partner and Director of ERP Solutions at Go Virtual Office; Tela Holloway, Implementation Consultant at Go Virtual Office; and Chris Muir, Vice President of Sales at Work Hero.

03:40 – 04:10 | Agenda Overview

Tela Holloway: 03:40

Today we’ll cover the strategy roadmap, why strategy matters, centralized ERP systems, technology investments, AI, cybersecurity, workforce enablement, customer success stories, and a Q&A if time allows.

04:10 – 05:40 | Poll #1 – Industry Representation

Tela Holloway: 04:23

Our first poll asks which industry best represents how your organization conducts business. We’re seeing responses from construction, higher education, healthcare, financial services, and more.

05:40 – 09:10 | Technology Strategy Roadmap

Tela Holloway: 05:42

Andy, from your perspective, what’s key to aligning day-to-day execution with long-term goals?

Andy Dinkle: 06:07

Everything starts with understanding who you are as a business. Your technology strategy should align with your company’s vision, culture, and long-term goals. There’s no one-size-fits-all approach.

Andy Dinkle: 07:03

You need to consider where your business is going in the next five to ten years—expansion, e-commerce, acquisitions, or operational modernization—and let those goals drive your technology priorities.

09:10 – 11:15 | People, Process & Change Management

Chris Muir: 09:17

Strategy matters because digital transformation impacts people. Often these projects run alongside day-to-day jobs, which makes change management and realistic planning critical.

11:15 – 17:55 | Why Digital Transformations Fail

Tela Holloway: 11:17

While 91% of organizations are undergoing digital transformation, only about 30% succeed. Andy, what causes this low success rate?

Andy Dinkle: 11:48

A major factor is people. Employees already have full workloads, and adding large projects creates tension. Alignment around goals and priorities is essential before technology selection even begins.

Andy Dinkle: 15:45

Don’t bite off more than you can chew. We believe in a crawl-walk-run approach. Technology evolves quickly, and trying to do everything at once can derail an entire project.

17:55 – 22:25 | Centralized ERP & Integration

Andy Dinkle: 20:17

ERP systems serve as the central hub of a tech stack. They connect fragmented systems, improve data accessibility, and act as a single source of truth across the organization.

Chris Muir: 22:31

A centralized system enables departments to collaborate better by working from the same information at the same time. Choosing the right ERP and implementation partner is critical.

22:25 – 30:00 | ROI, Investment & Long-Term Value

Chris Muir: 24:05

Technology should be viewed as an investment, not an expense. Understanding ROI and defining success metrics upfront helps organizations measure real outcomes over time.

Andy Dinkle: 26:45

Technology transformation is a marathon, not a sprint. When organizations focus solely on upfront costs, they often miss long-term value and adoption benefits.

30:00 – 45:00 | AI, Data & Business Impact

Tela Holloway: 32:32

AI is no longer experimental. Andy, where do you see AI making the biggest measurable impact in business today?

Andy Dinkle: 32:56

AI drives operational efficiency—automating tasks like expense reporting, document recognition, and customer interactions. It’s evolving rapidly and becoming embedded across systems.

Chris Muir: 35:16

AI adoption is accelerating across every department. The key is using AI meaningfully and responsibly, remembering that AI is only as good as the data it’s given.

45:00 – 49:00 | Cybersecurity Considerations

Andy Dinkle: 47:14

No business is immune to cyber threats. Companies must consider cloud security, multi-factor authentication, and trusted partners to safeguard sensitive data.

49:00 – 55:30 | Workforce Enablement & Adoption

Chris Muir: 49:15

Workforce enablement starts early. Involving the right people, prioritizing communication, and embedding change management throughout implementation are key to adoption.

Andy Dinkle: 50:27

Training should be hands-on and continuous. User-friendly systems, short videos, and feedback mechanisms help teams adapt as technology evolves.

55:30 – 60:05 | Closing Remarks & Resources

Andy Dinkle: 58:47

Go Virtual Office’s Boost Forum is a free community for NetSuite users to connect, share insights, attend workshops, and engage with experts.

Liz Brison: 59:27

Thank you to Go Virtual Office, Work Hero, and our speakers for sharing insights on building a successful technology strategy. We look forward to seeing you at future webinars.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Poor planning, unclear scope, and lack of user adoption are the most common causes of ERP failure—not the software itself.

ERP timelines vary widely. Smaller implementations may take 2–3 months, while larger, complex projects can take a year or longer.

Significant effort is required. Organizations should assign a dedicated project owner and ensure key stakeholders have enough bandwidth to participate.

No. Focus on core requirements first. Customizations should be added later once users are familiar with the system and ROI is clear.

Signs include lack of real-time reporting, heavy spreadsheet reliance, process inefficiencies, and systems that no longer scale with growth.

Share this post

Picture of chrissy

chrissy

Join Our Newsletter

Sign up to receive the latest tips, educational series webinars, and industry news straight to your inbox.