What to assess when evaluating ERPs: financial management, operations, AI, implementation approach, and the partner you bring in to do the work.
ERP selection is one of the most consequential decisions a finance leader makes. The landscape has changed: modern platforms promise AI-native automation and go-lives in weeks, while deep industry solutions offer capabilities that generic tools cannot touch. Before you evaluate either, three questions are worth settling early. Who owns your data if you leave? AI-native platforms frequently limit data export or retain rights in ways that create compliance exposure down the road. How does the platform handle security and regulatory requirements at your scale? Faster implementations often trade depth of controls for speed of setup. And can your finance team see operations in one place, or will you be reconciling across disconnected systems at month-end? A single view of financials and operations is worth more than it sounds when your business starts to scale. This checklist helps you evaluate your options and decide which trade-off is right for your business.
General ledger and multi-dimensional reporting
Does the system support dimensional reporting by project, department, and location without custom coding?
Multi-entity and intercompany accounting
Can it manage multiple legal entities, consolidations, and intercompany eliminations natively?
Multi-currency support
Real-time exchange rate updates and full transaction-level currency tracking, not just display formatting.
AP / AR automation
What level of workflow automation exists for approvals, matching, and exception handling?
Month-end close timeline
What is the realistic close time post-go-live for a company of your size?
Fixed assets management
Depreciation scheduling, disposals, and audit trail, all within the same system?
Audit trail and access controls
Is the audit trail immutable? Are segregation of duties and role-based access enforced natively?
FP&A, budgeting, and forecasting
Does integrated planning come standard, or is it a separate module with a separate cost?
SOX and regulatory compliance controls
How does the system document and enforce compliance controls? What does the auditor workflow look like?
Open API architecture
Can the system connect to your CRM, HRIS, and banking tools?
Evaluate these based on your industry. Not every item applies to every business.
Manufacturing: MRP and production planning
Multi-level BOM, MRP runs, capacity scheduling, and shop floor data collection. How native vs. bolted on?
Manufacturing: quality and compliance
Lot and serial traceability, non-conformance tracking, and certificate generation within the same system?
Construction: job costing and POC billing
CSI MasterFormat cost codes, percentage-of-completion revenue recognition, retainage tracking, and AIA billing?
Construction: change order management
Approval workflows, commitment tracking, and impact to project financials. All connected?
Distribution: warehouse management
Pick, pack, ship, barcode and RFID, wave picking. Native WMS or requiring a separate add-on?
Distribution: multi-channel order management
EDI, ecommerce, and marketplace orders flowing into a single order management system?
Field service: mobile workforce
Dispatching, field time entry, and customer billing accessible on mobile without a separate app?
Inventory optimization
Demand forecasting, safety stock calculations, and ABC classification. Built-in or third-party?
Project accounting
Cost tracking by project, resource billing, and project-level P&L without manual workarounds?
Subcontractor and vendor compliance
Certificate of insurance tracking, lien waiver management, and vendor performance benchmarking?
Implementation methodology: big bang vs. phased standup
Is the partner proposing a single large go-live or a phased approach? Do they get you live on a minimum viable product first, then coach you through how to expand as your business grows? Methodology choice directly impacts risk exposure and time to value.
Realistic go-live timeline
What is the actual go-live time for companies your size and complexity? Talk about a milestone-level schedule.
Data migration approach
How is historical data validated post-migration? What is the tolerance for data gaps?
Customization scope
Heavy customizations require deep discovery before you commit. Have you and your partner mapped out exactly how each integration would work, what data moves between systems, and who owns troubleshooting when something breaks? The time spent on that mapping before go-live is far less expensive than finding the gaps after.
All-in 5-year cost
The full return on an ERP investment rarely shows up in year one. It builds as manual processes are eliminated, close cycles shorten, and operational data becomes reliable enough to drive decisions. Together we can map out total costs across five years, licensing, implementation, support, integrations, and upgrades, and then ask them to show you where the savings accumulate over that same period.
Internal headcount required
How many internal FTEs will be needed to support and administer this system post-go-live? And look at the other side of that equation too: how much time does your current team spend on manual processes that this system eliminates? How many additional hires will you not need to make as the business grows? The right ERP should reduce administrative burden, not just redistribute it.
Upgrade policy
What does the upgrade process look like? Is it included in your subscription, or billed separately?
On-time and on-budget track record
How does the partner guarantee the project goes live on time and on budget? Get the details.
Industry experience
How many implementations have they completed in your industry in the last 12 months?
Reference calls
Can they provide three reference calls with companies of similar size and complexity in your vertical?
Gold-level certification
Does the partner hold the software publisher's highest certification tier? Gold-level certification requires a verified track record of successful implementations, multiple credentialed consultants, and ongoing performance benchmarks. It also means priority escalation access to the publisher's engineering team when problems go beyond standard support.
Dedicated support model
Will you have a named account manager and a dedicated support team, or shared resources?
ISV selection and vetting
Partners with real industry expertise do more than implement software. They solution architect your entire environment, including the third-party tools that connect to your ERP. Ask whether they have hands-on experience with the specific solutions your business relies on for tax, compliance, warehouse management, or construction project tracking. The right partner has done this before in your industry and can tell you what works in production, not just what looks good in a demo.
Hypercare post go-live
First 30 to 90 days of support. Is it included, dedicated, or the same shared queue as general support?
Staff continuity
What is the project staffing model?
Watch for These During Evaluation
Unclear data ownership or exit terms
AI features without audit trails or explainability
Implementation timeline promises that do not account for data migration
Ready to Walk Through This with Someone Who Knows the Answers?
We have implemented Acumatica for companies across manufacturing, distribution, construction, and professional services since 2015. If you are mid-evaluation or just starting, we are happy to work through this checklist with you.
Book a discovery call