From Failure to Transformation How to get ERP right
From Failure to Transformation: How to Get ERP Right | Precision Pyramid
ERP & Operations
From Failure to Transformation: How to Get ERP Right
50–60%
of ERP projects underperform or fail outright
ERP has the power to transform how a business runs. Yet studies show 50–60% of ERP projects underperform or fail outright. The reasons are rarely “bad software”, more often it’s how businesses approach the journey.
Let’s unpack the common pitfalls with real-world flavors, and how to overcome them.
Why Do Most ERP Implementations Fail?
01
Unclear Objectives & Misaligned Expectations
Pitfall
Businesses implement ERP as a “tech upgrade” without defining business outcomes.
Example
A manufacturing company rolls out ERP to “replace spreadsheets” but doesn’t define clear KPIs like reducing order-to-cash cycle time. Result: the system goes live, but inefficiencies remain.
How to Avoid
Begin with business-first goals (e.g., 20% faster month-end closing, real-time inventory visibility). Anchor every project milestone to these goals.
02
Poor Change Management & User Resistance
Pitfall
Employees resist because ERP feels like a burden. Training is last-minute or ignored.
Example
A retail chain implements ERP but cashiers and warehouse staff keep using old manual logs because they weren’t trained properly; data stays fragmented.
How to Avoid
Involve users from Day 1. Run change workshops, gamify training, and appoint “ERP champions” within each department to ease adoption.
03
Over-Customization of the System
Pitfall
Companies try to replicate every legacy process in the ERP, coding endless custom modules. This makes upgrades painful and costly.
Example
A distribution firm adds 15 custom workflows for order approvals, only to find upgrades require rewriting all custom code, stalling operations for months.
How to Avoid
Follow the “80/20 Rule” – stick to standard ERP best practices for 80% of processes, and customize only for truly differentiating business needs.
04
Weak Data Discipline & Dirty Migration
Pitfall
“Garbage in, garbage out.” Legacy data is often full of duplicates, mismatched formats, and outdated records.
Example
A pharma company migrates supplier master data with 3 versions of the same vendor, leading to payment errors and compliance risks.
How to Avoid
Invest in data governance before migration. Deduplicate, validate, and standardize. Assign ownership of master data quality to specific teams.
05
Underestimating Time, Cost, and Resources
Pitfall
Leaders assume ERP is “just another IT project,” and don’t budget for process reengineering or training.
Example
A mid-sized bank planned a 6-month rollout. With regulatory and process complexities, it took 18 months and double the budget.
How to Avoid
Treat ERP as a business transformation, not an IT project. Build a realistic phased roadmap with time for testing, feedback, and process redesign.
How to Avoid These Pitfalls
✓
Start with a clear transformation roadmap, not just an IT upgrade.
✓
Engage business leaders & end-users early, ERP is for people, not just processes.
✓
Keep customization minimal; adapt the business where possible to standard ERP best practices.
✓
Invest in data cleanup and governance before migration.
✓
Treat ERP as a journey; start with core processes, then evolve.
Frameworks for Ensuring ERP Success
Here are some basic but powerful frameworks you can embed into your ERP journey:
Process: Redesign workflows to match best practices, not just old habits.
Platform: Configure ERP around clear business needs with minimal customization.
Framework 02
The ERP Success Triangle
ERP projects succeed when there’s a balance between three pillars:
Strategic Alignment – clear goals and executive sponsorship.
Operational Discipline – process mapping, data governance, and thorough testing.
Change Management – training, adoption tracking, and feedback loops.
Framework 03
Phased Implementation Roadmap
Phase 1: Core financials & compliance, lay the foundation.
Phase 2: Operations modules; inventory, supply chain, and HR.
Phase 3: Advanced analytics, AI-driven insights, and integrations.
This approach reduces risk, delivers quick wins, and builds momentum across the organization.
Conclusion
ERP failure is rarely about software. It’s about vision, execution, and adoption. With clear goals, disciplined processes, and people-first change management, ERP can become the nervous system that powers growth.
Ready to make your ERP implementation a success?
Precision Pyramid helps businesses navigate ERP transformations end-to-end, from strategy and process design to change management and go-live.