Is Your Business Ready for an ERP? A Practical Guide to Getting Started
- arshsheikh
- May 26
- 2 min read
As your business grows, spreadsheets and basic accounting software can start to hold you back. If managing purchases, sales, inventory, accounting, manufacturing, projects, or HR has become a juggling act, it might be time to consider an ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning) system.

This guide walks you through how to plan, evaluate, and implement an ERP system that fits your business needs—without the overwhelm
Step 1: Start with a Clear Plan (a.k.a. Your RFQ)
Begin by preparing a Request for Quotation (RFQ)—this document sets the tone for your ERP project.
Here's what to include:
Business Goals: Define what you want to achieve with an ERP. Streamlined operations? Better visibility? Paperless processes?
Departmental Needs: Collect input from every department—sales, finance, HR, production, etc.
Industry Fit: Specify your vertical—are you in trading, manufacturing, maintenance, or something else?
Current Pain Points: Document inefficiencies and challenges you're facing today.
A solid RFQ helps ERP vendors understand your business—and makes it easier for you to compare solutions later
Step 2: Figure Out How Many Users You’ll Need
Knowing how many team members will use the ERP helps you:
· Pick the Right ERP Tier:
Tier 1 (e.g., SAP, Oracle, Microsoft) for large enterprises.
Tier 2 (e.g., Odoo, Sage) for SMEs.
· Match ERP Scope to Your Size: Are you a small business or a multi-department enterprise?
· Shortlist Vendors: Use your RFQ to start contacting vendors who align with your needs.
Step 3: Book Demos—and Take Notes
Now it's time to see the systems in action. Arrange demos with a few shortlisted ERP providers. Don’t just focus on features—most platforms will check the basic boxes.
Instead, look for:
Ease of Use: Can your team actually use it without getting frustrated?
Cost Transparency: Understand both upfront and long-term costs.
Cloud Access: Is it accessible anytime, anywhere, on any device?
Automation: Does it help eliminate manual tasks?
All-in-One Capability: Look for solutions offering a single source of truth for your business data
Step 4: Request Proposals (and Compare Carefully)
After the demos, ask vendors for detailed technical and commercial proposals.
What to watch for:
Alignment with Your RFQ: Does the proposal meet your original requirements?
· Implementation Model: Choose between:
Fixed Price – predictable cost, but limited flexibility.
Time & Materials (T&M) – more flexible, but potentially open-ended costs.
Step 5: Create a Realistic Implementation Roadmap
Avoid going live with every module on day one. Break your ERP rollout into manageable phases:
Core Modules – start with essentials (sales, inventory, finance).
Advanced Features – like HR, manufacturing, or CRM.
Reports – build dashboards and performance tracking.
Automation – streamline repetitive tasks.
Analytics – use data for better decision-making.
IoT Integration – if relevant to your business model.
This phased approach keeps your team from feeling overwhelmed and ensures higher adoption.
Step 6: Sign the Contract and Begin Implementation
Once you’ve finalized the scope, budget, and chosen vendor—sign the agreement and kick off your ERP journey

Final Thoughts
Implementing an ERP system is a major milestone—but it doesn’t have to be complicated. With the right planning, clear communication, and phased execution, your ERP can become the engine that drives your business forward. Looking for expert help in choosing or implementing an ERP? Contact QZ Infomatics to talk strategy—we’re here to guide you through every step.
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