Choosing the right ERP system is one of the most important technology decisions a building materials distributor will make. The right platform can streamline everything from inventory to invoicing—while the wrong one can cause delays, frustration, and wasted investment.
But with so many ERP options available, each with different features and pricing models, it’s easy to feel overwhelmed. Here’s how to get started with a smart, focused ERP comparison process tailored to the needs of building material suppliers.
Before you look at any vendor’s features or pricing, get clear on what your business needs:
How many locations or warehouses do you manage?
Do you sell by bundle, piece, weight, or custom length?
Do you offer job-site deliveries or schedule-based dispatching?
Do you have complex pricing models (contractor discounts, volume breaks, etc.)?
What systems are you currently using—and what’s not working?
This step helps you focus only on ERP solutions that are a fit for the way you actually operate.
Generic ERP checklists miss the details that matter most in building materials. Build yours based on your actual day-to-day:
Having this list will make it easier to filter out platforms that don’t support your workflows natively.
When you talk to ERP vendors, don’t just watch a generic demo. Ask them to walk you through real scenarios:
Seeing your use cases in action helps you evaluate how much customization you’d need—and how user-friendly the system really is.
Licensing model: Per user, per module, or per transaction?
Cloud vs. on-premise: Cloud solutions usually include hosting, updates, and support in a monthly fee
What’s included: Does the price cover mobile apps, reporting, training, and integrations—or are those extra?
Implementation costs: Ask about setup, configuration, data migration, and go-live support
Scalability: Will pricing increase as you grow locations, users, or customers?
Request a detailed quote that breaks out each component. Don’t just ask about cost—ask about value.
The ERP itself is only part of the decision. You’re choosing a long-term partner. Look for:
A roadmap that aligns with your future goals (e.g., mobile tools, e-commerce, or analytics)
A great vendor doesn’t just sell software—they help you run your business better.
Getting started with ERP comparison doesn’t mean rushing to pick a platform—it means creating a clear, confident evaluation process that reflects how your business works. The more real-world your checklist, the easier it will be to separate the tools that truly fit from the ones that don’t.
Take your time, ask the right questions, and focus on long-term value—not just short-term cost.