How Complex Should Your ERP System Be?
A Practical Guide to Choosing the Right Modules — and Avoiding Paying for What You Don’t Use
62% of companies pay for ERP modules they rarely or never use (Panorama Consulting, 2026). The wasted cost? Between 15-35% of total subscription value. The problem isn’t the ERP system itself — it’s the lack of a proper needs assessment methodology before selecting modules. This guide provides a practical framework to determine what you actually need — regardless of your company size or country.
62%
Pay for Unused Modules
35%
Wasted Subscription Value
8-14
Modules in Average ERP
3-5
Modules Suffice for 70%
Why ERP Complexity Varies Between Companies
No single ERP system fits everyone. Required complexity depends on five key factors: business nature (trading vs. manufacturing vs. services), company size and headcount, number of branches and legal entities, regulatory requirements, and growth stage. A 15-person trading company needs vastly different modules than a 500-person manufacturer.
ERP Module Map: Essential vs. Optional
A typical ERP system has 8-14 core modules. Not all are necessary for every company.
| Module | Necessity | Who Needs It? | Who Doesn’t? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accounting & Finance | Essential ✅ | Every company | None |
| Inventory & Warehousing | Essential ✅ | Trading, manufacturing, distribution | Pure services (consulting, law) |
| Sales & POS | Essential ✅ | Retail, wholesale, services | B2G only (government contracts) |
| Procurement | Important ⚡ | Companies with >$130K annual purchases | Small businesses with 1-2 suppliers |
| HR & Payroll | Important ⚡ | Companies with 20+ employees | Companies with <10 employees |
| Project Management | Important ⚡ | Construction, consulting, IT | General trading, repetitive manufacturing |
| Manufacturing (MRP) | Specialized 🔧 | Factories and production facilities | All non-industrial companies |
| CRM | Specialized 🔧 | Services, real estate, insurance | B2B manufacturing with fixed clients |
| Asset Management | Specialized 🔧 | Facilities, energy, transportation | Service companies without heavy assets |
| BI & Analytics | Competitive 🚀 | Data-driven decision makers | Early-stage companies |
5-Step Needs Assessment Framework
Step 1: Map Current Business Processes
Before considering any ERP module, document every business process: daily (invoicing, receiving goods, payroll), weekly (collections follow-up, inventory review), monthly (financial closing, bank reconciliation), and seasonal (annual stocktake, tax filings). For each process, record: who does it, how often, current tools, and pain points.
Step 2: Classify by Frequency × Impact
High-frequency, high-impact processes (billing, sales, inventory) = automate immediately. Low-frequency, low-impact processes = may not need a dedicated module at all. This simple 2×2 matrix prevents over-buying modules for rare tasks.
Step 3: Calculate the Cost of NOT Automating
For each manual process, calculate: Time (hours/month × hourly cost), Errors (errors/month × correction cost), and Missed Opportunities (lost sales or discounts due to slowness). If the cost of NOT automating exceeds the module cost — you need it.
Step 4: Apply the 80/20 Rule
In most companies, 20% of modules cover 80% of needs. Focus on modules used by 50%+ of employees daily, modules required for legal compliance, and modules that directly generate revenue or reduce costs. Defer modules used by one person once a month.
Step 5: Build a Phased Roadmap
Phase 1 (Month 1-3): Accounting + Inventory + Sales + Procurement — covers 60-70% of daily needs. Phase 2 (Month 4-6): HR & Payroll + Project Management — automates internal operations. Phase 3 (Month 7-12): Specialized modules based on actual need. Phase 4 (12+): BI & Analytics — when sufficient data exists.
Case Study: Distribution Company Saved 40% by Removing Unused Modules
Food Distribution Company — 65 Employees — 3 Warehouses
Problem: Purchased a full 12-module ERP based on vendor advice. After one year, discovered they used only 5 modules while paying $4,200/month for modules nobody logged into.
$4,200
Monthly Cost (Before)
$2,500
Monthly Cost (After)
$20,400
Annual Savings
Quick Assessment: 10 Questions to Determine Your Needs
1. Do you sell physical products or services? (Products → need Inventory)
2. Do you have 20+ employees? (Yes → need HR module)
3. Do you manufacture or buy finished goods? (Manufacture → need MRP)
4. Do you work project-based or repetitive operations? (Projects → Project Management)
5. Do you own heavy assets (equipment, vehicles)? (Yes → Asset Management)
6. Do you sell online or plan to? (Yes → E-commerce)
7. Do you have multiple legal entities? (Yes → Financial Consolidation)
8. How many suppliers do you work with? (>10 → Advanced Procurement)
9. Do you need board-level executive reports? (Yes → BI & Analytics)
10. Are you in a regulated industry (food, pharma, energy)? (Yes → Quality & Traceability)
Conclusion
An ERP system is not “one size fits all.” Smart companies start with the modules they actually need and add gradually as they grow. The golden rule: don’t pay for a module that fewer than 3 people will use daily. Use the assessment framework in this article, and you’ll save 20-40% on ERP costs without sacrificing any functionality you truly need.
References
- • Panorama Consulting, “ERP Module Utilization Report 2026”
- • Gartner, “Modular ERP Strategy Guide 2026”
- • McKinsey, “Right-Sizing Enterprise Software — A CFO’s Guide 2026”
- • Forrester, “ERP Total Cost of Ownership — Module-by-Module Analysis 2026”
- • IDC, “Global ERP Adoption Patterns by Company Size 2026”
