What is NetSuite SuiteSuccess? And How Can It Boost Your ERP Implementation?

There's no reason to build an ERP from scratch when you can rely on industry trends and best practices.


Enterprise resource planning (ERP) implementations are famously long processes. According to ERP Research, they can take three to nine months for small businesses and six to 18 months for larger corporations. That’s a lot of staff time and money dedicated to a single internal project.

 

We know how daunting that timeline feels—it may even dissuade your company’s leadership from switching to an ERP at all. NetSuite SuiteSuccess uses best practices and industry knowledge to speed up implementation, so you don’t have to sink so many resources into the task.

 

SuiteDynamics works with NetSuite to customize and implement ERP systems. Our experts can help you choose a SuiteSuccess platform that offers the features you need in a manageable amount of time. Schedule a free consultation with our team today and enjoy a simpler NetSuite experience.


Schedule a Consultation



Key Takeaways

 

  1. Industry-Specific Solutions: NetSuite SuiteSuccess is tailored for different industries, using Oracle's 20+ years of experience to create pre-configured systems based on best practices. There are versions for sectors like manufacturing, retail, nonprofits, and more.
  2. Pre-Configured Features: SuiteSuccess comes with pre-set tools like dashboards, reports, roles, and workflows that align with common business needs, cutting down setup time.
  3. Fast Implementation: Businesses can get their ERP system running in under 100 days thanks to SuiteSuccess's ready-to-go structure, avoiding lengthy, complex setups.
  4. Quick ROI: With faster go-live, companies quickly see efficiency gains, like shorter financial close times and reduced IT support costs, leading to a stronger bottom line.
  5. Customizable: While starting from a standard setup, businesses can modify and expand their SuiteSuccess ERP to fit unique needs, ensuring flexibility and scalability over time.

 

Graphic stating that NetSuite experts have built 3,000 hours' worth of best practices into each SuiteSuccess solution.


What Is NetSuite SuiteSuccess?

 

NetSuite SuiteSuccess is an implementation methodology that allows users to balance customization and standard features. The thinkers at Oracle NetSuite have realized many companies within specific fields use the same functionalities. Their programmers have created a series of standard solutions that follow industry practices and fit businesses with similar needs. 

 

NetSuite’s experts have drawn on the company’s 20 years of experience to tailor these starter ERP systems for specific industries. In fact, they’ve built over 3,000 hours’ worth of best practices into each SuiteSuccess solution. Their preconfigured systems help eliminate lengthy, over-budget implementations and allow customers to benefit from NetSuite’s significant knowledge.

 

Most SuiteSuccess systems include pre-configured or commonly used:


 

As a business owner, you can choose from the following industry-specific editions.


  • Financials First Starter Products
  • Starter Services Agency
  • Apparel & Footwear
  • Health & Beauty Food & Beverage
  • Manufacturing
  • Nonprofit
  • Media & Publishing
  • Retail
  • Software
  • Wholesale Distribution 

 

 

A Faster Route to Go-Live

 

Naturally, businesses that choose a SuiteSuccess option don’t have as many ERP functionalities to configure. Therefore, they can get their systems up and running faster than a company working from scratch. For example, a SuiteSuccess customer can go from “zero to Cloud” in 100 days or less.

 

Graphic stating that SuiteSuccess customers experience a 45% to 70% reduction in the time it takes to close financial books.


A Quick Return on Investment

 

The faster you reach go-live, the sooner you see results. According to NetSuite, SuiteSuccess customers experience a 45% to 70% reduction in the time it takes to close financial books. They also see their audit completion and support time decrease by 25% to 40% and their reporting time and resources cut by 40% to 55%. 

 

As everyone knows, time is money, which means SuiteSuccess also contributes to a healthier bottom line. For example, users experience 40% to 65% reductions in their IT support costs and 45% to 65% decreases in their business continuity expenses. 

 

 

Allows for Extensive Customization

 

The SuiteSuccess concept assumes parts of your workflow will look like other companies’ operations. However, NetSuite experts understand that you will still have unique needs.

 

Therefore, SuiteSuccess is fully customizable. 

 

You could start with an out-of-the-box SuiteSuccess ERP and customize it in phases. Or you could customize before taking your system online. You could even begin with a financials-only module and then expand to a full ERP over time. It all depends on your needs and capabilities.

 

Schedule a free consultation with our team to learn more about the NetSuite SuiteSuccess platform and how it could provide your company with a robust, customized ERP system in 100 days. We want to see your company equipped with the software it needs to rise in your industry.


Schedule a Consultation

Blow Away the Competition


Stop fighting a software system that's working against you. Instead, enjoy the benefits of an ERP that knits your operations together seamlessly and provides the data and analysis you need to trounce your competition. 


We know you can rise in your industry. 


So, team up with SuiteDynamics to develop the ERP system your business needs. As NetSuite Alliance Partners, we customize and implement NetSuite ERP software for clients in any industry. 


And the partnership doesn't stop there. We can work with you long after go-live, maintaining the system, training staff, and adjusting the software to accommodate your expansion. Start by contacting us for a free consultation. 


Schedule a FREE Consultation

Headshot of Casey Watson

Casey Watson is the Marketing Communication Specialist for SuiteDynamics. She has a degree in journalism from Murray State University and over 10 years of experience researching and writing about various subjects, including insurance, nonprofit work, and healthcare. She has been covering NetSuite ERP systems for more than two years. 




We pull information from NetSuite material, SuiteDynamics experts, and other reliable sources to compose our blog posts and educational pieces. We ensure they are as accurate as possible at the time of writing. However, software evolves quickly, and although we work to maintain these posts, some details may fall out of date. Contact SuiteDynamics experts for the latest information on NetSuite ERP systems.



Part of this text was generated using GPT-3, OpenAI’s large-scale language-generation model. After generating the draft language, our team edited, revised, and fact-checked it to ensure readability and accuracy. SuiteDynamics is ultimately responsible for the content of this blog post.

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Spreadsheets built modern business. For decades they served as the unofficial operating system of job shops and custom manufacturers everywhere. They are flexible, familiar, and just comfortable enough to feel like a real solution. In the early days of a growing shop, they genuinely work. But as make-to-order complexity increases, as custom BOMs multiply, lead times tighten, and engineering revisions pile up, spreadsheets strain under the pressure. Every job is different, but spreadsheets want everything to be the same. In make-to-order environments, no two jobs are identical. Unique BOMs, custom routings, variable material costs, different setup requirements, customer-specific specs. Spreadsheets, though, thrive on repetition and standardized rows. So the more variation you introduce, the more tabs you create. The more exceptions you add, the more manual overrides appear. The more formulas you patch together, the more fragile the whole thing becomes. Eventually, the file turns into something only one person truly understands. That’s a liability, not a system. Capacity becomes a guessing game. In make-to-order shops, capacity isn’t theoretical. It’s constrained by reality. Machines go down. Operators vary in skill. Setup time fluctuates from job to job. Rush orders blow up carefully planned weeks. Spreadsheets struggle here because they’re built on static inputs. You can build a beautiful planning sheet with machine-hour allocations, but unless it dynamically adjusts for real-time job status, operator availability, overlapping resource conflicts, and maintenance downtime, you’re not really planning. You’re forecasting best-case scenarios. And that’s exactly how shops overpromise delivery dates and end up paying for it later in overtime and expediting costs. Engineering changes don’t cascade cleanly. Change is a constant in make-to-order manufacturing. A customer tweaks a dimension, a material substitution becomes necessary, or a tolerance tightens halfway through production. In an integrated system, that change automatically updates BOMs, routings, cost projections, and scheduling impact all at once. In a spreadsheet environment, it depends entirely on who remembers to update which tab. A routing might change without adjusting the labor estimate. A material substitution might never feed into the margin calculation. A lead-time adjustment might not reach the production schedule until it’s too late. These small disconnects multiply quickly, and because spreadsheets have no enforced relationships between data sets, the errors don’t announce themselves. Institutional knowledge becomes a single point of failure. Ask most growing job shops who owns the master spreadsheet and you’ll get a name. One estimator, planner, or operations manager who has become the living interpreter of years’ worth of embedded formulas, assumptions, and logic that nobody else fully understands. This works fine until it doesn’t. When that person goes on vacation, gets sick, or leaves, the shop loses operational clarity. In an environment already defined by complexity, having critical knowledge live inside one person’s mental model of a file is an inefficient bottleneck. Visibility stops at the file boundary. Spreadsheets are static snapshots. Make-to-order manufacturing is anything but. Without real-time feedback loops, shops find themselves unable to answer questions that should be simple: Are we actually on track this week? Which jobs are consuming more labor than quoted? Where is the bottleneck right now? Which customers consistently drive margin compression? When performance data doesn’t flow automatically from the floor back into quoting and planning, improvement stalls. You can’t refine what you can’t see. Here’s the thing about spreadsheet failure in manufacturing… it’s not dramatic. It’s gradual. First the files get slow, then fragile, then opaque. By the time leadership feels the real pain through late shipments, squeezed margins, and rising overtime, the architectural issues are widespread. Make-to-order manufacturing demands systems that understand relationships: how a routing affects capacity, how a BOM revision affects cost, how a delayed job cascades through the rest of the schedule. The question most shops ask is whether they can make the spreadsheets work. The better question is what it’s actually costing to keep them. The most resilient make-to-order manufacturers are building systems that preserve flexibility without sacrificing the visibility needed to actually run the business. Adaptability is the advantage. 
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