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Understanding the short, mid and long term return of an ERP

Discover the returns of an ERP system for your business, from immediate gains to long-term growth.

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Key takeaways

  • ERP ROI is multi‑dimensional and includes financial, operational, compliance and people gains.

  • Treat ERP as a long‑term investment; adoption and optimisation compound returns over time rather than delivering a single, linear payoff.

  • Build a complete TCO view up front including infrastructure, software, implementation and ongoing support in order to compare options accurately and avoid cost surprises.

  • Short‑term ROI (0–12 months): often include early efficiency wins like faster reporting, fewer errors and clearer visibility.

  • Mid‑term ROI (12–36 months): compounding gains include shorter cycles, tighter inventory and improved cash conversion. Many organisations reach break‑even in this window.

  • Long‑term ROI (36+ months): ERP becomes the operational backbone while legacy systems grow costlier and slow decision‑making.

  • Try our ROI Calculator, to help you estimate potential returns based on your inputs and assumptions.


What’s the return on investment of an ERP system? It’s a question every CFO or COO eventually asks, and on the surface, it sounds simple. But when you’re assessing a platform that affects finance, inventory, workflows, compliance and people, the return isn’t always immediate or linear.

Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) isn’t a software cost. It’s a long-term investment in how your business runs, makes decisions and scales. Because adoption and optimisation build over time, so does the return.

Mid-sized businesses need a clearer way to evaluate that value: early wins, mid-term process transformation, and long-term strategic uplift. This guide breaks down each stage and shows how tools like the MYOB Acumatica ROI Calculator help build a confident, evidence-based business case. 

What is ERP ROI?

ERP ROI is often reduced to a cost-vs-time-savings calculation, but the real impact is far broader. Yes, gains like productivity improvements, faster reporting, better cash flow and fewer errors matter. But ROI also shows up as:

  • Stronger compliance

  • Better decision-making

  • Improved collaboration

  • Lower staff turnover

  • Increased operational resilience

Importantly, ROI begins earlier than most leaders expect. In Phase Zero, the critical discovery phase that comes before implementation begins, you’re already mapping pain points, identifying inefficiencies and defining baselines. This becomes the foundation for every return that follows.

Think of ROI as a portfolio: financial gains, operational efficiency, compliance confidence and people outcomes working together over time.

Understanding the ERP investment

ERP investment varies depending on scope, scale, integrations and internal capabilities. Typical cost inputs include:

  • Infrastructure: cloud-based platforms like MYOB Acumatica minimise hardware needs, and can relieve pressure on IT teams.

  • Software: includes licensing or subscriptions, user access, and platform support.

  • Implementation: covers discovery, configuration, data migration, training, and change management. See our 9 step implementation guide for a full breakdown.

  • Ongoing support: some level of support is usually included, but premium support might cost extra.

Capturing these costs thoroughly is essential when calculating Total Cost of Ownership (TCO), especially when comparing legacy systems or entry-level platforms.

Key ERP benefits that drive ROI

ERP benefits build progressively and differ based on your starting point. Core ROI drivers include:

  • Real-time visibility across finance, supply chain and operations

  • Tighter inventory control

  • Faster reporting and decision-making

  • Streamlined month-end and reduced errors

  • Built-in compliance to meet local ANZ requirements

  • Less manual admin and re-keying

  • Better collaboration and customer response times

For a deeper-dive, read14 ERP System Benefits to Consider.

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How ERP delivers ROI over time

Returns don’t arrive all at once. They typically build in three phases; early efficiency gains, compounding process improvements, and long-term strategic advantage.

Short-term ROI (0–12 months): Early wins

The first year is about implementation, adoption and consistency. While costs are still being absorbed, you’ll begin seeing meaningful improvements:

Efficiency: Faster reporting, fewer errors, quicker reconciliations

Visibility: Real-time data removes duplication and reduces delays

Productivity: Finance teams close faster and manage cash with more confidence

Employee experience: Cleaner workflows, reduced stress, and less manual reporting

These early wins depend heavily on strong change management and user buy-in. MYOB Acumatica’s guided onboarding, intuitive UX and real-time dashboards accelerate time-to-value.

Mid-term ROI (12–36 months): Compounding gains

As teams grow confident in the platform, benefits multiply. The ERP becomes embedded in daily processes, leading to:

Efficiency: Significant reductions in manual hours across finance, operations and reporting

Cycle times: Shorter procurement, fulfilment and reconciliation cycles

Inventory control: Fewer stock variances and tighter inventory management

Cash conversion: Faster billing, fewer delays, and improved cash flow

Employee experience: Teams collaborate more effectively and solve issues earlier using shared real-time data.

This period often marks break-even for ERP investment.

Long-term ROI (36+ months): Strategic advantage

ERP becomes more than a system, it becomes the operational backbone of the business.

Scalability: Add entities, markets or product lines without replacing systems

Resilience: Built-in compliance features and audit trails reduce regulatory risk

Insight: Connected data supports scenario modelling, forecasting and capacity planning

Employee experience: Modern systems help attract and retain finance and IT talent

By contrast, legacy systems become more expensive to maintain and slower to support strategic decision-making.

Calculating ERP ROI

A structured approach ensures your ROI analysis is realistic and defensible. Here’s a framework to guide the calculation:

Define your horizon

Use a minimum three-year view to capture full impact. ERP value compounds over time, making short-term-only models unreliable.

Build your total cost of ownership (TCO)

Include all costs:

  • Software, licensing and integrations

  • Implementation and training

  • Any downtime or temporary resourcing

  • Ongoing support and upgrades

Measure these against savings such as:

  • Consolidated systems and reduced software spend

  • Reduced hardware and IT costs

  • Fewer errors, rework and late fees

  • TCO becomes the baseline against which all benefits are measured.

Estimate your benefits

Benefits fall into two categories:

  • Tangible: time savings, headcount reduction, faster collections, better cash flow

  • Intangible: compliance confidence, staff satisfaction, faster decisions

Be realistic and only include measurable outcomes tied to actual processes.

Validate your assumptions

Benchmark your assumptions using internal data, industry standards and real customer examples. This step strengthens financial credibility and ensures conservative, defensible modelling.

Apply the ROI formula

ROI = (Total Benefits – Total Costs) / Total Costs × 100

For example, if a project delivers $1M in savings against $500K in costs over X years, ROI is 100%.

Common pitfalls to avoid

  • Underestimating change management needs

  • Overestimating short-term savings

  • Ignoring post-go-live optimisation

  • Focusing solely on financial metrics (people have the biggest impact on ROI)

Track people metrics as well

Adoption, training success, retention, and job satisfaction are all critical indicators of ROI. ERP shouldn’t just save money, it should make work easier.

Use the MYOB ROI calculator 

The calculator helps estimate time, cost and efficiency benefits across finance, operations and IT. It won’t replace expert advice, but it strengthens the business case. 

See what ERP could unlock for your business

Model the potential savings, efficiency gains, and long-term value MYOB Acumatica could deliver.

Calculate your potential savings

Realising ROI with MYOB Acumatica

Built for mid-sized Australian and New Zealand businesses, MYOB Acumatica is a modern cloud ERP platform that connects your finance, operations, inventory, payroll and compliance in one system.

MYOB Acumatica delivers ROI at every stage:

  • Short-term: Real-time dashboards, pre-built reports, automated month-end

  • Mid-term: Connected finance, supply chain and payroll reduce complexity

  • Long-term: Modular growth, scalability and seamless API integrations

The impact of ERP isn’t just theoretical, real-world results show how these efficiencies translate into measurable business outcomes.

MYOB Acumatica customer, Stellmann, streamlined workflows by replacing fragmented systems with one platform. Automating key admin tasks saved 35 hours per week, while accurate forecasting shifted freight from costly air to planned sea, saving $50,000 annually.

And by unifying sales, inventory and accounting with MYOB Acumatica, Lights and Tracks saw an 18% revenue uplift and 62% reduction in admin hours, demonstrating how short-term gains unlock sustained, long-term impact.

What’s Next

If you’re building a business case for ERP, or reassessing the value of your current systems, take a long-term view. The real return isn’t just financial, it’s greater operational resilience, the ability to scale with confidence, and systems that enable your teams to work more effectively.

To understand what that could look like in your organisation, use our ERP ROI Calculator to estimate the returns your business might see with MYOB Acumatica, then share the results with your stakeholders.

If you want to learn more about MYOB Acumatica cloud ERP software or you’d like support modelling ROI for your business, our team can help. Start your ROI conversation today.


FAQs

How can we get the best ROI from our ERP implementation?

Start with strong change management and clear communication. Map your key processes before going live, define measurable baselines early, and focus on adoption, not just installation

How long does it typically take to realise ROI from ERP?

Many businesses see early improvements, like faster reporting and reduced admin, within the first 6 to 12 months. But full ROI usually builds over two to three years as efficiencies compound.

What factors influence ERP ROI?

Several elements play a role, including scope, data quality, training, internal buy in, and whether the system can scale with your business over time.

What are the most common mistakes in evaluating ERP ROI?

Overestimating short term savings, underestimating the impact of change, and failing to measure people-related outcomes like user adoption and engagement.

How often should ERP ROI be reviewed?

At minimum, review ERP ROI every 6 to 12 months. Schedule a detailed check in post going live, then reassess as business processes evolve or new modules are added.

Who should be involved in tracking ERP ROI?

It’s not just a finance task. CFOs, COOs, operations managers, finance leads, and department heads should all contribute, ensuring ROI is tracked across functions, not just spreadsheets.


Information provided in this article is of a general nature and does not consider your personal situation. It does not constitute legal, financial, or other professional advice and should not be relied upon as a statement of law, policy or advice. You should consider whether this information is appropriate to your needs and, if necessary, seek independent advice. This information is only accurate at the time of publication. Although every effort has been made to verify the accuracy of the information contained on this webpage, MYOB disclaims, to the extent permitted by law, all liability for the information contained on this webpage or any loss or damage suffered by any person directly or indirectly through relying on this information.

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