A cloud ERP rollout is one of the most significant investments your mid-market business will make. But here's the thing most vendors won't tell you: the warning signs of a failing project rarely show up on go-live day. They appear months earlier—subtle at first, then impossible to ignore.
BusinessHub helps Australian mid-market CFOs and finance managers spot these early warning signs before they become costly problems. This guide breaks down the 12 most common indicators that your cloud ERP implementation is heading off track—and what you can do to course-correct.
Cloud ERP projects don't fail overnight. They erode gradually through missed milestones, communication breakdowns, and scope creep. Recognising these patterns early gives you the chance to intervene before delays turn into budget blowouts or user rejection derails your go-live entirely.
One delay can happen to any project. But when your go-live date shifts repeatedly, it signals deeper problems beneath the surface. Scope is likely expanding faster than your team can absorb, or requirements are still being discovered that should have been locked in during design.
What to do: Revisit your project scope immediately. Identify which requirements were added post-design and assess whether they're truly essential for go-live or can be deferred to phase two.
ERP implementations demand significant time from your best people—the ones who understand your processes inside and out. When these critical staff members are consistently pulled away by day-to-day operations, knowledge gaps form and decisions get delayed.
What to do: Work with department heads to create dedicated time blocks for ERP activities. Consider backfilling roles temporarily to free up your subject matter experts.
Your new ERP is only as good as the data you put into it. If data cleansing and migration tasks keep slipping, or your team is discovering data quality issues weeks before go-live, you're heading toward a chaotic transition.
What to do: Prioritise data cleaning now—not later. Assign a dedicated data steward and establish clear data ownership rules across departments.
Testing isn't a box-ticking exercise at the end of your project. It's how you validate that the system will meet your business needs. If testing keeps getting pushed back, or test scripts haven't been written, your team will discover critical gaps far too late.
What to do: Begin user acceptance testing (UAT) as early as possible. Create realistic test scenarios based on your actual business processes, not generic vendor templates.
When end users start planning how they'll export data to spreadsheets on day one, it's a red flag. This indicates the system won't meet their needs—or they don't believe it will. Either way, you're looking at low adoption and a poor return on your investment.
What to do: Investigate why users feel they need workarounds. Often the root cause is insufficient training or gaps in process design that can still be addressed.
Your implementation partner should be responsive, transparent, and proactive. If emails go unanswered for days, status updates are vague, or your project team feels like they're being shuffled between consultants, the relationship needs attention.
What to do: Escalate communication concerns to your partner's leadership. Establish clear response time expectations and regular check-in schedules in writing.
New software alone won't fix broken processes. According to research published in Information & Management journal, readiness for change is one of the strongest predictors of ERP success. If you haven't invested in communication, training, and adoption planning, resistance will undermine even the most well-configured system.
What to do: Appoint a change management lead separate from your technical project manager. Create a communication plan that explains why the change is happening and what's in it for each department.
ERP projects need visible, active support from the C-suite. When executives attended the kick-off but haven't been involved since, middle management and frontline staff get the message that this project isn't a priority. Resources get diverted elsewhere.
What to do: Schedule regular steering committee meetings that require executive attendance. Ask sponsors to communicate project importance through company-wide updates.
No news isn't good news when it comes to project budgets. If your implementation partner hasn't provided a budget update in weeks—or keeps deferring cost discussions—unexpected invoices are likely building up behind the scenes.
What to do: Request weekly burn rate reports. Establish a contingency budget (typically 15-20% of total project cost) if you haven't already.
Adequate training is non-negotiable for user adoption. When training gets squeezed into a few days right before go-live, your team won't have time to build confidence with the new system. Errors multiply, frustration builds, and productivity tanks during the critical first weeks.
What to do: Start training earlier in the project, even with a partially configured system. Use role-based training so each team learns what's relevant to their daily work.
Your ERP needs to connect with other systems—payroll, CRM, e-commerce, banking. If these integrations haven't been tested with real data in a production-like environment, go-live will surface problems that halt operations.
What to do: Build integration testing into your project timeline early. Test with realistic data volumes, not just a handful of sample records.
If you asked five project team members what success looks like, would you get five different answers? Without agreed metrics and outcomes, there's no way to measure whether the project delivered value—and no accountability when it doesn't.
What to do: Define 3-5 measurable success criteria now. Examples include: month-end close reduced by X days, manual journal entries reduced by Y%, or order-to-dispatch time improved by Z hours.
Mid-market businesses face distinct challenges that larger enterprises don't. Your finance and operations teams are typically stretched thin, making it harder to dedicate resources to a multi-month implementation. You may also have fewer internal IT resources to manage technical complexity.
At the same time, you can't afford the drawn-out implementations that enterprise customers tolerate. Cash flow constraints mean budget overruns hit harder, and a failed project can set your business back years rather than quarters.
BusinessHub understands these mid-market realities because we've spent over 20 years working exclusively with Australian businesses like yours. Our Phase Zero readiness process identifies risks before a single dollar is spent on implementation, so you know what you're getting into from day one.
If several warning signs apply to your current situation, take action immediately. Early intervention dramatically improves your odds of getting back on track.
Start with an honest assessment:
Next, engage your executive sponsor and steering committee. Present your findings clearly and propose concrete actions. A project pause to reset scope and timeline is almost always preferable to a failed go-live.
Finally, consider whether your implementation partner has the capacity and expertise to help you recover. BusinessHub specialises in mid-market cloud ERP implementations and can assess your project status to recommend a path forward.
BusinessHub gives you more than just software expertise—you get a partner who has lived through the challenges you're facing. As Australia's first MYOB Acumatica implementation partner and a Platinum Partner for over a decade, we've refined an approach specifically designed for mid-sized businesses.
Our Phase Zero process maps your current processes, identifies data quality issues, and establishes realistic timelines before implementation begins. This upfront investment prevents the warning signs described above from ever appearing.
BusinessHub connects your finance and operations teams through fully integrated cloud ERP solutions including MYOB Acumatica, Wiise, and Microsoft Business Central. And our local support team stays with you long after go-live to ensure you're getting the value you expected.
If your current implementation is showing warning signs—or you're evaluating cloud ERP options—contact BusinessHub for a candid conversation about your situation.
Studies consistently show that 30-70% of ERP projects fail to meet their original goals, timeline, or budget. BusinessHub reduces this risk through our Phase 1: Understanding readiness assessment, which identifies potential issues before implementation begins.
Most mid-market cloud ERP implementations take 4-9 months, depending on complexity. Factors include the number of entities, integration requirements, and data migration scope. BusinessHub helps you establish realistic timelines based on your specific situation.
Poor change management is the leading cause of ERP failures. Technology rarely fails—people and processes do. BusinessHub addresses this by building adoption planning and training into every project from day one.
Yes, most struggling projects can be recovered with the right intervention. The key is identifying root causes early and making decisive changes to scope, timeline, or resources. BusinessHub offers project health assessments to diagnose issues and recommend corrective actions.
Look for Australian mid-market experience, transparent communication, and a structured methodology. Your partner should ask detailed questions about your processes before discussing software features. BusinessHub brings over 20 years of local mid-market expertise to every engagement.