Integrating ERP systems after an $80M merger of three healthcare companies can be a daunting task — fraught with the risk of missteps, delays, and costly errors. In our case, the acquired entities were running NetSuite, Sage, and QuickBooks — all with unique chart structures, processes, and reporting methodologies.
To complicate matters, the merger was executed quickly, with minimal planning for post-acquisition ERP integration and no additional resources allocated upfront.
As part of the leadership team overseeing eleven subsidiaries, we made a strategic decision early: take control of the integration rather than react to it. We set a 90-day conversion timeline and worked backward from the nearest month-end close. Fortunately, we had disciplined staff with strong closing cadence, which allowed us to execute with speed and financial integrity.
Keys to a Successful ERP Conversion
ERP implementations fail when leadership treats them as IT projects. They succeed when treated as strategic operating transformations — with finance in the driver’s seat.
Here were the pillars of our success:
- Plan your work — and work your plan.
- Define measurable goals and success expectations early.
- Anticipate and resolve problems before they surface.
- Lock in a defined implementation roadmap with resources committed.
- Build a realistic budget — include contingency reservoirs.
- Select an “A-Team” — not just available bodies.
- Assign crystal-clear responsibilities and ownership.
- Hold frequent, structured communication checkpoints.
- Prepare data imports early — scrub relentlessly.
- Build esprit de corps — integration is change leadership.
ERP conversions are more than system swaps — they are catalysts for process optimization, financial integrity, and enterprise scalability. When accounting leads with precision and confidence, ERP conversions become value-creation moments, not disruptions.

