3 successful ERP implementation case studies to learn from

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Large-scale ERP implementation outcomes are a mixed bag, a fact worth acknowledging upfront. The failure rate is well-documented; less discussed are the specifics that separate a successful implementation from one that runs over budget, over schedule, or both.

These three ERP success stories offer something more useful than a checklist. They show how real companies across different industries and sizes handled the same problems you're likely facing. Cadbury, Nestlé, and ABC Compounding each ran into serious difficulties. Each came out with concrete, measurable improvements.

ERP case study #1: Cadbury

Our first ERP implementation case study examines Cadbury, the iconic confectioner owned by Mondelēz International. Facing rapid growth, Cadbury struggled to meet production and distribution demands efficiently. The solution came with SAP ERP, which enabled Cadbury to resolve these concerns.

The implementation extended multi-node resource management across Cadbury's supply chain and overhauled its warehouse and distribution processes end-to-end.

This allowed Cadbury to reduce overall operating costs, while its newly engaged supply chain produced significantly better production efficiencies throughout its manufacturing chain.

Key takeaway:

Thorough requirements gathering before go-live is what made Cadbury's supply chain gains possible. Without that groundwork, ERP features rarely map cleanly to real operational needs.

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ERP case study #2: Nestlé SA

Nestlé SA, a global food giant headquartered in Switzerland, faced a familiar multinational challenge: getting ERP to work cohesively across its Swiss, UK, and US operations.

The latter operation had been working toward the complete integration of a set of ERP solutions since the late 90s. Still, conflicting regional requirements, inconsistent business processes, and internal resistance had repeatedly stalled a full rollout. By the turn of the millennium, its management finally decided that a holistic re-approach to its business requirements was in order.

By investing $200 million into ERP, Nestlé saw changes in both its processes and its team dynamics through a consolidated accounting structure, enhanced communication across the supply chain, and a more empowered workforce.

Key takeaway:

Sometimes the right move is to start over rather than build on a shaky foundation. Nestlé's willingness to re-examine its business requirements from scratch (rather than force a broken integration) is what ultimately produced financial transparency and better cross-regional coordination.

Guide: ERP Implementation: 11 steps to success

ERP case study #3: ABC Compounding

ABC Compounding, an Atlanta-based industrial cleaning supply manufacturer, exemplifies the benefits of ERP for small to mid-sized businesses. When their legacy ERP system could no longer support critical processes like planning and scheduling, the company chose Sage ERP X3 to meet these needs.

Most ERP success stories focus on large multinationals, which makes ABC worth attention: at around 150 employees, it's closer in size to the majority of businesses actually weighing up an ERP switch.

COO Myra Hager had used Sage X3 in a prior position and was familiar with its comprehensive manufacturing capabilities.

The time was right, and the pricing to make the switch was very competitive,” she says. A common thread among companies using ERP at the time.

ABC Compounding then automated work orders, enhanced inventory tracking, and streamlined customer service. The new system allowed employees to generate work orders automatically based on stock levels and orders, a significant time saver over manual data entry. Additionally, sales and service teams noted improved navigation and efficiency, critical to handling over 200 daily orders.

Key takeaway:

Familiarity with the system shouldn't be an afterthought. ABC's CIO had used Sage X3 before, which shortened the evaluation process and reduced the implementation risk. If your team has direct experience with a system that fits your requirements, that's a legitimate factor worth weighing.

Final thoughts

The common thread across these three ERP success case studies is intent. Each company treated the implementation as a business transformation rather than a software installation.

  • Cadbury aligned its ERP rollout with specific supply chain demands.
  • Nestlé reset its entire approach rather than continuing to patch something that wasn't working.
  • ABC Compounding chose a system its CIO had hands-on experience with, and kept the scope realistic.

Before you move forward with your own project, it's worth asking the same question each of these companies ultimately had to answer: what specific operational outcome are you building toward, and does your current implementation plan actually reflect that? The answer tends to clarify a lot, including which ERP features matter and which ones don't.

Further recommended reading: To read about ERP implementations that didn’t go nearly as smoothly, click here.

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Rick Carlton

About the author…

Rick Carlton dba PRRACEwire, has worked as a tech journalist, writer, researcher, editor and publisher for many years. In addition to his editorial work, Rick has also served as a C-Level executive/consultant for a wide-range of private and public sector U.S. and International companies.

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Rick Carlton

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