Distribution companies hit an operational wall around $10 million in revenue. QuickBooks and spreadsheets that worked at $3 million suddenly buckle under the weight of 5,000 SKUs, 200 vendors, and customers demanding EDI compliance. Sound familiar? That wall is why you are here.
The distribution ERP market is crowded. SAP Business One, NetSuite, Acumatica, Epicor Prophet 21, Infor CloudSuite Distribution, and Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management all claim to serve distributors. Some actually do it well. Others bolt on distribution features as an afterthought.
What makes distribution ERP different from generic ERP? Three things: warehouse execution speed, demand planning accuracy, and trading partner connectivity. A manufacturer needs production scheduling. A retailer needs point of sale. A distributor needs to move product fast, predict what customers will order next, and communicate electronically with hundreds of vendors and customers.
This guide breaks down what matters for distributors specifically, which features are non-negotiable, where each major platform excels, and how to avoid the expensive mistakes I see distribution companies make every quarter.
Must-Have Features for Distribution ERP
Warehouse management is not optional, it is the core of your operation. Your ERP must support multi-warehouse inventory tracking, bin and zone management, wave picking, and mobile barcode scanning at minimum. Directed putaway, cycle counting, and cross-docking are critical for distributors handling more than 3,000 SKUs. Epicor Prophet 21 and Infor CloudSuite Distribution include robust WMS natively. NetSuite and Dynamics 365 require add-ons or third-party WMS integrations that add $20,000 to $60,000 in additional cost.
Demand planning and forecasting separate profitable distributors from those drowning in dead stock. Look for statistical forecasting with seasonal adjustments, safety stock optimization, and automated reorder point calculations. Acumatica and NetSuite offer solid built-in forecasting. SAP Business One requires the SAP Business Planning and Consolidation add-on for serious demand planning. If your forecast accuracy is below 70%, even basic ERP forecasting will improve your fill rates by 10% to 15%.
EDI and electronic commerce capabilities are table stakes for distributors selling to major retailers or working with large vendors. You need at least EDI 850 (purchase orders), 810 (invoices), 856 (advance ship notices), and 855 (purchase order acknowledgments). Some ERPs include basic EDI mapping. Others require middleware like SPS Commerce or TrueCommerce at $500 to $2,000 per month depending on transaction volume.
Lot tracking and serialization matter for distributors handling food, pharmaceuticals, electronics, or any product requiring traceability. FIFO, FEFO, and lot-specific recall capabilities should be native, not custom-built. If you handle regulated products, verify that the ERP supports FDA 21 CFR Part 11 or relevant compliance frameworks before signing any contract.
Top ERP Platforms for Distribution
Epicor Prophet 21 is purpose-built for distribution and it shows. Native warehouse management, advanced pricing with matrix support, and deep vendor rebate tracking give it an edge for traditional wholesale distributors. It handles complex pricing scenarios, like different prices by customer class, quantity breaks, and promotional periods, better than any general-purpose ERP. The downside is a dated user interface and limited manufacturing capabilities if you do any light assembly. Typical cost for 25 users: $150,000 to $250,000 for implementation plus $4,000 to $6,000 monthly.
Infor CloudSuite Distribution, formerly Infor Distribution SX.e, competes directly with Prophet 21. Its strengths include strong counter sales functionality for distributors with will-call or showroom operations, and excellent multi-company support for distributors operating under multiple brands. Pricing is comparable to Prophet 21 but Infor's implementation partner ecosystem is smaller, which can limit your options for support.
NetSuite is the default choice for fast-growing distributors who want a single platform for financials, CRM, and operations. Its SuiteCommerce module provides a native B2B ecommerce portal that syncs inventory and pricing in real time. This is a significant advantage for distributors building online ordering channels. The weakness is warehouse management depth: NetSuite's WMS module is adequate for simple warehouses but lacks the directed picking and advanced slotting that high-volume operations need. Expect $120,000 to $300,000 all-in for a 20-user distribution implementation.
Acumatica stands out for distributors who need flexibility without per-user licensing. Its consumption-based pricing model means you can give warehouse workers, sales reps, and even customer portals access without paying per seat. For a 50-person distribution company where 30 people need light system access, Acumatica often costs 30% to 40% less than NetSuite or Dynamics 365. The distribution edition includes solid inventory, purchasing, and sales order management out of the box.
Warehouse Operations and Inventory Management
Your ERP selection should start with your warehouse, not your accounting department. Walk the warehouse floor and document every process: receiving, putaway, picking, packing, shipping, returns, and cycle counts. Note where workers rely on paper, memory, or workarounds. These are the processes your ERP must improve on day one.
Picking methodology matters more than most evaluators realize. If you use wave picking, zone picking, or batch picking, verify the ERP supports your method natively. Switching from zone picking to basic single-order picking because the software requires it will crush your throughput. One distributor I worked with saw picks per hour drop from 85 to 52 after implementing an ERP with inadequate picking support. They spent $35,000 on a third-party WMS bolt-on to fix it.
Inventory accuracy drives everything in distribution. Perpetual inventory with real-time updates from barcode scanning should give you 97% or better cycle count accuracy. If your current accuracy is below 90%, expect the ERP to lift it above 95% within six months, provided you enforce scanning discipline. The revenue impact is direct: a 5% improvement in inventory accuracy typically reduces stockouts by 20% to 30% and overstock by 10% to 15%.
Returns management is the process everyone forgets during ERP evaluation. Distribution companies typically process returns on 5% to 12% of orders. Your ERP needs to handle RMA creation, quality inspection workflows, restocking decisions, vendor return authorization, and credit memo generation. Test this workflow during your demo. If the vendor glosses over it, that tells you something about how well they understand distribution.
Pricing, Rebates, and Margin Management
Distribution pricing is uniquely complex. You might have contract prices, list prices, quantity breaks, customer-specific prices, promotional prices, and matrix pricing all running simultaneously. If your ERP cannot handle at least five pricing tiers with automatic price selection based on customer and quantity, walk away. Epicor Prophet 21 and Infor CloudSuite Distribution handle this natively. NetSuite requires the Advanced Pricing module, which adds to the subscription cost.
Vendor rebate management is where distributors leave money on the table. Rebate programs from manufacturers, volume incentives, growth rebates, ship-and-debit programs, can represent 2% to 5% of a distributor's revenue. Tracking them manually in spreadsheets means you miss claims and leave cash with your vendors. An ERP with automated rebate tracking and claim generation pays for itself on this feature alone for distributors with more than $20 million in purchases.
Margin analysis at the transaction level is essential. You need to see true margin on every order, every line item, accounting for landed costs, freight, rebates, and customer-specific discounts. Some ERPs only calculate margin at the invoice level, which masks unprofitable product lines. Insist on demos showing margin analysis at the customer, product, and salesperson level.
Real-time pricing updates from vendors reduce the lag between cost increases and price adjustments. If you manage more than 2,000 active SKUs, even a two-week lag in updating costs can erode margins significantly. Look for automated cost update capabilities that flag items where cost changes have not been reflected in selling prices.
Implementation Approach for Distributors
Phase your rollout around your slow season. Distribution companies have clear seasonal patterns, and going live during peak season is reckless. Plan for a 4 to 8 month implementation, with go-live timed at least 6 weeks before your busy period. This gives you buffer to stabilize before volume spikes.
Data migration for distribution is heavier than other industries. You are migrating customer records (with complex pricing agreements), vendor records (with rebate programs), item masters (with multiple units of measure, packaging hierarchies, and cross-references), open purchase orders, and sales order history. Clean your item master before migration. Merge duplicate SKUs, standardize descriptions, and verify units of measure. This alone takes 4 to 6 weeks for a distributor with 10,000 or more active items.
Test your highest-volume workflows obsessively. The order-to-shipment cycle for your top 20 customers should be tested end-to-end at least three times in the sandbox. Include exception scenarios: partial shipments, backorders, drop ships, will-call pickups, and credit hold releases. If these workflows are not smooth, your team will revert to the old system within a week of go-live.
Budget for warehouse hardware: mobile scanners ($800 to $2,500 each), label printers, and potentially wireless infrastructure upgrades. A 20,000 square foot warehouse typically needs 5 to 10 mobile devices and 2 to 3 label printers. Include this in your total project cost. Distributors who discover hardware needs mid-implementation often face 4 to 6 week lead times on ruggedized devices, which delays the entire project.