Most ERP projects don’t fail because of the system. They fail because the business logic behind the system remains a black box.
In 2026, organizations invest more than ever in platforms like Dynamics 365. They follow every implementation step, involve the right partners, and yet the results remain the same: slow adoption, messy workarounds, and value that stays just out of reach.
While the pattern isn't new, the stakes have changed. With automation moving as fast as it is, you can’t afford to ignore these root causes. It’s no longer just a budget issue; it’s what stops your business from actually moving forward.
An ERP system forces structure; it makes processes explicit and connects data across the organization. That sounds like progress, but in reality, it often exposes an uncomfortable truth: many processes are unclear, inconsistent, or based on outdated assumptions.
If these issues aren't addressed, they don’t disappear during implementation. They simply get hardcoded into your new environment. This is why projects that look successful on paper often fail in practice. A process-first approach avoids this trap. Instead of starting with the system, you start with how work actually gets done. It’s about gaining a clear view of end-to-end processes before they are translated into technology.
Most organizations have plenty of documentation. The problem is that it rarely reflects reality. It shows how things should work, not how they actually run day-to-day. That gap creates significant risk:
By creating a single, connected view of processes and data, you ensure that teams work from a shared version of reality rather than fragmented PDFs. In complex ERP environments, even a small misunderstanding at the start scales into a massive problem across the organization.
Domain Expertise: The Human Anchor
Technology can support business transformation, but it cannot replace the people who understand where the exceptions happen and where the real dependencies sit.
This is where many projects fall short. Teams often focus so heavily on delivery speed and configuration that deep process understanding is treated as a side activity. The result is predictable: a technically correct system that doesn’t actually fit the business. While tools create the necessary clarity, it is the human expert who provides the "sense-making" required to turn that data into a working strategy.
Today, AI is taking over parts of ERP implementation - from configuration to automated documentation. This creates massive efficiency, but it also creates distance.
Fewer people are involved in the early stages where real understanding is built. Over time, this weakens the domain expertise within the organization. As machines handle the "how," the need for human judgment on the "why" becomes more critical than ever. Someone still has to decide what the system should do to deliver value. That tension is growing fast.
A Different Way to Approach ERP
Organizations that succeed in 2026 treat processes as the starting point, not the system. They invest in understanding the flow of work and ensure business and IT stay aligned throughout the journey. The real shift is cultural: moving ERP from a technical checklist to a business-led change initiative.
If these challenges sound familiar, join our next Business Originals episode.
Prof. dr. Hans Mulder sits down with Emily Steegstra, Senior Solution Architect at Avanade, to discuss what actually drives ERP success today. They will share practical insights on avoiding the "upgrade trap," the evolving role of AI, and why human expertise remains your most important asset.
Register for the Business Originals session here!