Manufacturers and wholesale distributors share a common operational headache: keeping production, inventory, and finance in sync as products move from raw materials to finished goods. Many growing businesses still track assembly builds in spreadsheets, manually deduct components, and reconcile inventory after the fact. The result is predictable. Component shrinkage from inaccurate consumption, expedite fees from untracked work orders, and excess inventory caused by bills of materials that nobody maintains.
The NetSuite Work Orders and Assemblies module exists to close that gap. It adds control and real-time visibility to the process of producing assembly items, whether you are building to replenish stock or filling a specific customer order. With this module, you can define assembly items, build complex multi-level bills of materials, create and track work orders, record assembly builds, and automatically backflush components, all inside the same system that runs your financials, inventory, and order management.
This guide breaks down everything you need to know about the module: what it is, the key terms and features, how it fits within NetSuite's broader manufacturing offerings, what it costs, the industry problems it solves, and how to decide whether it is the right fit. If you operate in production and want a single source of truth across the shop floor and the back office, read on. And if you would rather talk it through with a specialist, you can contact our team at Versich at any point.
What Is NetSuite Work Orders and Assemblies?
NetSuite Work Orders and Assemblies is an add-on manufacturing module that extends the core NetSuite ERP platform with the capabilities needed to produce assembled goods. It sits within the Manufacturing Resource Planning area of Oracle NetSuite, and its job is to handle and track the production of assembly items through a structured work order workflow with automated component consumption.
In practical terms, the module lets your team define assembly items, build out multi-level bills of materials, generate work orders that specify what to build and how many, and record assembly builds that consume components and receive finished goods into inventory. It links these production processes directly to financial reports, inventory balances, and outstanding orders, so the impact of every build is visible across the organization in real time.
It is important to position this module correctly. Work Orders and Assemblies is the entry tier of NetSuite's production management capabilities. It is built for light assembly and basic manufacturing, the kind of work where you combine components into a finished product but do not need to track work in process or capture labor separately at each step. Think of toy assembly, kit building, light electronics, furniture, food and beverage packing, or wholesale distributors who do simple value-added assembly to fulfill orders.
The module also has an important technical prerequisite. To run Work Orders and Assemblies, you generally need the Advanced Inventory module enabled, since assembly production depends on the inventory commitment, costing, and tracking that Advanced Inventory provides. Keeping that dependency in mind early helps you budget and scope accurately.
If your operation involves transforming raw materials into finished products and you want every stage recorded automatically, this module gives you that foundation without the overhead of a full manufacturing execution system. Our NetSuite Consultants regularly help manufacturers determine whether this tier covers their needs or whether they should plan for more.
Key Terms You Need to Know
Before going deeper, it helps to define the core vocabulary. These terms appear throughout NetSuite's manufacturing functionality, and understanding them makes everything that follows much clearer.
Assembly Item: An assembly item is the finished or built product that comes out of your production process. It is a special inventory item type in NetSuite that is made up of other items (its components). When you record an assembly build, NetSuite consumes the components and adds the assembly item to stock.
Bill of Materials (BOM): The bill of materials is the recipe for an assembly item. It lists every component and the quantity required to build one unit of the finished good. A well-maintained BOM is the backbone of accurate manufacturing because it drives component commitment, consumption, and costing. In NetSuite, BOMs are managed as their own records and can be assigned to assemblies and revisions, giving you version control over your product structures.
Multi-Level BOM (Subassemblies): Many products are not built in a single step. A multi-level BOM nests assemblies within assemblies, so a finished good might be made up of several subassemblies, each with its own component list. NetSuite supports these nested structures, letting you model complex products accurately and build subassemblies independently or as part of the parent build.
Work Order: A work order is the instruction set for production. It defines the assembly item to build, the quantity, and the components to commit from inventory. The work order acts as a guide for the manufacturing process, making it easier to track production, manage inventory, and ensure finished goods are built correctly and on time. Work orders move through a series of statuses from creation to completion.
Assembly Build: The assembly build is the transaction that actually records production. It consumes the components from inventory and receives the finished assembly item into stock. A useful analogy: an assembly build is to a work order what an item fulfillment is to a sales order, or what an item receipt is to a purchase order. It represents the real inventory and financial impact of the work order.
Assembly Management: This is the broader discipline of managing how products are assembled: defining the items, maintaining the BOMs, controlling subcomponents, recording builds and unbuilds, and tracking finished goods against the components consumed. The Work Orders and Assemblies module is the toolset that makes assembly management efficient and auditable.
Backflushing: Backflushing is the automatic deduction of components from inventory when an assembly build is completed. Instead of manually issuing each part, the system relies on the BOM to determine what was consumed and removes it from stock automatically. This reduces manual effort and keeps inventory accurate, provided your BOMs reflect reality.
Inventory Commitment: When a work order is created, NetSuite can automatically commit the required components to that production order. This reserves the inventory and gives you a precise, up-to-date view of what is available, helping prevent stockouts and overstocking.
Understanding these terms is the first step toward configuring the module well. If you want help mapping them to your actual product structures, Versich's NetSuite specialists can walk through your operation with you.
Where Work Orders and Assemblies Fit in NetSuite's Manufacturing Stack
One of the most common mistakes businesses make is assuming NetSuite manufacturing is a single thing. It is not. NetSuite offers a progression of production management capabilities that build on one another, so you can choose the tier that matches your operational reality and scale up later without re-platforming.
Tier 1: Work Orders and Assemblies. This is the foundation. It works best for companies that do light assembly but do not need to track work in process or capture labor separately. You define assembly items, build BOMs, create work orders, record builds, and backflush components. Costing at this tier focuses on material costs rather than detailed labor and overhead allocation by operation.
Tier 2: WIP and Routings. This tier adds the ability to define work centers and routings, track labor costing, perform infinite-capacity scheduling, and visualize production through a Gantt chart with drag-and-drop functionality. It also introduces additional work order statuses for finer control over how work is released to the floor. If you need to track value as it moves through production stages or capture labor against specific operations, this is where you move up.
Tier 3: Advanced Manufacturing. This is the most comprehensive offering. It provides finite-capacity scheduling, batch management, full manufacturing execution capabilities, and detailed shop-floor control. It is designed for complex, multi-stage, or multi-plant environments where you need complete control over every aspect of the manufacturing process.
A simple rule of thumb: Work Orders and Assemblies suit light assembly operations and many wholesale distributors, WIP and Routings tends to fit larger or more process-driven manufacturers, and Advanced Manufacturing serves enterprise-level production. These are not rigid boundaries, though. The right answer depends on your specific workflows, which is exactly why scoping with an experienced partner matters. The good news is that because these tiers build on each other, starting with Work Orders and Assemblies does not lock you out of advanced features later.
Key Benefits of NetSuite Work Orders and Assemblies
The value of this module comes from automating tasks that are otherwise manual, error-prone, and disconnected from your financials. Here are the benefits that matter most to growing manufacturers and distributors.
Optimized inventory levels. Because work orders commit components automatically and builds deduct them in real time, you always have an accurate picture of what is on hand, what is reserved, and what needs replenishing. Production plans can be based on actual raw material and assembly item availability, which removes bottlenecks and prevents both stockouts and excess stock.
Real-time financial visibility. Every build links production activity to inventory and the general ledger. Leadership can see the financial impact of manufacturing across the organization without waiting for end-of-period reconciliation. This unified view is one of the strongest reasons businesses choose NetSuite over disconnected production and accounting tools.
Reduced manual effort and fewer errors. Automatic backflushing removes the need to issue each component by hand. Manufacturers who rely on automated consumption spend far less time on inventory reconciliation and make fewer data-entry mistakes that cause inventory drift.
Accurate assembly costing. The module captures material costs into each assembly so you know what your finished goods actually cost to build. This supports better pricing, margin analysis, and profitability decisions. For businesses that want predefined cost values, NetSuite also supports standard costing, which you can read more about in our guide on setting up standard costing in NetSuite.
Faster, more confident decision-making. With production, inventory, and finance in one system, you remove the lag and the guesswork that come from stitching reports together across multiple platforms.
Productivity improvements. Standardized production plans, clear work instructions, and real-time costing communicate directly to the people doing the work. This keeps the floor aligned and reduces rework.
Scalability. As your business grows, you can activate new modules and add users without ripping out your foundation. The module is designed to be set up quickly and to scale alongside your operation.
End-to-end traceability. For regulated or quality-sensitive industries, the module supports lot-numbered and serialized inventory, giving you full traceability from raw materials to finished products.
Taken together, these benefits translate into lower carrying costs, tighter margins, and far less administrative friction. If you want to quantify what that looks like for your business, the team at Versich can help you build the case.
Key Features of NetSuite Work Orders and Assemblies
Beyond the high-level benefits, the module ships with a specific set of capabilities. Here is what you get.
Assembly item definition. Create assembly items with full component lists, including subassemblies, so your product structures live as real records in the system rather than in a spreadsheet.
Multi-level bill of materials. Build and maintain BOMs that nest assemblies within assemblies. This lets you model genuinely complex products and manage revisions over time.
Work order creation and tracking. Generate work orders that specify the quantity to build and the components to commit, then track each order through its lifecycle.
Production order and special order workflows. Production orders replenish stock levels, while special orders are tied directly to specific customer sales orders for custom or made-to-order builds.
Assembly built and unbuilt. Record builds to create finished goods and consume components, or unbuild to reverse a build and return components to stock.
Automatic component backflushing. Deduct used components from inventory automatically at build completion based on the BOM, dramatically reducing manual issuance.
Inventory commitment. Commit components to production automatically when a work order is created, giving you a precise inventory status and protecting against stockouts.
Cost capturing for assemblies. Track raw material costs to ensure complete and accurate assembly costing, with the ability to layer in more detailed costing as you scale up tiers.
Lot and serial traceability. Support for lot-numbered and serialized inventory provides traceability across the entire production chain.
Work order travelers and instructions. Produce work order travelers and work instructions that communicate production plans and steps directly to the floor.
Work without work orders. For the lightest assembly scenarios, NetSuite allows production teams to record builds without creating a formal work order, backflushing all materials upon completion.
These features cover the full cycle of light manufacturing inside a single platform. To see how they would map to your products and processes, book a consultation with Versich.
Work Order Types in NetSuite
NetSuite supports more than one type of work order so you can manage production according to whether you are building for stock or fulfilling a specific order.
Production orders (standard work orders).
These are the most common types, used to build products based on demand or to replenish inventory. A production order defines the assembly item, the quantity, and the required components, and it is tracked from creation through completion. This is the workhorse for make-to-stock operations.
Special order work orders.
These are linked directly to a customer sales order and are used for custom or made-to-order builds. When a customer orders a configured or built-to-order product, the special order work order ties production to that specific demand, ensuring you build exactly what was sold. For businesses selling configurable products, this often works alongside configuration tooling. Our article on CPQ for NetSuite covers how configurable products and quoting fit into this picture.
WIP work orders.
As you move toward the WIP and Routings tier, work orders gain the ability to issue and track materials and labor as work-in-process costs, and to define and track labor through a routing ticket system. This bridges the gap between basic assembly and full production management.
The Work Order Lifecycle and Statuses
A work order is not a single event. It moves through a defined lifecycle, and understanding those statuses helps you manage production and troubleshoot issues.
At the Work Orders and Assemblies tier, a work order typically progresses through statuses such as Planned, Released, In Process, Built, and Closed. The work order is created and planned, released to production, worked through as the build happens, marked as built once the assembly is completed, and finally closed.
When the work order is created, NetSuite explodes the BOM and commits the required components from inventory automatically. This BOM explosion is what reserves your parts and gives you that precise, real-time view of availability. As production proceeds, the build transaction receives finished goods into stock and removes the consumed components.
If you need to reverse a work order that has reached Built status, you can delete the related assembly builds. Doing so returns the work order to Released status and restores the inventory to where it was before the build. This gives you a clean, auditable way to correct mistakes.
It is worth noting that higher tiers add more granular statuses. The WIP and Routings module, for example, introduces statuses such as Open Planned, Firm Planned, and Released, giving production controllers greater control over how work is released to the floor. Mass update screens let controllers track statuses and make bulk changes based on criteria like customer, item, or due date, and these can be automated with NetSuite's workflow engine. Even at the base tier, status discipline is one of the most important habits for keeping production data trustworthy.
Backflushing: How Component Consumption Works
Backflushing deserves its own explanation because it is central to how the module keeps inventory accurate with minimal effort.
When an assembly build completes, NetSuite uses the BOM to determine which components were consumed and automatically deducts them from inventory. You do not manually issue each part. This is the lightweight approach to manufacturing: a single transaction consumes components and creates finished goods, and the inventory deduction happens behind the scenes.
The benefit is significant. Manufacturers using automated backflushing spend far less time on inventory reconciliation and avoid the errors that come with manual issuance. For repetitive assembly, kit building, and light manufacturing, this is exactly the kind of automation that pays for itself.
There is a catch worth calling out plainly. Backflushing is only as accurate as your BOMs. If actual consumption does not match the BOM, if scrap is not accounted for, or if components are substituted without updating the records, your inventory balances will drift over time. This is one of the most common reasons assembly inventory becomes unreliable. The fix is disciplined BOM maintenance and proper scrap handling, which a good implementation builds in from the start. This is an area where working with an experienced partner like Versich prevents expensive, slow-building inventory problems.
Assembly Build vs. Unbuild
The module gives you two-way control over production through builds and unbuilds.
An assembly build takes components and creates a finished assembly item, consuming the components and receiving the finished good into stock. This is the normal forward direction of production.
An assembly unbuilds reverses that process. It takes a finished assembly item apart and returns the components to inventory. Unbuilds are useful when a product needs to be reworked, when you built the wrong quantity, or when you need to recover components for a higher-priority order.
Throughout both, NetSuite tracks inventory of finished builds versus subcomponents separately, so you always know how much of each you hold. This separation matters for accurate valuation and for understanding your true component availability at any moment.
Costing and Financial Visibility
One of the strongest arguments for managing assembly production inside NetSuite rather than in a standalone tool is the direct link to your financials.
At the Work Orders and Assemblies tier, costing focuses on capturing material costs into each assembly. The cost of a built assembly is essentially the sum of its component costs, consumed at the time of the build. This gives you a reliable material cost for every finished good, which feeds margin analysis and pricing.
If you need to allocate labor and overhead by operation, that capability arrives when you move up to WIP and Routings, where you can issue and track work-in-process costs. For businesses that prefer fixed, predefined cost values rather than fluctuating actual costs, NetSuite supports standard costing as well. Our detailed walkthrough on standard costing in NetSuite explains how to set it up for accurate manufacturing costs.
The real advantage is that production activity flows straight into inventory valuation and the general ledger. There is no separate reconciliation step, no exporting and importing between systems, and no waiting until month-end to understand the financial impact of what you built. This single-system view is what lets leadership make confident, timely decisions.
Traceability and Compliance
For many manufacturers, traceability is not a nice-to-have. It is a regulatory requirement.
The Work Orders and Assemblies module supports lot-numbered and serialized inventory, which provides full traceability from raw materials all the way through to finished products. If a component lot turns out to be defective, you can trace exactly which finished goods used it and where those went. If a finished unit needs to be recalled or investigated, you can trace back to the specific components and lots that went into it.
This level of traceability is critical in sectors such as pharmaceuticals, food and beverage, medical devices, and aerospace, where compliance and quality control demand a documented chain of custody for every component. Building this traceability into your production system from day one is far easier than retrofitting it later, and it is a key part of how we approach manufacturing implementations at Versich.
Industry Challenges and How NetSuite Work Orders and Assemblies Solves Them
Different industries run into different versions of the same core problems. Here is how the module addresses the most common challenges.
Challenge: Managing complex bills of materials. In industries like automotive, electronics, and durable goods, products are built from intricate multi-level BOMs. Managing these manually is slow and error-prone, and a single outdated BOM can throw off both production and costing.
Solution. The module lets you create detailed multi-level BOMs and track each component's usage, with revision control so your product structures stay current. Subassemblies can be modeled and built independently, which keeps even complex products manageable.
Challenge: Inaccurate inventory and stockouts. When component consumption is tracked manually, inventory balances drift, leading to surprise stockouts that halt production or excess stock that ties up cash.
Solution. Automatic inventory commitment on work order creation and automatic backflushing at build completion keep inventory precise in real time. You see exactly what is committed, what is available, and what needs replenishing, which prevents both stockouts and overstocking.
Challenge: Ensuring product traceability. In pharmaceuticals, food and beverage, and medical manufacturing, maintaining traceability of components is essential for compliance and recalls.
Solution. Lot-numbered and serialized inventory support delivers full traceability from raw materials to finished goods, so you can document the complete chain of custody for every unit.
Challenge: Light assembly for distributors. Wholesale distributors often have basic assembly or kitting requirements to fulfill orders, but they do not need a heavy manufacturing system.
Solution. The module supports light assembly perfectly. A distributor can define assembly items, set up BOMs, and record builds efficiently without the overhead of full production management. For example, a toy distributor can define new products, assemble them from predefined BOMs, and ensure every component is accounted for.
Challenge: Disconnected production and finance. Many businesses run production in one tool and accounting in another, forcing constant reconciliation and delaying financial insight.
Solution. Because the module is native to NetSuite, every build links directly to inventory and the general ledger, eliminating reconciliation and giving leadership real-time financial visibility.
Challenge: Special and custom orders. Businesses that build to order struggle to tie production to specific customer demand.
Solution. Special order work orders link production directly to sales orders, ensuring you build exactly what was sold and can track it from order to delivery.
Challenge: Outsourced or contract manufacturing. Some manufacturers rely on third parties for part of their production.
Solution. NetSuite extends to outsourced production scenarios as well. Our guide to NetSuite outsourced production management covers how to set up outsourcing charges, outsourced locations, and vendor relationships within the system.
Whatever your industry, the underlying pattern is the same. The module replaces manual, disconnected processes with automated, integrated ones. To map these solutions to your specific challenges, talk to a Versich consultant.
Who Should Use the Work Orders and Assemblies Module?
This module is ideal for businesses with assembly or basic manufacturing needs, particularly those that depend on efficient inventory management, accurate costing, and streamlined production workflows. Consider it if any of the following describe your operation.
You transform raw materials into finished products and want every stage of the assembly process tracked.
You build inventory products from components or assemble kits.
You run repetitive assembly operations or light manufacturing.
You are a wholesale distributor with basic value-added assembly requirements.
You build both to stock and to specific customer orders.
You need a lot of serial traceability for compliance, but do not need full shop-floor execution.
If, on the other hand, you need detailed labor tracking by operation, multi-step routing, work-in-process accounting, or finite-capacity scheduling, that is a signal you should look at WIP and Routings or Advanced Manufacturing. A specialist can help you read those signals correctly so you neither overbuy nor outgrow your setup too quickly. Our NetSuite for manufacturers page outlines how Versich supports businesses across the full range of production complexity.
Limitations and Common Implementation Pitfalls
An honest assessment of the module includes its limits. Knowing these in advance leads to a far smoother implementation.
No native labor, WIP, or routing tracking. At this tier, you cannot capture labor by operation, track work in process, or define multi-step routings. If those are requirements, you need a higher tier. Many businesses discover this only after going live, so scope it correctly up front.
BOM maintenance is the silent cost. The single most common cause of unreliable assembly inventory is stale BOMs. Product designs change, components get substituted, but the BOMs never get updated, so builds consume the wrong materials. Maintaining current BOMs is a discipline, not a one-time setup task.
Backflush accuracy and scrap handling. If actual consumption does not match the BOM and scrap is not accounted for, inventory balances drift over time. Configuring accurate consumption rules and scrap handling from the start prevents this.
Production staff bypassing work orders. When teams build assemblies directly without creating work orders, you lose the visibility and tracking the module is meant to provide. Clear process design and the right permissions keep everyone on the rails.
The Advanced Inventory prerequisite. Because the module generally requires Advanced Inventory to be enabled, you need to factor that dependency into both your budget and your configuration plan.
None of these is a reason to avoid the module. There are reasons to implement it deliberately. A partner who has done this many times will design around these pitfalls rather than discovering them after go-live. That is precisely the value Versich brings to manufacturing implementations.
Implementation Best Practices
A successful rollout comes down to a handful of disciplines.
Start with clean, current BOMs. Your BOMs drive commitment, consumption, costing, and backflushing, so getting them right is the highest-leverage thing you can do.
Decide your workflow up front. Determine where you will use formal work orders versus working without them, and which builds are production orders versus special orders.
Configure accurate consumption and scrap rules so backflushing reflects reality rather than an idealized recipe.
Set status-change controls and, where helpful, mass-update workflows so production controllers can manage volume without manual drudgery.
Plan for the upgrade path before you need it, so that moving to WIP and Routings or Advanced Manufacturing later is a smooth step rather than a re-implementation.
Above all, treat the implementation as a process design exercise, not just a software configuration task. The businesses that get the most from this module are the ones that align their actual shop-floor processes with how the system works. Our six-step NetSuite implementation plan lays out a proven approach you can follow.
How Much Does NetSuite Work Orders and Assemblies Cost?
Pricing is one of the most common questions, and the honest answer is that it depends on your overall configuration. Here is a realistic picture based on current market data, with the caveat that Oracle prices NetSuite by company size, edition, and negotiated terms, so your actual figures will vary.
NetSuite licensing has several components that stack together. There is a base platform fee, per-user license fees, and the cost of add-on modules. In 2026, base platform fees commonly range from roughly $999 per month for the Starter edition up to $5,000 per month or more for Enterprise editions, with many mid-market buyers landing in between. Full user licenses typically run in the range of $99 to $199 per user per month.
For the Work Orders and Assemblies module specifically, manufacturing module pricing in 2026 generally falls somewhere in the range of $600 to $2,000 per month, depending on scope and complexity, with the basic assembly capability sitting toward the lower end of that range. Historically, the module has been listed at around $599 per month. Remember that the module generally requires Advanced Inventory, which typically adds around $500 per month. So when budgeting, you should account for both.
A few important notes on cost. First, NetSuite often bundles work orders, assemblies, and WIP tracking into its industry-specific Manufacturing edition, so buying the right vertical bundle can be more cost-effective than purchasing modules individually. Second, you can add modules mid-contract, but usually can only remove them at renewal, so it pays to scope carefully. Third, the license is only part of the total cost. Implementation services are the larger and more variable investment, and they determine whether you actually realize the value of the software.
Because every business is different, the most reliable way to understand your cost is to get a tailored quote. For a sense of how the broader investment breaks down, our article on the cost of NetSuite implementation for small businesses is a useful starting point. When you are ready for specific numbers for your operation, we will help you scope only what you need and avoid paying for capabilities you will not use.
Why Versich Is the Right Choice for Work Orders and Assemblies
Choosing the right partner matters as much as choosing the right module. Here is why manufacturers and distributors work with Versich.
Deep manufacturing and distribution expertise. Our NetSuite consultants bring hands-on experience in manufacturing workflows, from BOM design and assembly costing to outsourced production and inventory control. We specialize in implementing, optimizing, and supporting NetSuite for manufacturers, and we align system functionality with your real operational goals rather than forcing your business to fit a generic template.
Implementation done right the first time. The pitfalls described above, stale BOMs, inaccurate backflushing, and bypassed work orders, are exactly the kinds of issues we design around from the start. Our structured NetSuite implementation services cover discovery, design, configuration, data migration, integrations, training, testing, go-live, and post-implementation optimization, so nothing falls through the cracks.
Ongoing support that does not disappear after go-live. We continue to support you long after launch using the same consultants who know your configuration, which minimizes handoffs and knowledge gaps. Our NetSuite managed services and support plans give you dedicated admin assistance and continuous optimization at predictable monthly rates.
Right-sized recommendations. Because we know all three manufacturing tiers intimately, we will tell you honestly whether Work Orders and Assemblies cover your needs or whether you should plan for WIP and Routings or Advanced Manufacturing. We help you avoid both overbuying and outgrowing your setup too soon.
A relationship-first, transparent approach. We treat your team as an extension of ours. Clients consistently highlight clear communication, meeting deadlines, and reliable delivery. We bring clarity to complex problems and stay invested in your outcomes well beyond the initial project.
Industry-specific configurations. From wholesale distribution and manufacturing to retail, software, and professional services, we bring vertical expertise that produces faster, more relevant configurations.
If you want a partner who combines technical depth with genuine accountability, get in touch with Versich. We are happy to start with a no-pressure conversation about your goals.
Conclusion
The NetSuite Work Orders and Assemblies module gives manufacturers and distributors a right-sized way to manage light production inside a single, unified system. It replaces manual, disconnected processes with automated, integrated ones: defining assembly items, building multi-level BOMs, creating and tracking work orders, recording builds, and backflushing components, all while linking production directly to inventory and finance in real time.
Its strengths are accurate inventory, real-time financial visibility, reliable costing, traceability, and scalability. Its limits, no native labor or WIP tracking and a dependence on disciplined BOM maintenance, are entirely manageable with the right implementation approach and an honest assessment of whether this tier fits your needs or whether you should plan for more.
That assessment is where an experienced partner earns its keep. Versich brings deep manufacturing expertise, implementation done right the first time, and support that lasts well beyond go-live. Whether you are evaluating the module for the first time, planning a migration, or looking to fix an existing configuration that has drifted, we can help you get it right.
