The iceberg beneath the license fee
When vendors quote you a license fee, they are showing you the tip of the iceberg. The real total cost of ownership (TCO) for enterprise software includes implementation, customisation, integration, training, per-user charges, annual maintenance, and the opportunity cost of slow deployment.
Industry research consistently shows that for every dollar spent on ERP licenses, companies spend $2 to $5 on implementation and customisation. A $500K license deal becomes a $2M+ project before a single user logs in.
The five hidden cost drivers
- Per-user licensing — at $150-300/user/month, a 500-person operation pays $900K-$1.8M annually just for logins
- Integration middleware — connecting HR, MES, WMS, and finance typically costs $200K-$500K in middleware licenses and consulting
- Implementation consulting — 12-24 months of consultants at $200-400/hour adds $500K-$2M
- Customisation debt — every custom report, workflow, or screen costs $5K-$50K and must be re-validated on every upgrade
- Upgrade cycles — major version upgrades every 3-5 years often cost 30-50% of the original implementation
What a flat-fee model looks like
Composable platforms with unlimited-user pricing eliminate the largest variable cost in enterprise software. No per-seat fees means you can give every operator, manager, and executive access without budget negotiations. No middleware means you eliminate the integration layer. And modular deployment means you go live in days, not months — cutting consulting costs by 80% or more.
The cheapest ERP is not the one with the lowest license fee. It is the one that eliminates the costs you did not budget for.