If your CFO is going to green‑light NetSuite, they need crisp math, credible assumptions, and a plan that survives board scrutiny. This guide gives you the whole package: what to quantify, how to model it, and how to defend it.
Executive Summary (1 slide your CFO will actually read)
- Problem: Fragmented systems, slow close (10+ days), 52‑day DSO, $8M inventory with low turns, manual P2P and O2C, audit risk.
- Solution: Consolidate on NetSuite to standardize processes, surface real‑time KPIs, and automate finance/ops.
- Outcome: ~40% faster close, 6 days lower DSO, 12% lower inventory, ~12% SG&A efficiency.
- Ask (36 months): TCO $600,000, payback 10–12 months, IRR ~85%, NPV ~$1.30M at 11% WACC.
- Risk plan: Phased rollout, change mgmt, owned KPIs, 15% services contingency.
Keep this slide brutally short. Everything else is backup.
The ROI Equation (make the math obvious)
ROI = (Cumulative Benefits − Total Cost of Ownership) / Total Cost of Ownership
Also model: NPV, IRR, and Payback on monthly cash flows over 36–60 months.
Baseline first. Document what “today” costs and how long work takes. No baseline = no credibility.
Cost Model (TCO you can defend)
Include all-in cash and non-cash costs. Typical line items:
- Subscriptions: NetSuite editions/modules, users, sandbox.
- Implementation: Partner services, project mgmt, solution design, data migration, testing, UAT.
- Integrations: iPaaS or point-to-point build + maintenance.
- Change Mgmt: Training, SOP updates, comms, enablement assets.
- Internal Time: SME hours × loaded rate (don’t hide this – CFOs won’t).
- Backfill/Overtime: For period-end and go-live.
- Decommission Savings (negative cost): Retired licenses, servers, backups, outsourced bookkeeping.
- Contingency: 10–20% on services depending on complexity.
Tip: Convert multi-year contracts to a monthly cash flow. Include uplifts and indexation.
Benefit Buckets (where NetSuite actually pays back)
Focus on improvements your CFO recognizes. Tie every benefit to a metric.
1) Working Capital & Cash
- DSO reduction: AR automation + consolidated invoicing + collections workflows.
- Model: Days reduction × average daily credit sales = one-time cash release; interest benefit = cash × company short-term rate.
- Inventory reduction: Centralized item/PO planning, demand/supply visibility, min/max, ATP.
- Model: % reduction × average inventory = cash release; carrying cost savings = released cash × carrying rate.
2) Operating Expense (Run-rate savings)
- Close automation: Journal rules, intercompany, eliminations, bank recs.
- Model: Hours saved per month × loaded rate × utilization.
- Procure-to-Pay efficiency: 3‑way match, approvals, vendor portals.
- Model: Invoices/POs per FTE improvement × FTE cost.
- IT consolidation: Kill point solutions (ERP, WMS lite, reporting, FP&A add-ons).
- Model: Retired licenses + infra + support contracts.
3) Gross Margin Uplift
- Pricing discipline: Native pricing tiers, promos, and margin reporting.
- Model: Basis‑point lift × revenue (apply only to affected segments).
- Order accuracy/expedite avoidance: Fewer chargebacks, rework.
- Model: % reduction in penalties/expedites × historical cost.
4) Risk & Compliance (Hard-to-ignore)
- Audit readiness: Segregation of duties, logs, native controls.
- Model: External audit hours reduction + avoided findings/fines.
- Revenue recognition accuracy: ASC 606 support where relevant.
- Model: Avoided re‑statements/penalties (probability‑weighted).
Guardrail: Use conservative deltas. Then run sensitivities at −50% / Base / +25%.
Data You Need (pull before you model)
- Revenue by channel, monthly for 24–36 months, credit sales only for DSO.
- AR aging and write-offs; AP aging.
- Inventory by category, turns, carrying cost (%).
- Invoice volume, POs, receipts, vendor count.
- Finance & ops time-on-task: close, reconciliations, billing, collections, purchasing.
- Current software & infra costs (licenses, servers, support, maintenance).
- Audit hours and fees; compliance incidents.
Example Model (plug-and-play structure)
Use monthly periods (P1…P36). Below are sample formulas – swap in your actuals.
Baseline (illustrative)
- Annual revenue: $60M (90% credit sales)
- DSO baseline: 52 days
- Average inventory on hand: $8.0M
- Finance team: 8 FTE, loaded cost $95k/FTE/yr
- Legacy tools to retire: $7,500/mo
Assumptions (base case)
- DSO improvement: 6 days starting Month 9 (post‑go‑live stabilization)
- Inventory reduction: 12% starting Month 10
- Close time reduced: 40% from Month 10
- Decommissioned tools: $7,500/mo from Month 10
- Carrying cost of capital: 9%; WACC for NPV: 11%
- Services spend: $240k over Months 1–8; Subscriptions: $12k/mo from Month 7
Working capital release
- Average daily credit sales = (TTM credit revenue ÷ 365) = $147,945
- AR cash release (one‑time) = 6 days × $147,945 = $887,670 in Month 9
- Interest benefit (monthly) = $887,670 × (9% ÷ 12) = $6,658/mo from Month 9
Inventory
- Cash release (one‑time) = 12% × $8,000,000 = $960,000 in Month 10
- Carrying savings (monthly) = $960,000 × (18% ÷ 12) = $14,400/mo from Month 10
OpEx savings (finance & AP/AR)
- Hours/FTE saved ≈ 40%; modeled as avoided hires rather than layoffs
- Monthly savings ≈ (8 FTE × $95k × 40%) ÷ 12 = $25,333/mo from Month 10
IT consolidation
- Monthly savings = $7,500/mo from Month 10
Costs
- Services: $240,000 (Months 1–8)
- Subscriptions: $12,000/mo (Months 7–36) → $360,000 over 30 months
- Total TCO (36 mo): $600,000
Benefit run‑rate after Month 10
- Interest: $6,658/mo
- Inventory carrying: $14,400/mo
- OpEx: $25,333/mo
- IT consolidation: $7,500/mo
- Total run‑rate benefit: $53,891/mo (from Month 10)
Cumulative benefits (36 mo, base case)
- One‑time cash releases: $1,847,670 (AR + Inventory in Months 9–10)
- Recurring benefits Months 10–36 (27 months): $53,891 × 27 = $1,455,057
- Total benefits: $3,302,727
Headline metrics (base case)
- ROI: (3,302,727 − 600,000) ÷ 600,000 = 451%
- NPV (11%) ≈ $1.30M
- IRR: ~85%
- Payback: ~10–12 months (benefits begin Month 9–10)
Sensitivity (downside)
- Benefits −50% (cash releases & run‑rate): Total benefits ≈ $1.65M
- ROI: ≈ 175%
- NPV (11%) ≈ $0.55M
- Payback: ~14–16 months
Rule of thumb: Mid‑market rollouts usually target 9–18 month payback with conservative assumptions.
Phasing & Timeline (what your CFO will challenge)
- Phase 0 – Readiness (4–6 weeks): Requirements, data audit, future-state design, cutover plan.
- Phase 1 – Core Financials (3–4 months): GL, AR, AP, banking, basic reporting.
- Phase 2 – Order-to-Cash / Procure-to-Pay (2–3 months): Items, pricing, approvals, 3‑way match.
- Phase 3 – Advanced (2–4 months): RevRec, projects, WMS lite, subsidiaries, FP&A integration.
Show when benefits start per phase. Do not front-load benefits before stabilization.
Risks & Mitigations (preempt finance’s objections)
- Benefit risk: Benefits arrive later/smaller.
- Mitigation: Tie KPIs to phase gates, run sensitivity model, hold a contingency reserve.
- Change fatigue: Users revert to spreadsheets.
- Mitigation: Role-based training, super-user network, SOP updates, sunset legacy access.
- Integration drag: APIs or data quality slows go‑live.
- Mitigation: Early data profiling, mock migrations, integration spikes, dedicated data owner.
- Scope creep: Nice‑to‑haves crowd out must‑haves.
- Mitigation: Rigor in backlog, change control with CFO visibility.
Proof Pack (what convinces a CFO)
- Before/After benchmarks from similar companies (industry, size, SKU count, channels).
- Live demo using your chart of accounts and sample orders.
- References who will confirm close time, DSO, and audit outcomes.
- Pilot metrics if you run a limited-scope proof.
KPI Scorecard (measured monthly)
- Close time: days to close; goal: −30–50% by Month 3 post‑go‑live.
- DSO: goal: −3 to −10 days by Month 6–9.
- Inventory turns: goal: +10–25% by Month 6–12.
- AP automation rate: % invoices touchless; goal: 50–80%.
- Cost to serve: finance FTEs per $100m revenue; goal: −10–25%.
Tie these to leadership bonuses to keep focus.
Building the Deck (structure that wins approvals)
- Executive summary (the 1‑pager above).
- Current state & pain quantified (baseline data, photos of the chaos optional but effective).
- Future state & scope (phases, modules, timeline).
- Financials (TCO, benefits, NPV/IRR/Payback, sensitivities).
- Risk register & mitigations (with owners).
- Governance (steering cadence, RACI, decision rights).
- Appendix (assumptions, datasets, quotes, reference calls).
Objections You’ll Hear – and How to Answer
- “Can’t we do this in spreadsheets?” You can. That’s why your DSO is up and audits are painful. We need controlled, repeatable processes and a single ledger.
- “Let’s wait until next year.” Waiting keeps the burn rate: manual hours, carrying costs, missed revenue. The NPV of delay is negative – show the monthly leakage.
- “Implementation risk is high.” Agree – so we phase scope, front-load data work, and tie partner fees to milestones.
- “Vendors always overpromise.” That’s why we modeled conservative benefits and included a 15% services contingency.
One-Slide Financial Template (copy/paste)
- TCO (36 mo): $600,000
- Cumulative benefits: $3,302,727
- NPV (11%): $1,300,000 (approx.)
- IRR: ~85%
- Payback: 10–12 months
- Sensitivity (Benefits −50%): NPV ≈ $550,000; Payback ≈ 14–16 mo
- Top 3 KPIs: Close time, DSO, Inventory turns
- Go-Live: Phase 1 Month 6; Phase 2 Month 9; Phase 3 Month 12
Implementation Commercials (how to buy smart)
- Negotiate ramp-up user counts to match phasing.
- Align subscription start with sandbox/implementation schedule.
- Bake success criteria into SOW milestones; holdback 10–20% until acceptance.
- Ask for multi-year price locks and renewal caps.
Final Word
The CFO isn’t anti‑ERP – they’re anti‑fluff. Bring defensible numbers, clear phasing, and a sober risk plan. Do that, and your NetSuite business case signs itself.