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When ‘we’ll fix it later’ becomes an ERP strategy

Does your ERP strategy rely on “fixing it later”? In busy construction environments, it’s easy for short-term workarounds to become long-term habits—but over time, these small delays can turn into bigger operational risks and hidden costs. What starts as a quick fix can quietly erode the value of your system. Read on to understand how this pattern develops—and what it could be costing your business.

Deferring changes and updates to your ERP system can feel like a temporary fix, but it can harden into a pattern over time if left unattended. When that happens, your ERP strategy becomes ‘we’ll fix it later’, and your business can start to accrue invisible costs.

For construction leaders, understanding why this occurs and recognising the signs it is happening is all-important.

When ‘later’ never arrives

It’s no secret how much pressure construction businesses are under in 2026. Margins are tight, time is short and regulatory requirements are becoming more complex every year. That can create an environment where:

  • Temporary fixes and workarounds are prioritised.
  • Your team stop using the system entirely.
  • Long-term solutions are pushed further and further back.

The problem is that ‘later’ never seems to arrive in this industry, and it’s all too easy to fall into a pattern of delays. What you are left with is a system that is outdated or even redundant in the worst cases. Your ERP becomes less and less useful over time, becoming a negative cost rather than a contributor to positive outcomes.

Small compromises can accumulate into a structural problem

A pattern of small, individual compromises is another way in which your ERP system can become structurally fragile. No one person is responsible, and each compromise will make sense in isolation. For example:

  • Someone is creating their own inspection template to suit their work, but it doesn’t meet your business requirements.
  • Your finance team is creating an offline spreadsheet to fill a gap they have identified, rather than updating the system as a whole.
  • Team members are reverting to paper-based operations because there is no time for appropriate training on the ERP system.

As these patterns build, they create organisational gravity that pulls more operations and people away from the ERP as their default working system. When that happens, your ERP strategy becomes fragile, and the system loses its value.

Risk, cost and fatigue compound quietly

When efficiency is lost, and communication becomes less clear, it is easy for your teams across the business to feel fatigued with the ERP system as a whole, leading to:

  • Unclear priorities
  • Unexplained friction in their daily workflows
  • Outdated training

These can all contribute to a feeling that the system is the problem. When that happens, people can start sidestepping it or using it incorrectly, both of which limit the value the ERP system provides and make it a net cost rather than a positive addition to your firm’s operations.

It can also turn your ERP into an active business risk. If your team are only partially using it, they might miss updates or use the wrong plans. That creates potential health and safety problems and can even lead to regulatory non-compliance.

Creating unhealthy disruption rather than embracing controlled change

‘Disruption’ can be a bad word in construction. As a result, many construction businesses choose to continuously ‘optimise’ their current systems to avoid what is viewed as the much larger disruption of replacing them entirely. However, in reality, this means continuous deferral of real, lasting fixes, leading to:

  • Loss of efficiency
  • Organisational fatigue
  • Operational drag
  • Unsuitable system for the business

Trying to avoid disruption by deferring a larger change can, in reality, create continuous, unhealthy disruption that costs far more than embracing controlled change and developing a productive, efficient, and operationally resilient ERP system.

Delaying action shapes outcomes, whether you want it to or not

It’s always tempting to fix your ERP system later and just get by for now – especially when there is so much pressure on construction businesses. However, if your ERP strategy is defined by a never-ending list of small fixes, that has a substantial cost all of its own.

A single change which is considered and controlled is always preferable to dozens or hundreds of small changes over the years which you have no oversight of. The last thing any construction leader wants is for control of their business to quietly erode under their noses. That would be the real disruption.

Want to learn more about how to make a controlled change to your ERP system? Contact our team of experts today to get started. 

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