Book Image

NetSuite for Consultants - Second Edition

By : Peter Ries
Book Image

NetSuite for Consultants - Second Edition

By: Peter Ries

Overview of this book

ERP and CRM consultants can effectively implement NetSuite for a client organization with the aid of NetSuite for Consultants, revised with the latest features and best practices for NetSuite 2023. After reading this book, you’ll have a thorough understanding of how to configure the NetSuite ecosystem for any business. You’ll learn how to apply new features such as the Manufacturing Mobile application, NetSuite budgeting features, and tools for handling rebates and trade promotions. This edition also includes expanded coverage of technical topics such as SuiteQL and the SuiteTalk REST API. Understanding what a business requires is a crucial first step toward completing any software product deployment, and this NetSuite guide will teach you how to ask meaningful questions that ascertain which features, basic and new, you will need to configure for your client. Most importantly, you’ll not only learn how to perform a NetSuite implementation; you'll also learn how to prepare clients to use the software confidently, which is the true test of a great consultant.
Table of Contents (28 chapters)
1
Section I: The NetSuite Ecosystem, including the Main Modules, Platform, and Related Features
5
Section II: Understanding the Client’s Organization
11
Section III: Implementing an Organization in NetSuite
21
Section IV: Managing Gaps and Integrations
25
Other Books You May Enjoy
26
Index
Appendix: My Answers to Self-Assessments

Analyzing the other process groups

If you review Table 8.1 from this chapter, you’ll see that the other remaining business processes are going to be relatively more or less important to each of your clients, based on their industry and their specialty within it. Not every NetSuite client uses the cases/issues/knowledge base features, for instance, but those that make them a part of their customer-facing business consider them to be very important indeed.

Let’s talk through a few of the more commonly used processes here then and get an idea of the information you need to gather from the client when analyzing them.

Design to build

In the previous chapter, we talked about gathering requirements for items, but this process includes more than that. If your client has a manufacturing department of any sort, you might need to understand their need for work orders and assembly builds or more transactions, depending on how deeply they wish to track their shop processes...