Sage readies ERP suite for small and medium-sized firms

Sage 1000 due to be delivered to customers in May

Enterprise software specialist Sage has revealed more details about Sage 1000, its new integrated software suite for medium-sized businesses, due to be delivered to customers in May.

David Pinches, director of accounts and enterprise resource planning (ERP) at Sage, said the new suite includes all the components needed to run firms with a turnover of between £10m and £500m.

"It's a generic product that's applicable across a wide range of industries, " Pinches said. "It has all the core requirements for a mid-market firm, like an accounting system and operations management, including sales order processing, procurement, warehousing and inventory of goods." Additional modules are available to handle specialist requirements, such as general manufacturing and build-to-order manuf- acturing, he added.

Pinches said more and more medium-sized firms are using such integrated suites. "The days of deploying standalone accounting, customer relationship management [CRM] and manufacturing systems are eroding fast in the mid-market. These companies want to manage their processes across the entire business, not at a departmental level," he added.

Other elements in Sage 1000 include sales management tools for both field and office-based sales teams, and a module to manage sales campaigns, including lead management and sales forecasting. A customer support module includes tools for service-level targets and the logging of enquiries.

"Full reporting is available throughout the suite, either using dashboards or grid-oriented reporting," Pinches said. "There's also a self-service web module, so a company can expose selected information to trading partners."
The software runs on Windows Server systems and requires Microsoft SQL Server. Clients connect to the suite via Internet Explorer.

The price of the suite has yet to be confirmed, but Pinches said it would be competitive for the mid-market. He noted that other products in this sector cost between £1,000 and £4,000 per seat.