There is a moment in every growing company’s life when Excel stops being a tool and starts being a liability. The CFO is rebuilding the same consolidation every month. The sales team is exporting orders from a shared workbook nobody trusts. Inventory counts on one tab contradict the receipts on another. The business is running, but it is running on hope.
This article is for companies on that edge. We will help you recognize the signals, decide whether you are really ready for an ERP, and walk through what a clean migration from Excel to Business Central looks like.
The five signals you have outgrown Excel
Not every Excel-heavy business needs an ERP yet. But if you recognize three or more of these signals, the math is starting to favor a move.
Signal one: you can’t close the month in five days. Closing time is the single best proxy for finance system maturity. If your CFO is spending two weeks on a close every month, the cost is real (her time, her team’s time, the delayed reporting to leadership).
Signal two: you have multiple sources of truth. Inventory in spreadsheet A, in workbook B, in your e-commerce platform. None of them match. Every meeting starts with « whose numbers are we using ? ».
Signal three: you can’t onboard a new finance hire quickly. Excel-based processes live in someone’s head. New hires take months to be productive. That tells you the system is brittle.
Signal four: audit and compliance are getting expensive. Your statutory auditor is increasing fees because they cannot rely on your internal controls. Tax inspectors are asking for evidence that takes weeks to produce.
Signal five: you are losing deals because of operational pain. Sales cycles slow because quoting is manual. Customer service suffers because order status is buried in spreadsheets. The cost is no longer just internal; it is leaking to your revenue.
The right time to move (and the wrong time)
The right time to move is when Excel pain is real but you still have organizational bandwidth to migrate. That usually means: 20 to 100 employees, a CFO with at least two years of experience, and a 6 to 12 month window without major business disruption (no acquisitions in progress, no major fundraise).
The wrong time to move is during a crisis. « Our Excel is breaking right now, we need an ERP yesterday » is the worst possible starting position. ERP projects need 6 to 12 months minimum. If you are in fire-fighting mode, fix the fire first, then plan the migration.
The second wrong time is when you are too small. Below 20 employees and below 5 million euros in revenue, the implementation cost of BC is rarely justified. Tools like QuickBooks, Pennylane (France), or Xero will do the job until you grow into ERP scale.
What you are really buying when you move to BC
The sales pitch is « Business Central will replace all your spreadsheets ». The reality is more nuanced. You are buying three things.
First, a single source of truth for your transactional data. Customers, vendors, items, invoices, payments, journal entries all live in one place. Reports are consistent because they query the same data.
Second, enforced process. BC posts journal entries on validation, locks closed periods, requires approval workflows on payments. The discipline is built into the product. You no longer rely on someone remembering to do the right thing.
Third, integration capacity. BC plugs into Microsoft 365, Power Platform, payment providers, banks. Most of the integrations you have hand-built in Excel become standard.
What you are not buying: a system that adapts perfectly to every quirk of how you do things today. You are buying a system that will force you to clean up some of those quirks. That is the cost and the benefit at the same time.
The five-step migration path
A clean Excel-to-BC migration follows five steps.
Step one: map your current state. Inventory every spreadsheet, every shared workbook, every macro that runs your finance and operations. You will be surprised how many there are. This map is your scope.
Step two: prioritize. You cannot move everything in one project. Pick the three to five processes where Excel pain is highest. Migrate those first. Other processes stay on Excel for now.
Step three: clean before you migrate. Run a data hygiene project on the master data you will move (customers, vendors, items). Remove duplicates, complete missing fields, retire obsolete records. This is the most boring part of the project and the one that determines success.
Step four: implement BC for the priority processes. A focused BC implementation for finance and one or two adjacent processes runs 60,000 to 150,000 euros for a 20 to 50 user company. Six to nine months. Manageable.
Step five: retire spreadsheets gradually. After go-live, identify which spreadsheets are now redundant and decommission them deliberately. Keep an explicit list of « spreadsheets we are intentionally keeping » so they don’t multiply again silently.
What stays on Excel even after BC
A secret most ERP partners won’t tell you: even after a clean BC implementation, some things stay on Excel and that is fine. Business modeling, scenario analysis, one-off analysis, board reporting templates. Excel is a great tool for exploration. It is a bad system of record.
The right pattern in 2026 is to use BC as your source of truth, Power BI for standard reporting, and Excel for one-off thinking. Each tool used where it shines.
The Asio Services way: move only when you are ready
We sometimes tell companies they are not yet ready for Business Central. They are too small, too distracted, or too internally fragmented to handle a 6-month ERP project. Telling them so is more useful than selling them a project they will abandon halfway.
If you are wondering whether your business is ready to leave Excel for Business Central, the right next step is a paid discovery. We will look at your current Excel landscape, your team, and your operational rhythm, and give you a real answer.
→ Book a free discovery call with Asio Services. We will help you decide if 2026 is the right year to move, or whether you should wait another 12 months.






