NetSuite
NetSuite is a cloud-native enterprise resource planning (ERP) and business management suite that integrates core financials, commerce, CRM, and operations on a single platform for organizations of varying sizes.
- Cloud-based Emergency Response Plan (ERP) and financial management suite for accounting, billing, and revenue operations
- Customer relationship management (CRM) tools for sales, marketing, and service processes
- Commerce capabilities for B2B and B2C e-commerce and order management
- Professional services automation (PSA) and project management for service-based organizations
- Platform and extensibility framework for configuration, custom applications, and integrations
More About NetSuite
NetSuite is delivered as a multi-tenant cloud ERP and business management platform that organizations use to standardize and automate finance, operations, and customer-facing workflows across subsidiaries, geographies, and business units. The suite targets midmarket and enterprise customers as well as fast-scaling entities that require an integrated System of Record (SOR) rather than separate point solutions for accounting, CRM, and commerce.
Core ERP and financial management capabilities (ERP/financial management) include general ledger, accounts payable and receivable, fixed assets, budgeting, revenue management, and financial consolidation. These functions share a common data model, which supports multi-entity, multi-currency, and multi-tax operations. The platform is used to support processes such as procure-to-pay, order-to-cash, record-to-report, and subscription billing, with role-based dashboards and workflow automation for finance, operations, and executive users.
Customer relationship management capabilities (CRM) cover sales force automation, marketing campaign management, customer service, and partner management. A shared database with ERP functions allows leads, quotes, orders, and invoices to exist in one system, which helps align sales and finance around the same customer and revenue data. Commerce capabilities (commerce/e-commerce) extend this further by providing online storefronts and order management that connect web, phone, and in-store transactions back into the same inventory and financial records.
For service-based and project-oriented organizations, NetSuite offers professional services automation (PSA/project management) that includes project planning, resource management, time and expense tracking, and project accounting. This PSA layer integrates with core financials for revenue recognition and margin analysis on projects, and with CRM for opportunity-to-project workflows. The suite is often deployed in industries such as software, services, wholesale distribution, manufacturing, and nonprofit, with role-based configurations tailored to sector-specific processes.
The platform and customization layer (PaaS/application platform) provides scripting, workflow, integration, and reporting tools. NetSuite uses web-based interfaces, Representational State Transfer (REST) and Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) APIs (integration/enterprise connectivity), and a proprietary scripting environment for server-side and client-side logic. Administrators and developers can configure custom records, fields, and forms, build integrations with external systems such as payroll or industry applications, and extend the system with custom applications while remaining on the vendor-managed upgrade path.
From a marketplace categorization perspective, NetSuite fits into cloud ERP, financial management, CRM, e-commerce, PSA, and iPaaS-adjacent integration categories. Organizations often evaluate it alongside other cloud ERP suites, particularly for scenarios where a single vendor stack for financials, CRM, and commerce is preferred over integrating multiple standalone products. Its multi-tenant Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) delivery model reduces the need for customer-managed infrastructure, patching, and upgrades, and provides a single codebase across the customer base with configuration-driven variability.