WEBCON Integration with an ERP System – What Real Benefits Will It Bring to Your Business

Table of contents
    WEBCON ERP integration – what real benefits it brings to your company

    Implementing an ERP system is a major investment. Companies devote months of work, significant budgets, and human resources, expecting that from that point on, their processes will run efficiently and consistently. Reality, however, is often more complex. ERP systems excel at managing resources and transactional data, but they are not designed for comprehensive business process management or for flexible process automation.

    This is where WEBCON BPS comes in — a BPM (Business Process Management) platform designed for modeling, automating, and optimizing processes, as well as managing workflows across the organization. Integrating WEBCON with an ERP system therefore becomes a strategic step toward full company-wide digital transformation, combining stable data management with dynamic process control.

    1. Why ERP implementation alone is not enough — the role of WEBCON BPS

    ERP systems were created to manage a company’s core resources: finance, procurement, supply chain, manufacturing, or HR. This is their natural domain, and in these areas they perform very well. Challenges arise when organizations attempt to use ERP systems to handle processes they are not always best suited for — such as dynamic document workflows, non-standard approval paths, or rapidly changing operational procedures.

    In practice, this leads to one of two scenarios: either the organization adapts its processes to fit the standard ERP operating model, or it decides to extend and customize the system. Both approaches can create issues. The first limits business agility, while the second increases system complexity and ongoing maintenance costs. It is no coincidence that SAP promotes the clean core approach — keeping the ERP core as close to standard as possible to facilitate upgrades, reduce technical debt, and minimize the risks associated with modifications.

    The risks of customization are also reflected in Microsoft’s recommendations for Dynamics 365 environments. The vendor indicates that custom scripts can cause performance issues, errors, and complications during upgrades. This means that every additional modification requires not only design and implementation, but also ongoing testing, maintenance, and careful assessment of its impact on future system versions.

    A heavily customized ERP system can also extend the time required to implement new processes by two to five times.

    WEBCON BPS is a low-code platform that does not replace ERP, but complements it. It acts as a process layer on top of existing systems, taking over the handling of complex, dynamic workflows. This allows the ERP system to focus on what it was designed for, while WEBCON manages the rest — with full, real-time data integration.

    2. How WEBCON–ERP integration works — mechanisms and technical capabilities

    Before real business benefits can be realized, a solid technical foundation must be in place. WEBCON’s integration with ERP systems is based on several proven mechanisms that connect both systems without interfering with ERP logic.

    2.1 Two-way data exchange between WEBCON and ERP

    WEBCON integrations with ERP systems operate bi-directionally. WEBCON BPS can both retrieve data from ERP (inventory levels, production status, vendor and customer data, price lists) and send process outcomes back to ERP (approved purchase orders, submitted orders, responsible parties, posted invoices, registered documents). This synchronization eliminates the need to manually transfer data between systems, which has traditionally been one of the most common sources of errors and delays.

    In practice, TTMS applies several approaches. Synchronous REST API connections allow up-to-date ERP data to be retrieved at the exact moment a user performs an action on a form. Asynchronous mechanisms using SQL buffer tables are effective where ERP-side processing takes time and WEBCON must wait for execution status and document numbers. The integration method is selected based on the requirements of the specific process and the underlying technology.

    2.2 Supported ERP systems: SAP, Comarch, Microsoft Dynamics 365, and others

    WEBCON ERP integration supports a wide range of systems. For SAP (ECC, S/4HANA, and SAP Business One), the preferred method is integration via ST Web Services, which provides full two-way communication and supports transactions such as vendor invoices, purchase orders, and inventory levels. Older SAP installations can also use SOAP Web Services.

    Microsoft Dynamics 365 integrates via web services and SQL views, depending on data structure and instance location. Comarch and other ERP systems are supported through custom connectors, proprietary web services, or direct database connections using MS SQL or Oracle. WEBCON BPS also leverages SQL views in ERP databases, enabling data validation scenarios — such as verifying a vendor’s status on a tax whitelist before a user approves a form.

    2.3 APIs, connectors, and integration without overwriting ERP logic

    A key advantage of the WEBCON BPS architecture is that integration takes place without modifying the ERP core logic. The platform operates as an external process layer, with data flowing through documented interfaces. This minimizes the risk of destabilizing the ERP environment and ensures full compatibility with the vendor’s update schedule.

    For SAP integrations, solutions such as yunIO can also be used to replicate SAP transactions via web services. The WEBCON BPS Portal enables configuration of API applications and service agents, supporting complex data exchange scenarios with multiple external systems simultaneously.

    WEBCON Integration with an ERP System - What Real Benefits Will It Bring to Your Business

    3. Key business benefits of WEBCON–ERP integration

    Technology is the foundation, but organizations decide to integrate WEBCON with ERP primarily for business reasons. A Forrester study commissioned by WEBCON BPS showed a 113% return on investment, with a 25‑month payback period and an NPV of USD 321,055. These figures are risk-adjusted and based on real-world implementations.

    3.1 Shorter time-to-market for new processes without IT involvement

    In an ERP environment, every change typically requires developers, testing, and long deployment cycles. WEBCON low-code ERP reverses this model. Business users equipped with tools such as Designer Desk can independently design and modify processes, reducing implementation time by as much as 2–5 times compared to similar changes made directly in ERP systems. Simple business applications can be created in a single afternoon instead of weeks.

    3.2 Document workflow automation and elimination of manual operations

    Analyses by consulting firms such as Forrester indicate that low-code and BPM platforms can significantly increase operational efficiency, accelerate process execution, and deliver measurable ROI in a relatively short time.

    In practice, this means eliminating manual data re-entry between systems, automating notifications and escalations, replacing email-based approval chains with digital approval paths, and maintaining a complete document history with timestamps, authors, and decisions at each stage.

    3.3 Complete data visibility and lower implementation costs

    System fragmentation is one of the most frequently reported challenges by TTMS clients. When financial data resides in ERP, documents live in email inboxes, and statuses are tracked in spreadsheets, managers make decisions based on incomplete information. WEBCON–ERP integration consolidates these streams, combining data from ERP, CRM systems, HR databases, and other sources into a single, coherent context visible to end users.

    The low-code model also transforms software economics. Instead of engaging external developers for every new application, organizations build and evolve process solutions in-house, launching dozens of applications annually with a budget that would traditionally cover only a handful of custom development projects.

    3.4 InstantChange™ technology — adaptation without operational downtime

    Changes in tax law, new compliance requirements, or organizational restructuring demand rapid response. InstantChange™ technology in WEBCON BPS allows modifications to running applications without interrupting active processes. Changes take effect immediately in the production environment while maintaining full continuity for in-progress cases. This is a true game changer, especially for the pharma and dermocosmetics industries, ensuring audit readiness at every stage.

    4. Market example: Amber Expo MTG and invoice workflow automation

    A clear illustration of these benefits can be seen in the case study of Amber Expo MTG, a company in the trade fair and conference industry. The organization implemented WEBCON BPS as a process layer on top of its existing ERP system, automating incoming document assignment, vendor invoice workflows, request and decision forms, and core CRM processes. ERP integration included automatic assignment of invoices to the correct cost centers and direct transfer to the accounting system after approval.

    4.1 Results achieved within the first 6 months:

    • Request approvals accelerated by 10×
    • Over 3,000 invoices processed automatically
    • 7 key processes launched in under 6 months
    • Real-time budget reporting

    This implementation reflects a pattern TTMS observes across multiple projects: the highest returns come from automating document-driven processes directly linked to ERP transactions, delivered iteratively from the very first weeks of the project.

    5. Which business areas benefit the most

    Although the benefits of WEBCON–ERP integration are felt across the entire organization, some departments gain particularly strong advantages.

    5.1 Finance and accounting: automated invoice workflows and cost approval

    Vendor invoices entering the organization can be automatically recognized, assigned to the appropriate cost centers retrieved from ERP, routed to the correct approvers based on value and category, and—once approved—posted directly to the accounting system without manual intervention. WEBCON can also validate vendor data against ERP SQL views and the tax whitelist before the document is approved.

    5.2 HR and people operations: leave requests, onboarding, and employee documentation

    WEBCON BPS retrieves organizational structure data from ERP and uses it to build intelligent workflows: leave requests with automatic balance verification, onboarding processes with task lists for multiple departments, document management with deadline control and reminders, and digital performance review forms. Any structural change in ERP automatically updates approval paths in WEBCON.

    5.3 Procurement and logistics: purchase orders, deliveries, and inventory control

    A purchase request submitted in WEBCON is routed for budget verification, checks product availability via the ERP ST API, obtains approval at the appropriate level, and automatically generates a purchase order in ERP. After delivery, the goods receipt document closes the workflow and updates inventory levels, with the entire cycle visible in one place and a full decision history.

    5.4 Sales and customer service: quotes, contracts, and claims in one environment

    WEBCON BPS retrieves up-to-date price lists and product availability directly from ERP via the ST API and uses them to populate quotation forms. Claims, contracts, and service requests are handled in a single environment integrated with ERP, CRM, and document systems, giving sales teams a complete customer context and real-time order status without switching between applications.

    WEBCON Integration with an ERP System - What Real Benefits Will It Bring to Your Business

    6. What WEBCON-ERP integration looks like in practice – stages and timelines

    The implementation and integration of WEBCON with ERP follows several clearly defined phases.

    The analysis phase is the starting point, where TTMS works with the client to identify processes to be integrated, map data flows, and ask key questions: Which systems will be connected to WEBCON? Which integration method should be used? Which form values must be transferred to ERP? Is interface documentation available?

    The design phase includes validation of data structure and quality (key uniqueness, absence of duplicates, data scope covered by the implementation) and definition of views and tables that WEBCON will use, taking into account database-side technical requirements.

    The configuration and testing phase involves building workflows, configuring connectors, and testing integrations across DEV–TEST–PROD environments. WEBCON BPS uses a three-environment application lifecycle, minimizing the risk of defects reaching production. Simple integrations can be launched within a few weeks; more complex, multi-system projects take several months, but the iterative approach allows value to be delivered from the very first weeks.

    7. Next step: how to assess organizational readiness for integration

    Before deciding to proceed with implementation, it is worth asking a few candid diagnostic questions.

    The first concerns the current state of processes. Are workflows documented, or do they exist mainly in employees’ heads and email threads? The more unstructured the environment, the more critical the analysis phase becomes.

    The second issue is data quality in ERP. Outdated vendor records, duplicate entries, or inconsistent price lists will carry over into WEBCON and disrupt process execution. Data verification and cleanup are tasks that are well worth completing upfront.

    The third issue is ERP documentation readiness—specifically, the availability of interface documentation or web service specifications. Its absence does not block the project, but it does extend the analysis phase. The fourth issue is business engagement. Integration projects most often stall not for technical reasons, but organizational ones. Undefined decision-making roles, lack of a process owner on the client side, or employee resistance to change slow down implementation more than any API challenge. A change management plan should ideally be prepared before the project scope is finalized.

    8. WEBCON–ERP integration delivered by TTMS — how we can support your organization

    TTMS is an official WEBCON partner with over seven years of experience implementing WEBCON BPS. The team holds authorized WEBCON certifications, translating into expertise both in platform configuration and in designing integration architectures with ERP, CRM, and HR systems.

    In practice, TTMS delivers the full project lifecycle: from analytical workshops and process mapping, through integration design and configuration, to testing, production rollout, and user training. As a company specializing not only in business process automation but also in IT outsourcing, IT service management, and AI-based solutions, TTMS approaches WEBCON–ERP integration as more than a purely technical configuration task. It is part of a broader digital transformation strategy, where every system and process should operate cohesively within the organization’s IT ecosystem.

    Organizations that want to launch their first process quickly—such as vendor invoice workflows or purchasing requests—can start with a pilot implementation in a single area and expand integration iteratively. If you are looking for a partner to assess your integration readiness or discuss a specific use case, contact TTMS.

    9. FAQ – Frequently Asked Questions About WEBCON and ERP Integration

    Who is WEBCON BPS the best choice for?

    WEBCON BPS is particularly well suited for organizations built on the Microsoft stack (SharePoint, Azure AD, Dynamics), mid-market and enterprise companies handling complex, multi-stage document workflows, and environments where processes are closely intertwined with ERP transactions. If automation needs are relatively simple and limited to a single department, lighter tools such as Power Automate or Nintex may be sufficient. WEBCON BPS delivers the greatest value where scalability, complex conditional logic, and tight integration with multiple systems at once are critical.

    Does WEBCON–ERP integration require modifications to the ERP system?

    No. Integration is handled through external interfaces such as web services, SQL views, APIs, and connectors. The ERP core logic remains untouched, preserving system stability and alignment with the vendor’s update schedule.

    Which ERP systems does WEBCON BPS integrate with?

    WEBCON BPS integrates with SAP (ECC, S/4HANA, Business One), Microsoft Dynamics, Comarch, and other ERP systems. The integration method depends on the specific system version, architecture, and the organization’s process requirements.

    How long does WEBCON–ERP integration take to implement?

    Simple integrations covering one or two processes can be launched within a few weeks. More complex projects involving multiple systems and dozens of processes typically take several to over a dozen months, but an iterative approach allows value to be delivered progressively from the first weeks of the project.

    Is WEBCON BPS secure from an ERP data perspective?

    Yes. WEBCON BPS provides enterprise-grade security with role-based access control, data encryption, change auditing, and compliance with regulatory requirements. Every report access and every data change is logged, creating a transparent and complete audit trail.

    Can small and mid-sized companies benefit from WEBCON–ERP integration?

    Yes. The low-code model and relatively short implementation time make integration benefits accessible beyond large enterprises. Small and medium-sized businesses successfully deploy WEBCON BPS as a process layer on top of ERP systems, reducing the cost of handling operational processes.

    What happens to active WEBCON processes when something changes in ERP?

    InstantChange™ technology allows WEBCON applications to be updated without interrupting active processes. If an ERP-side change requires integration adjustments, these updates are implemented in DEV–TEST environments before production deployment, minimizing the risk of operational disruption.

    How much does WEBCON–ERP integration cost?

    The cost depends on scope: the number of integrated systems, process complexity, and the required number of applications. The low-code platform and short implementation cycles reduce the total cost of ownership compared to traditional custom development. Forrester reported an NPV of USD 321,055 in a typical implementation scenario, demonstrating that financial benefits significantly outweigh project costs.

    Wiktor Janicki

    We hereby declare that Transition Technologies MS provides IT services on time, with high quality and in accordance with the signed agreement. We recommend TTMS as a trustworthy and reliable provider of Salesforce IT services.

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    TTMS has really helped us thorough the years in the field of configuration and management of protection relays with the use of various technologies. I do confirm, that the services provided by TTMS are implemented in a timely manner, in accordance with the agreement and duly.

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