ERP and PLM: When separate systems become one
Blog

ERP and PLM: When separate systems become one

3 min read Oct 29, 2025

In many manufacturing companies, the collaboration between engineering and operations is still fragmented. Product structures (BOMs) flow from the PLM system to the ERP, but feedback from production or procurement rarely makes it back. The result? A one-way street. And that has consequences: decisions are made based on incomplete information, and optimization opportunities go untapped. But it doesn’t have to be this way.

The status quo: functional but incomplete

Many manufacturers rely on a variety of external tools for CAD, variant management, or engineering change control. These tools are typically connected via interfaces to a central PLM system, which is itself linked to the ERP. While this setup allows for automated transfers of engineering data like BOMs, an improvement over manual processes, it’s not without its challenges. Every interface needs to be maintained. This adds complexity and makes two-way communication difficult.

Why one-way data flow no longer works

True efficiency comes when ERP and PLM systems are integrated, not just technically, but functionally. Especially in economically uncertain times, every decision matters. Whether it’s about cost optimization, faster component availability, or regulatory compliance like the digital product passport, designers need access to operational data. Inventory levels, lead times, and serial numbers are critical to making the right choices. Only a fully integrated system provides this level of insight.

Five reasons to aim for true integration

  1. Transparency over silos: A shared data foundation creates a single source of truth. Everyone works with the same, up-to-date information.
  2. Fewer friction points: No more chasing updates by phone or email. Integrated workflows streamline collaboration across departments.
  3. Improved data quality: No duplicate entries, no outdated plans. Changes are tracked and implemented directly in the system.
  4. Stronger compliance: Continuous access to accurate data supports ESG compliance and ensures traceability in quality issues.
  5. Future readiness: Solutions like Bluestar PLM—fully embedded in Microsoft Dynamics 365—go beyond today’s requirements. They support AI-based analytics, digital product passports, and end-to-end automation.

undefined

The best interface is no interface

One key learning from countless BE-terna manufacturing projects: full ERP and PLM integration offers more than just technical convenience. Companies that commit to a shared data platform gain faster processes, better data, and stronger cross-team collaboration. Data no longer flows in just one direction, design, production, and logistics teams all access the same information, in real time.

That means decisions are based on facts, not assumptions.

If you're rethinking your PLM strategy, don’t stop at technical connectivity. Go further. Because in the end, the best interface is the one you no longer need.

ERP & PLM Integration

Want to know more?

Contact us today!

Like what you read?

Subscribe to our Newsletter and get relevant updates …

Topics
ERP
About the Author

Christian Rothner

Business Development Manager