ERP system development
in San Jose
Challenges we solve
One system.
All operations.
We design ERP platforms
that grow with your business — modular, stable, and flexible. Every workflow, integration, and report is built with long-term efficiency in mind. No vendor lock-in. No outdated modules slowing you down.
Data scattered across departments.
Centralized database.
Single source of truth.
Too many manual tasks slow things down.
Automation added.
Workflows streamlined.
Reports take days
to prepare.
Dashboards built.
Insights delivered in real time.
System breaks
when scaling.
Architecture reworked.
Modules isolated.
Who we work with
to handle finance, inventory,
and HR from day one.
- Core modules from the start
- Easy integrations for growth
- Investor-ready reports
We migrate and rebuild processes into one ERP system.
- Legacy data unified
- Workflows automated
- Roles defined clearly
— we deliver ERP systems built
to endure.
- Multi-entity control
- Cross-team reporting
- Performance hardened
What goes into ERP development?
ERP system development
cost in San Jose
We price by what it takes to build ERP right — not by how many modules are bolted on.
What our clients say
We didn't want a cookie-cutter solution, and Toimi understood that right away. They came back with ideas tailored exactly to our needs — creative, practical, and easy to scale.
Strong technical skills, but also patient in explaining things so everyone could follow. That balance made the whole process smooth.
Quick turnaround, clean work, good communication. Would recommend.
Working with Toimi felt straightforward and stress-free.
More possibilities for your project
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Let's chat
FAQ
Didn’t find what you were looking for? Drop us a line at info@toimi.pro.
How much does custom ERP development cost for a San Jose business?
The cost depends on the number of modules required, the complexity of business processes being automated, and the depth of integration with existing enterprise systems. A focused ERP covering procurement, inventory, and project costing for a San Jose hardware company in Edenvale Technology Park has a very different scope than a multi-entity platform managing finance, HR, logistics, and compliance for an enterprise software company serving Fortune 500 clients from North San Jose's Innovation Triangle. ERP projects are scoped after a detailed discovery phase covering your workflows, data model, and integration requirements — no figures before we understand your operational environment fully.
How long does custom ERP development take for a San Jose business?
A focused ERP MVP covering core modules — typically finance, inventory, and operations — takes 16 to 24 weeks from approved specification to initial deployment. For San Jose enterprises requiring a full system spanning procurement, HR, project management, client billing, and regulatory compliance — common among the semiconductor, hardware, and enterprise software companies concentrated in North San Jose and Edenvale Technology Park — the timeline extends to 12 to 18 months. We deploy in phases so your San Jose team begins realizing operational value before the full system is complete rather than waiting for a single monolithic launch.
When does a San Jose business need a custom ERP rather than SAP, Oracle, or NetSuite?
Off-the-shelf ERP products work well when business processes can adapt to fit the software's assumptions. Custom ERP makes sense when the reverse is true — when San Jose's specific operational requirements, integration landscape, or compliance environment cannot be accommodated without extensive and expensive customization of a standard product. Four situations drive this decision most frequently in Silicon Valley. First, hardware and semiconductor companies in North San Jose with product lifecycle management workflows that generic ERP modules handle poorly. Second, AI and deep tech startups with non-standard business models — usage-based billing, complex IP licensing, or research grant accounting — that established ERP vendors have not designed for. Third, enterprise software companies whose internal operations mirror their product's complexity and require the same level of custom engineering. Fourth, San Jose businesses that have outgrown QuickBooks or NetSuite but are not yet large enough to justify SAP implementation costs and timeline.
What modules do San Jose businesses most commonly need in a custom ERP?
The most requested module combinations in Silicon Valley's tech and enterprise sectors cover five areas. First, procurement and vendor management — particularly important for San Jose hardware companies managing complex supplier relationships across the global semiconductor supply chain. Second, project and resource management — tracking engineering hours, milestones, and costs against specific contracts or product development phases, common among San Jose professional services and software development firms. Third, finance and revenue recognition — covering the ASC 606 revenue recognition complexity that SaaS and enterprise software companies in Downtown San Jose face with multi-element contract arrangements. Fourth, inventory and product lifecycle management for hardware companies at Edenvale Technology Park managing components, assemblies, and finished goods across multiple stages. Fifth, HR and equity management — handling the stock option vesting schedules, cliff periods, and secondary market transactions that are standard compensation components across Silicon Valley's workforce.
How do you approach the discovery and specification phase for a San Jose ERP project?
ERP discovery is the most critical investment of the entire project — and in San Jose's engineering cost environment, where development hours are among the most expensive in the world, a poorly specified ERP is a uniquely costly mistake. We conduct structured interviews with every department that will use the system — operations, finance, procurement, engineering, HR, and IT security — mapping current workflows, data flows, and the specific pain points that existing tools cannot resolve. For San Jose enterprises with multiple stakeholders across product, finance, and legal who have different and occasionally conflicting system requirements, structured discovery surfaces those conflicts during the specification phase when they cost a conversation to resolve rather than mid-development when they cost weeks of rework.
Can a custom ERP integrate with the enterprise SaaS stack that San Jose tech companies already run?
Yes — integration with Silicon Valley's standard enterprise SaaS infrastructure is a core part of our ERP development scope for San Jose clients. We connect custom ERP systems to Salesforce for CRM-ERP data sync, Workday for HR data, Stripe for billing and revenue recognition, Jira for engineering project tracking, Google Workspace for document and calendar integration, and the procurement portals and compliance platforms used by San Jose's semiconductor and enterprise software supply chains. For San Jose companies where the ERP needs to fit into an existing technology stack rather than replace it, integration architecture is often the most technically demanding part of the project — and the area where inadequate discovery causes the most expensive mid-development surprises.
How do you handle data migration from existing systems into a new San Jose ERP?
Data migration is scoped and executed as a dedicated workstream within the ERP project. We audit your existing data sources — spreadsheets, legacy software, QuickBooks exports, and disconnected databases common in San Jose's fast-growing startups that have scaled faster than their operational infrastructure — assess data quality, and define a migration plan covering cleaning, transformation, and validation before any data moves into the new system. For San Jose businesses with years of financial history in legacy systems, data migration accuracy directly affects the reliability of every report the new ERP produces from day one. We run parallel operation periods — old and new systems running simultaneously — until your San Jose finance and operations teams are confident the new ERP is functioning correctly before the legacy system is decommissioned.
What ongoing support does a custom ERP need after launch for a San Jose business?
Custom ERP systems require active long-term support — regulatory changes including California-specific compliance requirements, business growth, new integrations, and user-requested improvements are constants for any San Jose business operating in Silicon Valley's dynamic market. For San Jose enterprises where the ERP is the operational backbone — managing finance, procurement, and project data that the business depends on daily — we offer a post-launch support retainer covering bug fixes, security updates, performance monitoring, user support, and a monthly development allowance for configuration changes and minor improvements. Significant new modules — additional business units, new compliance reporting requirements, or equity management additions as the company approaches an IPO — are scoped as separate development projects while the retainer keeps the existing system stable and current.