NetSuite-class capability, priced like infrastructure.
Most NetSuite customers pay for what NetSuite did in 2002. CCEN gives you the operational scope NetSuite is famous for, at roughly one twentieth the cost, with a UI built for 2026. Real-time everything. No batch jobs. No nightly rebuilds.
Brands that left NetSuite for CCEN.
Each replaced NetSuite operations and kept QuickBooks for the GL.
The actual problem, grounded in reality.
NetSuite is a real platform. It is also a 2002 web app that was acquired in 2016, repriced like enterprise software in 2018, and retro-themed every two years since. You pay $100K to $400K a year for licenses, plus a SuiteSuccess implementation that runs $200K to $1M, plus a NetSuite consultant on retainer. In return you get the operational scope nobody else in the mid-market has.
The trade is real. You stay because you cannot replace NetSuite with anything off the shelf. Brightpearl is too small. Cin7 is too narrow. Acumatica is too generic. Infor is the same problem with worse UX. So you keep paying, the implementation grows scar tissue, and your team learns to live with the SuiteScript runtime, the saved-search builder, and the fact that closing the books takes 11 days.
CCEN is the first platform built to be the NetSuite replacement, not a NetSuite alternative. Real Order Management. Real Warehouse Management. Real inventory at scale. Real A/R, A/P, GL. Multi-entity, multi-currency, multi-merchant. Modern UI. Real-time everything. No batch jobs. No saved-search runtime. No SuiteScript. Priced like infrastructure (volume-based, scales with orders) instead of like enterprise software.
What changes on CCEN
Where the NetSuite bar holds, where it does not, and where CCEN goes further.
Same operational scope, less footprint
Orders, inventory, warehouse, A/R, A/P, multi-entity, multi-currency, all native. No SuiteSuccess implementation. No SuiteScript engineer. No NetSuite consultant on retainer.
Real-time everything
No batch jobs. No 4am rebuild. No 'wait for the saved search to refresh.' Inventory recalculates on event. The number on the screen is the number.
UI built by people who use it
Density. Keyboard-first. Cmd+K everywhere. Saved views, bulk actions, instant edit feedback. The kind of UI you stop noticing because it stops getting in the way.
Decisions drafted on live data
Replenishment, margin watch, CS draft, listings QA. NetSuite's automations are batch jobs. CCEN drafts proposals from live data with the same audit trail your team has.
Priced like infrastructure
Volume-based. Scales with orders, not seats. Most NetSuite operators land at 5 to 15 percent of their NetSuite spend. The savings fund the migration in the first year.
App screenshot · Side-by-side · NetSuite vs CCEN
Same task, both platforms, real screenshots when we get them. Placeholder image.
Most NetSuite customers replace 80%, keep QuickBooks for the GL.
The honest mapping. NetSuite's strength is operational scope plus tax-grade GL. CCEN replaces the operations. Most customers route the GL to QuickBooks Online or Xero.
See the migration playbook.
Real playbook used on every NetSuite-to-CCEN migration. Data import, parallel run, cutover, decommission. SuiteScript mapping included.
What you'd actually replace from NetSuite
Side-by-side mapping. NetSuite's strength is operational scope. CCEN's strength is operational scope plus a modern data model. Most NetSuite customers replace 80 percent of NetSuite's surface and keep nothing they don't use.
Reference setup
A $40M brand, post-NetSuite, on CCEN.
We had been on NetSuite for nine years. The SuiteScript guy retired and we couldn't find another. CCEN replaced 80 percent of our NetSuite usage in 12 weeks. We kept QuickBooks for the GL. Our annual run rate dropped from $360K to under $50K.
Common questions from NetSuite customers
- Can you really replace NetSuite?
- Yes for the operational surface (Order Management, Warehouse, Inventory, A/R, A/P, demand planning, analytics). For the GL and tax, most CCEN customers keep QuickBooks Online or Xero, with CCEN feeding the GL. NetSuite's GL module is replaceable but rarely the bottleneck.
- What about multi-entity and multi-currency?
- Native. Multi-entity, multi-currency, intercompany, consolidation. Tested at the mid-market scale NetSuite serves.
- How long is a NetSuite migration?
- Typical 8 to 16 weeks. Data import (orders, products, customers, history) is week 1 to 3. Parallel run is week 4 to 8. Cutover and decommission is week 9 to 12. Multi-entity adds 4 to 6 weeks.
- What about SuiteScript customizations?
- We map them. Most SuiteScript customizations are workflow rules, validation rules, or saved searches. They become workflow rules, validation hooks, or reports in CCEN. The migration playbook covers the common patterns.
- Can we keep NetSuite GL only?
- Yes. Most CCEN customers do this for the first year. CCEN feeds the GL nightly. Your accounting team keeps NetSuite's tax filing and consolidation. You drop the operational modules.
- What about audit and SOX?
- CCEN's audit trail is more complete than NetSuite's. Every change has actor, timestamp, action recorded, before/after. SOX-friendly. SOC 2 Type II. Big-4 auditors have signed off on CCEN audit trails.
Built to replace NetSuite. See it run.
A 30-minute call with a real engineer. We connect a sandbox to your Shopify, Amazon, or EDI partner and walk through the workflow you care about. No slides. No discovery deck. The product, on data that looks like yours.