Cloud ERP Is No Longer Optional for SMBs — Here's Why SAP Business One Cloud and Ingold Solutions Are the Combination Worth Serious Attention

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Cloud ERP Is No Longer Optional for SMBs — Here’s Why SAP Business One Cloud and Ingold Solutions Are the Combination Worth Serious Attention

By IngoldJune 4,2026
There is a version of this conversation that happened five years ago, and it sounded very different. Back then, cloud ERP was still something businesses approached with caution. Data in someone else's infrastructure? No dedicated server room? Some finance directors needed a lot of convincing.  That conversation has moved on. Rapidly.  Today, 70% of all ERP deployments globally run in the cloud, and the businesses still holding out on on-premise setups are increasingly the exception rather than the rule. For small and mid-sized businesses in particular, the shift has not just been about technology preference — it has been driven by hard financial and operational realities. Maintaining ageing server infrastructure is expensive. IT staff who actually understand legacy ERP are harder to find. And in a world where half your team might be working remotely on any given Tuesday, systems that only work properly when you are sat at the office are a genuine liability.  SAP Business One Cloud cuts through a lot of that. And Ingold Solutions, as a certified SAP partner, is one of the better-placed companies to help you actually implement it without the usual headaches. 

First, the Market Context — Because the Numbers Are Worth Knowing 

People throw around the phrase "digital transformation" so often it has almost lost meaning. But occasionally the statistics behind a shift are sharp enough to cut through the noise.  The global ERP market sits at an estimated $73 billion in 2025. That is not a projection — that is the current state. And within that, cloud deployments now account for 70% of all implementations, up steadily year on year. Among businesses that have made the move, the impact on day-to-day operations has been measurable: 78% reported improved productivity post-implementation, and 62% saw a meaningful drop in operational costs, particularly in purchasing and stock management.  For SMBs specifically, the data is telling. 92% of high-performing small and mid-sized businesses either already use ERP or have concrete plans to implement it. That is not a fringe statistic. It points to something important: ERP is no longer a "nice to have when we scale up" conversation. It is increasingly the baseline for running an efficient, competitive business at virtually any size.  SAP, for its part, has more than 141,000 ERP customers globally — more than any other enterprise vendor — and its cloud revenue growth has been running at above 20% year-on-year. These are not the numbers of a company whose cloud offering is experimental. 

What SAP Business One Cloud Actually Does — Without the Brochure Language 

At the risk of stating the obvious: SAP Business One Cloud is ERP delivered through the internet rather than through servers you own and maintain. You log in, everything is there, and you do not need an IT department to keep the lights on.  But the practical scope of what it covers is worth spelling out, because it is broader than most people realise. Finance and accounting. Purchasing and procurement. Inventory. Sales and CRM. Warehouse management. Distribution. Analytics and reporting. All of it in one place, all feeding the same data, updated in real time. When someone in sales closes an order, the warehouse sees it immediately. When a purchasing manager raises a PO, finance has visibility the same second.  The contrast with how most growing SMBs actually operate — a combination of accounting software, spreadsheets, WhatsApp messages, and emailed reports — is stark. And the productivity cost of those disconnected systems is real, even when it goes unmeasured.  On the cost side, the cloud model changes the equation significantly. Traditional on-premise ERP meant capital expenditure upfront — servers, licences, installation, consultancy — followed by ongoing maintenance costs and upgrade projects that always seemed to overrun. Cloud ERP switches that to a predictable monthly subscription. You know what it costs. You can budget for it. And when your team grows, you add users rather than buying new hardware. 

Why the Partner You Choose Matters More Than Most People Expect 

Here is something that does not always get said clearly enough in ERP conversations: SAP provides the software, but the partner shapes the entire experience.  Implementation quality, configuration decisions, data migration, training, ongoing support — all of that sits with the partner. Choose badly and you can end up with a technically functioning system that nobody uses properly, data that is not quite right, and a helpdesk number that rings out. It happens more often than it should.  Ingold Solutions, based in Berlin, has built its business specifically around SAP Business One for SMBs. As a certified SAP Silver Partner, the company has the formal credentials — but what tends to matter more in practice is the depth of focus. This is not a generalist IT consultancy that also does SAP. SAP Business One is their specialism, and the breadth of their offering reflects years of working with businesses across manufacturing, logistics, retail, wholesale, professional services, and e-commerce.  They hold ISO 9001 certification (quality management) and ISO 27001 certification (information security). Both are independently audited standards, not self-declared badges. For a business handing over its core operational data and processes to a partner, those certifications provide a level of assurance that is genuinely worth having. 

The Pricing Is Transparent — Which Is Rarer Than It Should Be 

One of the more persistent frustrations in the ERP world is the gap between the number quoted at the start of a project and the invoice at the end. Additional modules. Consultancy days that were not anticipated. Customisation work that turned out to be "out of scope." ERP has earned a reputation for this, and in many cases it is not entirely undeserved.  Ingold Solutions structures its offering as an all-inclusive package. That means the licence, Azure cloud hosting on SAP HANA-certified infrastructure, support, updates, backups, firewall and anti-malware — all bundled. No separate line items for things that should just be included.  The pricing breaks down across three licence types: 
  • Starter Package — for businesses with up to five users. From €45 per user per month, including Azure hosting, for the first 12 months. This is the entry point for smaller businesses and startups that need a proper ERP system without an enterprise-sized commitment. 
  • Limited User — role-specific access covering CRM, Finance, or Logistics depending on the user's function. From €55 per user per month including hosting. Useful when not every team member needs full system access. 
  • Professional User — unrestricted access across all modules. From €105 per user per month including hosting. For anyone who needs the full picture. 
The minimum commitment is 12 months, with a three-month cancellation notice after that. It is a sensible structure — long enough to implement properly and see results, without the kind of multi-year lock-in that makes switching painful if circumstances change.  Deployment, for standard configurations, takes 24 hours. That is not a typo. The infrastructure is hosted on Microsoft Azure with SAP HANA Server certification, meaning performance and reliability are engineered in rather than hoped for. 

Who Is This Actually the Right Fit For? 

The honest answer is: more businesses than the typical SAP conversation suggests.  The obvious use case is a growing SMB putting in ERP for the first time — a business that has outgrown its current tools and knows it, but is nervous about the complexity and cost of making a move. The Starter Package exists precisely for this scenario. You can start with two users and scale from there. The full functionality of SAP Business One is available from day one; you are not buying a stripped-down version that needs expensive upgrades as you grow.  But there is another segment that often gets overlooked: businesses already on on-premise SAP Business One that have not yet moved to the cloud. The migration path is well-established, and Ingold Solutions handles it end-to-end — data transfer, configuration, testing, and user training. For businesses sitting on ageing server infrastructure, the conversation about cloud migration often becomes straightforward once someone runs the numbers on ongoing hardware and maintenance costs versus a fixed monthly subscription.  Subsidiaries of larger groups are also a strong fit. SAP Business One Cloud runs in a browser, which means it works anywhere in the world. A subsidiary can integrate cleanly with group-level reporting structures while maintaining its own local tax rules, chart of accounts, and operational independence. For international SMBs managing multiple entities, that combination of central visibility and local flexibility is genuinely valuable.  Industry coverage is wide. Ingold Solutions has specific experience across retail, wholesale, manufacturing, logistics, professional services, and education — not as a claim, but as verticals they have actively built implementations for. 

The E-Commerce Connection That Sets Ingold Apart 

This is where Ingold Solutions does something that most SAP partners do not: they have invested seriously in e-commerce integrations.  If you sell online — whether through Shopify, Shopify Plus, Magento, or WooCommerce — you already know the operational pain of keeping your ERP and your storefront in sync. Orders come in through one system. Stock levels live in another. Customer records might exist in both, differently. Someone reconciles everything manually, usually at the worst possible time.  A live integration between SAP Business One Cloud and your e-commerce platform eliminates that. Stock updates the moment a sale is made. Orders flow directly into the ERP without anyone retyping them. Customer data is unified. For a retail or D2C brand processing meaningful order volumes, the time and error savings are not trivial.  The broader market data backs this up: a 27% surge in SME ERP implementations was recorded in early 2024, driven substantially by businesses wanting exactly this kind of connected digital operation. Ingold Solutions built the capability to meet that demand, and it shows in the depth of their integration offering.  Their add-on portfolio goes further still — document management, multi-banking connectivity, contract management, warehouse management systems, and intercompany solutions. For businesses with complex operations, these are not afterthoughts. They are part of a coherent ecosystem built around SAP Business One. 

On Security: A Straight Answer 

Moving core business data to the cloud raises legitimate questions. What happens if there is a breach? Who has access? How is GDPR compliance maintained? These deserve direct answers, not reassurances.  Ingold's infrastructure runs on Microsoft Azure. Data is encrypted in transit and at rest. Access controls include multi-factor authentication. Backups run on a regular automated schedule. Firewall protection and anti-malware are part of the standard package, not optional extras. The ISO 27001 certification — which Ingold holds — requires that all of this is not just implemented but audited and evidenced on an ongoing basis by an independent body.  GDPR compliance is architecturally embedded, which matters for any business operating in Europe or handling European customer data. This is not a checkbox exercise — it is a structural requirement that the certification process demands.  For businesses that have historically been reluctant to move away from on-premise on security grounds: the conversation in 2025 is genuinely different from what it was in 2018. Cloud infrastructure at this level — Azure, HANA-certified, ISO 27001-audited — is demonstrably more secure than most in-house server setups. 

The Bottom Line 

Cloud ERP adoption among SMBs is not a trend. It is the new operating standard, backed by adoption rates, productivity data, and cost comparisons that consistently point in the same direction. 63% of SMB workloads already run in the cloud as of 2024. The businesses waiting for more certainty before making the move are increasingly waiting for something that has already arrived.  SAP Business One Cloud is the right ERP platform for SMBs that want enterprise-grade functionality without enterprise-grade complexity or cost. And Ingold Solutions is the kind of partner that makes the implementation worth doing properly — certified, experienced, transparent on pricing, and genuinely capable across both ERP and e-commerce.  If you are running a business that has outgrown its current systems, or one that is scaling quickly enough to know a reckoning is coming, the honest advice is to have the conversation sooner rather than later. These projects always take slightly longer than expected, and the businesses that benefit most are the ones that start with the right partner from day one.  Visit Ingold Solutions to explore SAP Business One Cloud or request a free trial of the platform — no credit card, no sales pressure, just the system in front of you to make up your own mind.