AccountMate Integrates with RedTail, Scores A Major Manufacturer
Accounting Software News, Accounting Software Trends No Comments »If the first months in a year are any indication of the success to be had in 2010, then AccountMate has set the pace for an auspicious year. In January, they scored big in the business software market by integrating with RedTail Solutions (and EDI and GDS provider), and just this week, they scored an account with logo-products manufacturer Kolder, Inc.
RedTail caters to mid-market suppliers and manufacturers, and their integration is taking AccountMate beyond just simple accounting processes. RedTail offers managed service solutions for Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) and Global Data Synchronization (GDS), and they’ve recently enhanced their UI to integrate with the latest version of AccountMate (v 7.6). Both companies target the mid-sized enterprises, and the new integration will allow companies processing large volumes of EDI transactions to cut costs, improve efficiency, and quicken the “order-to-crash” cycle. The new interface was designed by a third party, Figtree Consulting.
Kolder, Inc. implemented AccountMate through one of the company’s Elite Solution partners, and integrated AccountMate’s Manufacturing and CRM modules during deployment. Kolder is responsible for producing licensed and novelty products for some pretty big names—NFL, NBA, NHL, Anheuser-Busch, Coors, and over 130 colleges to name a few—and sought an accounting and finance solution that was integrative with manufacturing processes. Kolder’s solution also needed to meet the scalability they required for national product distribution.
Kolder had recently acquired another company, and each was using a different ERP solution. The AccountMate remedy chosen was AccountMate SQL with Manufacturing Conductor, as well as the AccountMate CRM module. The open architecture AccountMate offers was allegedly a large factor in Kolder’s decision, and the new implementation has allowed them to cut administration staff by 35%.
We don’t like to sound too much like press-release trumpets over here, but when the news is impressive it’s good to take note. A lot of the accounting software news we see is Intuit-related (which is not a bad thing), and it’s interesting to see companies that have grown their accounting products into more complete packages that include ERP and CRM functionalities.
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