INSIGHT
What to Look for in a Sage Intacct Implementation Partner
Jennifer Kinzel • April 17, 2026
Services: Sage Intacct Implementation
Deciding to implement Sage Intacct is the straightforward part. Finding the right partner to do it well is where the decision gets more consequential.
Sage Intacct is a powerful platform, and its capabilities are well-documented. What’s less predictable is how any given implementation will go. Organizations that end up with systems that underperform their expectations often trace the gap not to the software itself, but to how it was configured, deployed, and adopted. The Sage Intacct implementation partner you choose plays a major role in shaping that outcome.
5 Criteria to Evaluate when Considering a Sage Intacct Implementation Partner
Here’s what to evaluate before you commit:
1. Experience with Sage Intacct in Your Industry
Sage Intacct can be configured in many ways, and the right configuration depends heavily on your business model. A nonprofit managing fund accounting looks very different from a SaaS company recognizing subscription revenue under ASC 606, which looks very different from a construction firm tracking job costs across multiple entities.
Ask prospective partners which industries they work in most frequently and what configurations they’ve built for organizations like yours. Generic implementation experience is worth less than you might think. An implementation professional who has spent years configuring Sage Intacct for your specific sector will anticipate requirements that a generalist wouldn’t know to ask about.
2. A Defined Implementation Methodology
Implementations that go sideways usually share a common trait: the work was treated as a technical deployment rather than a business transformation. Look for a partner whose process reflects the difference.
A well-structured approach should include:
- Thorough requirements gathering before configuration begins
- Comprehensive data mapping and testing before migration
- Validation steps to confirm the system is functioning as expected. Go-live support that extends beyond day one
If a prospective partner can’t describe their methodology in concrete terms, that’s worth noting.
3. Attention to Data Migration
Historical data is one of the most underappreciated risks in any ERP transition. Transactional records, customer and vendor information, and multi-year reporting history all need to make it into the new system intact. Errors in migration can create reporting gaps, compliance problems, and cleanup work that persists long after go-live.
A strong implementation partner treats data migration as a discrete workstream, not an afterthought. Ask specifically how they approach data mapping, what testing they conduct before final migration, and how they handle records from legacy systems that don’t map cleanly to Sage Intacct’s structure. Some useful questions to bring to that conversation:
- How do you handle data from legacy systems that don’t map directly to Sage Intacct’s structure?
- What testing do you conduct before final migration, and how do you validate the results?
- What happens if errors are discovered after go-live?
4. Training and Adoption Planning
The value of Sage Intacct’s reporting, automation, and multi-entity capabilities depends on whether your team actually uses them. Implementations that deliver full value treat change management and user adoption as deliberate parts of the project, not supplementary activities.
Look for a partner who builds role-based training into the engagement and remains available after go-live, when the most practical user questions often begin to surface.
5. Post-Implementation Support
Your business will evolve after go-live. You’ll have new entities, new integrations, changes in reporting requirements, and adjustments to your chart of accounts. Sage Intacct is built to scale with you, but taking advantage of that flexibility often requires ongoing configuration and support. A partner who disappears after deployment leaves you to manage future growth on your own.
Ask whether post-implementation support is part of the relationship and what that looks like in practice.
Red Flags to Watch For
Not every warning sign is obvious during the sales process. A few patterns worth paying attention to:
- Vague timelines: A credible partner should give you a realistic project timeline based on your organization’s size and complexity. Reluctance to commit to specifics often signals inexperience or overcommitment.
- One-size-fits-all configuration: If a partner isn’t asking detailed questions about your business processes early in the conversation, they may be defaulting to a generic setup rather than one built around your needs.
- No post-go-live plan: If support after deployment is not part of the conversation, ask why. A partner who treats go-live as the finish line will leave you without the guidance needed during stabilization and adoption.
- Limited references in your industry: A partner who cannot point to relevant experience in your sector should be vetted carefully, especially if your organization has complex reporting, multi-entity structures, or industry-specific compliance requirements.
How BPM Approaches Sage Intacct Implementations
BPM has deployed Sage Intacct across a broad range of industries. Our Sage Intacct implementation process includes requirements analysis, system configuration, data migration, integration setup, user training, and ongoing support.
We also assist organizations moving from existing accounting systems, helping preserve historical data and plan migrations in a way that reduces operational disruption. Whether you’re implementing Sage Intacct for the first time or replacing a system that’s no longer serving your needs, our team works with you to build financial operations that support where your business is headed.
Contact us to discuss your Sage Intacct implementation needs and what a partnership with BPM would look like for your organization.
Jennifer Kinzel
Sage Intacct Industry Lead, Advisory
Jennifer Kinzel, CPA, CMA, is a Sage Intacct Industry Lead within Advisory, bringing extensive experience in accounting, technology, and finance …
Start the conversation
Looking for a team who understands where you’re headed and how to help you get there? Whether you’re building something new, managing growth or preserving success, let’s talk.