Enter open source.
A large part of ERP's high price tag goes toward the army of business process and programming consultants needed to customize commercial software for individual business operations. Access to open source ERP application code, on the other hand, means you can accomplish this customization in-house, while avoiding hefty software licensing fees to boot.

Available under the GNU license, webERP -- another production-grade project -- contains full accounting features, including general ledger, accounts payable, and accounts receivable books, as well as role-based security and a highly customizable Web-based front end. Oriented toward manufacturing-style business processes, it includes support for order entry and inventory management. As opposed to Compiere, it has no modules for customer management, HR, or similar resources. Gold, silver, bronze, and translation support are available from a number of companies around the globe.
Other projects are available, but one characteristic of open source is that different projects define their category's feature sets in different ways. This is especially true of ERP packages. Linux-Kontor, for example, defines ERP without accounting, focusing instead on customer management, order entry, invoicing, and inventory. TUTOS, on the other hand, calls itself ERP but more closely resembles a groupware suite. Clearly, some research is needed to make sure you're really getting what you expect in this category.
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https://erpguide.blogspot.com/
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