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The right accounting software setup can make or break finance teams. While software products like Xero and Access are familar, they often rely on a patchwork of manual spreadsheet workarounds and integrations to cover operational needs. That works—until it doesn’t.
Cloud Doing Good with NetSuite, on the other hand, takes a fundamentally different approach. Native applications, built on the Oracle NetSuite SuiteCloud platform, extend functionality without leaving the Oracle NetSuite ecosystem. The difference is more than technical—it's strategic.
Here’s how Cloud Doing Good with NetSuite applications directly address pain points that other systems like Xero and Access can’t keep up with.
1. Integration Pain Is Real—and It Grows With You
Let’s say you’re running on Xero or Access. To manage an operational process like care home billing, you bolt on a third-party app. For CRM, you connect another system. For projects? Monday.com. You may be using 4–8 different tools, all loosely stitched together through APIs, or with manual workarounds on excel spreadsheets.
Each connection brings:
When things break, you’re caught between vendors—and your data’s stuck in silos.
With Cloud Doing Good’s NetSuite-native applications, this pain disappears. There's no integration at all—because the app lives inside NetSuite. It runs on the same database, inherits the same data model, and uses the same reporting structure. This extends to the analysis codes. It’s not just connected—it’s part of the system.
2. One Data Model, One Source of Truth
One of NetSuite’s greatest strengths is its unified data model. Every module—finance, CRM, inventory, funds, billing—shares a single source of truth and the same analysis codes.
When you use a native NetSuite application:
Compare that to the multi-integration model, where data may live in separate apps, requiring ETL tools, spreadsheets, or middleware to reconcile and report. That adds overhead—and risk.
3. One Unified View Across Programs, Funds, and Grants
In the nonprofit world, analysis codes enable tracking by program, fund, and donor restrictions—and messy if you’re trying to do it across disconnected systems.
Cloud Doing Good’s unified data model approach allows you to:
And when you use NetSuite native apps—for example, a grant management or budgeting tool inside NetSuite—you get that same level of consistency. Everything rolls up into your financials and dashboards automatically.
With systems like Xero, Access and integrations, you're often trying to force separate systems to act like one. With NetSuite, you're working from a single source of truth from day one.
4. Low Maintenance = High Value Over Time
Integrations with Access or Xero might look appealing up front, but maintaining them becomes costly:
With native NetSuite apps, there’s low ongoing maintenance. They’re versioned to match NetSuite’s biannual updates and built with platform compatibility in mind. You're not just buying software—you're buying stability.
For organisations scaling quickly or with small IT budgets, this translates to lower total cost of ownership (TCO) and less IT intervention. It allows finance teams to self-serve, including changes to analysis codes to reflect organisational changes.
5. Security and Governance Built In
Data security is non-negotiable. Without Cloud Doing Good’s NetSuite common data model approach, you’re often dealing with varying levels of encryption and in sometimes questions over the robustness of the core underlying IT.
NetSuite-native applications inherit the same enterprise-grade security:
You’re not just trusting the app—you’re trusting Oracle’s infrastructure behind it.
6. Faster Time to Insight, Not Just Implementation
Key reporting is a challenge. Want a dashboard that combines finance, sales, and project data? Good luck getting it live without serious data engineering. Or yet another app to be integrated into multiple product.
In NetSuite, native apps plug into the same reporting engine. Whether it’s financials, inventory trends, or sales performance, it’s all there—out of the box.
7. Internet portals for non NetSuite users
Further, one of the hidden secrets of NetSuite is that native in NetSuite portals permit accessing NetSuite, without the need for individual user access licenses.
Cloud Doing Good specialises in provided user portals for a wide range of organisations, including charities:
These portals completely eliminate integrations and the associated costs and risks, allowing a range of third parties and non NetSuite portals to directly enter and view data inside the NetSuite database.
8. A place for integrations
While Cloud Doing Good’s native NetSuite applications offer unmatched benefits in stability, security, and ease of use, there is still a valuable place for integrations in the finance data tech stack.
Some best-in-class tools—for retailing, complex CRM, FP&A—live outside the NetSuite ecosystem and can complement it when connected thoughtfully.
When done well, integrations can extend functionality without creating fragmentation. At Cloud Doing Good, we recognize this balance, and in a future blog, we’ll explore when integrations make sense, how to manage them responsibly, and what to look for in partners and platforms to ensure native to NetSuite and integration based approaches are both appropriately.
Final Thoughts
If you’re currently juggling Xero, Access or other legacy finance software with integrations and manual spreadsheets, you might not just be outgrowing your accounting software—you could be outgrowing your entire approach.
Smart scale-ups don’t just look for apps—they look for architecture. And that’s where Cloud Doing Good wins.