Global Engineering & Installation Company
Building Operational Clarity Before ERP Implementation: Ziptrek Technologies
Executive Summary
Client: Ziptrek Technologies
Sector: Adventure Infrastructure & Experiential Tourism
Engagement Type: Strategic Systems Audit & Governance Roadmap
Role: Lead Advisor
Ziptrek Technologies engaged Sendpoint to strengthen the operational structure supporting its next stage of global growth. While exploring ERP implementation, leadership made a deliberate decision: operational governance needed to be clearly defined before automation could reinforce it.
The engagement translated cross-functional operational complexity across procurement, manufacturing coordination, installation, and workforce planning into structured executive visibility. Through systems audit, governance alignment, and phased roadmap development, the work formalized stage gates, approval thresholds, quality traceability, and capacity modelling.
The outcome was not a new tool. It was disciplined structural clarity that positioned the organization to scale with confidence and control.
Strategic Impact
Through a multi-phase engagement, Ziptrek Technologies strengthened the operational backbone required to support its next stage of global growth.
As growth accelerated, leadership sought clarity across operational systems, workflows, and technology architecture to support the next stage of scale.
Key outcomes included:
Formalized procurement controls and approval structures
Defined stage gates between design, manufacturing, and installation
Clearer quality traceability across production and site testing
Standardized workflow documentation ready for ERP configuration
A sequenced implementation roadmap to prevent overbuilding
A 12-month Resource Planning Framework linking pipeline to capacity
Data-backed workforce planning
Stronger revision governance and supplier risk mitigation
The organization moved from experience-driven coordination to formalized, scalable operational governance.
The Context
Ziptrek Technologies is a global provider and installer of engineered aerial ride systems, supporting complex projects from procurement through installation and commissioning.
At the time of engagement, the company was navigating a strategic transition. With design and engineering relationships evolving, leadership was focused on strengthening internal operational structure to support greater independence, consistency, and scalability across procurement, manufacturing coordination, and field installation.
The existing systems had supported years of technical excellence and successful project delivery. Leadership recognized that the next phase of growth would benefit from more formalized governance, clearer stage gates, and stronger cross-functional alignment.
While exploring ERP implementation, the team made a deliberate decision: operational structure needed to be clearly defined before technology could reinforce it.
The Opportunity
The inflection point was not failure. It was foresight.
Workflows were highly collaborative and experience-driven. As project volume and geographic reach expanded, leadership saw the opportunity to:
Reduce dependency on institutional knowledge
Increase consistency across projects
Strengthen traceability between design, production, and installation
Formalize approval thresholds
Align workforce planning with forecasted demand
Rather than reacting to strain, the company chose to proactively reinforce its operational foundation.
The engagement was structured to reinforce an already high-performing organization preparing for disciplined scale.
Designing for Scalable Operations
Phase 1 — Systems Audit
Objective
Translate operational complexity into structured executive visibility.
Focus
Cross-functional process mapping
Clarification of ownership and accountability
Structural constraint identification
Governance alignment assessment
ERP readiness evaluation
Result
Leadership gained clear visibility into how work and decisions moved across the organization — and where growth required reinforcement.
Phase 2 — Defining the Future State
Objective
Align leadership on what “better” needed to look like before system implementation.
Focus
Formal stage gates across design, manufacturing, and installation
Defined approval thresholds
Structured vendor qualification standards
Clear cross-functional accountability
Result
Operational rules were clarified and aligned before automation was layered on — ensuring system implementation would reinforce structure rather than precede it.
Operational Systems & Technology Readiness
Objective
Ensure that operational structure was clearly defined before layering automation or enterprise systems.
Focus
Consolidation of overlapping operational tools and workflows
Formalization of cross-functional process architecture
Definition of system ownership and approval logic
ERP readiness preparation grounded in real workflow sequencing
Alignment of operational documentation to future system translation
Result
Leadership gained confidence that technology would reinforce clearly defined structure. System implementation could proceed from intentional design rather than assumption.
Phase 3 — Sequenced Roadmap
Objective
Ensure disciplined sequencing and sustainable implementation pace.
Focus
Phased execution plan
Clear prioritization
Defined stabilization milestones
Explicit scope boundaries
Result
Leadership received a disciplined roadmap — clarifying what to tackle first, what to defer, and how to move forward safely.
Phase 4 — Workflow Activation Sprint
Objective
Translate strategy into clean, translatable operational documentation.
Focus
End-to-end procurement alignment
Standardized approval workflows
Unified installation templates
Embedded quality checkpoints
Improved inventory traceability controls
Outcome
A functional proof-of-flow was established — demonstrating that the operational backbone worked cleanly before further expansion.
Phase 5 — Resource Planning Framework
Objective
Elevate workforce planning from short-term responsiveness to forward-looking capacity modelling.
Focus
12-month pipeline-to-capacity modeling
Monthly workload distribution by role
Identification of operational pressure points
Hiring scenario planning grounded in real project sequencing
Outcome
Workforce planning became a forward-looking, data-informed capacity strategy aligned with projected growth.
What This Engagement Demonstrates
Growth shouldn’t break organizations, but it can reveal where structure needs to catch up. This engagement moved the organization from informal alignment to structured, scalable governance.
Rather than implementing software alone, the work focused on clarifying ownership, sequencing change safely, and building an operational backbone that could support growth without increasing risk.
The result was not just system readiness, but organizational clarity.
This is the level of structure I bring to organizations navigating growth, transition, or operational complexity.
“We engaged Sendpoint to help guide us through a business scale up process that involved implementing a new ERP system, an improved resource planning tool, and a more structured governance model.
Liz kept our project team on track with a level of structure and steadiness that made complex work feel manageable, and her well‑focused working sessions consistently brought clarity and alignment to workflows that had previously relied heavily on institutional knowledge.
Her depth of experience meant she understood our operational complexity quickly and intuitively, allowing us to move faster and make better decisions, and throughout the engagement she was an absolute pleasure to work with—professional, thoughtful, and deeply committed to helping us build the operational backbone we needed to scale confidently.”
— Jay Conroy
Director, Safety & Production
Ziptrek Technologies