Syteline is an ERP application that focuses on manufacturing operations, inventory and supply chain management, production scheduling, and shop-floor control. The product has historically been marketed as SyteLine and is now commonly delivered as part of Infor’s CloudSuite Industrial offering; it bundles core ERP functions with manufacturing-specific capabilities such as finite capacity scheduling, material requirements planning (MRP), and serial/lot tracking. Syteline supports mixed-mode manufacturing environments including discrete, process, repetitive, and make-to-order production.
Syteline is designed to centralize transactional and master data across finance, purchasing, production, inventory, quality and sales so that planners and shop-floor personnel work from a single source of truth. The solution is typically used to reduce manual data reconciliation between spreadsheets and point systems, to improve on-time delivery through tighter scheduling, and to apply standard costing and material tracking across production runs.
Deployment options commonly include cloud-hosted subscription implementations managed by Infor or certified partners, and on-premises/perpetual license deployments for organizations that need local control. Cloud deployments are packaged as CloudSuite Industrial (SyteLine) and often include platform services such as Infor ION for integration and Infor OS for user interface and analytics.
Syteline integrates production planning, inventory and order workflows with financial posting and reporting so accounting and operations share consistent data. The product is generally used by manufacturing operations managers, production planners, inventory managers, quality managers, and finance teams in mid-market to enterprise manufacturers.
Syteline provides a broad set of manufacturing ERP features designed to cover the full order-to-cash and procure-to-pay lifecycles. Core modules include: master data management for parts and bills of materials (BOMs); sales order and quoting; purchasing and vendor contracts; inventory control with lot/serial traceability; and general ledger and accounts payable/receivable.
Manufacturing-specific features include finite capacity scheduling (shop floor scheduling with resource leveling), advanced MRP, work order and job management, routings, multi-level BOM explosion, and backflush or discrete material issue methods. Syteline also supports lean and kanban processes, outside processing, and complex costing methods such as standard, actual, and lot-specific costing.
Quality and compliance features cover nonconformance tracking, inspection plans, corrective actions, and certificate-of-conformance output for regulated industries. Inventory traceability supports full lot/serial genealogy so manufacturers can track components through to finished goods and to customer shipments.
Reporting and analytics are available via embedded BI and dashboard tools that surface KPIs such as on-time delivery, inventory turns, capacity utilization, and order backlog. The platform also includes role-based workspaces and configurable screens so different users—planners, shop supervisors, purchasing agents—see the information and actions relevant to their roles.
Integration and extensibility are delivered through Infor ION, web services, and an API layer that allows connectivity to shop-floor data collection systems, third-party logistics, e-commerce channels, and CAD/PDM systems. The platform supports single sign-on, LDAP/Active Directory integration, and standard security controls for user roles and access.
Syteline consolidates transactional functions for manufacturing companies into a single ERP environment so planning, execution, and accounting operate from consistent master data. It automates MRP runs, generates production work orders, schedules capacity against finite resources, and moves inventory through picking, assembly, and shipping workflows.
The system enforces traceability and quality controls: it captures lot/serial numbers, records inspection results, and retains nonconformance records and corrective actions. That enables manufacturers to respond to audits, recalls, and supplier issues with documented material genealogy and disposition history.
Syteline also centralizes financial transactions related to production—material consumption, labor posting, overhead allocation and WIP adjustments—so cost accounting and financial reporting reflect actual manufacturing activity. This helps finance teams reconcile production variances and produce product-cost reports required for pricing and profitability analysis.
Syteline offers these pricing plans:
Syteline pricing is typically provided as a customized quote that accounts for number of users, modules selected, required integrations, and professional services for implementation and data migration. Pricing therefore varies substantially between small deployments and multi-site enterprise rollouts. Check Syteline product information for official contact channels and the latest procurement options.
Most vendors and implementation partners break costs into initial license or setup fees plus ongoing subscription or maintenance charges, and they often estimate total cost of ownership over a 3–5 year period to account for cloud hosting, integration, upgrades, and support. Typical cloud implementations bundle software, hosting, and a base level of support under a subscription contract; extended application support and managed services are priced separately.
When comparing proposals, purchasers should request explicit line items for: Implementation Services: configuration, data migration, and compliance setup; User Licensing: named or concurrent user counts; Hosting and Infrastructure: cloud or private hosting costs; and Ongoing Support: SLA levels, upgrade cadence, and training credits. For current packaging and partner offers, consult the Infor CloudSuite Industrial information and certified partner pages.
Syteline subscription starting monthly cost will be provided by Infor or certified partners based on configuration and user counts. Typical per-user cloud subscriptions for full ERP systems in the manufacturing mid-market commonly range in practice from $100/month per user to $500/month per user depending on included modules, support SLA, and hosting level.
When evaluating monthly costs, include not only the per-user fee but also platform hosting, integration middleware (for example Infor ION), and any managed-services fees. For multi-site rollouts, vendors often offer tiered pricing and discounts on per-user rates for volume.
To obtain a precise monthly figure for your environment, request a tailored quote from the vendor or an authorized partner and review the proposed service-level agreement and included services.
Annual pricing for Syteline is typically billed as a subscription and will be quoted by Infor or implementation partners. For budgeting, mid-market manufacturing ERP cloud subscriptions commonly cost between $1,200/year per user and $6,000/year per user, with total annual outlays for small implementations in the low tens of thousands and enterprise programs in the hundreds of thousands to millions.
Annual costs should also account for planned upgrades, training budgets, and contingency for additional integrations or bolt-on modules. When using a perpetual license model, expect an initial multi-year license fee followed by an annual maintenance charge typically expressed as a percentage of license cost.
Ask vendors for a multi-year TCO projection and break it down by Software: license or subscription, Services: implementation and training, and Hosting: cloud or private infrastructure fees.
Syteline pricing ranges from customized, entry-level cloud subscriptions to enterprise-scale implementations with multi-year service contracts. Small-to-medium implementations often fall into a cost bracket where total first-year outlay (software, services, and hosting) can be $25,000–$200,000, while larger multi-site enterprises commonly see first-year costs in the hundreds of thousands to several million dollars depending on scope.
Per-user ranges for cloud subscriptions are commonly in the $100–$500/month per user band, but those numbers will shift based on functionality (advanced scheduling, quality modules, CRM integration), number of concurrent users, and required performance or availability levels.
Always obtain a written proposal that separates license/subscription fees, implementation services, recurrent hosting costs, and optional managed services so you can compare vendor offers on an apples-to-apples basis.
Syteline is used primarily to run and coordinate manufacturing operations for companies producing engineered, configurable, or batch products. Typical uses include sales order management with configure-to-order quoting, MRP and material planning, work order issuance and shop floor control, and job costing for production batches.
Operations teams use Syteline to enforce sequencing and capacity constraints on production work so that planners can see finite load across machines, labor and tooling. Procurement uses it to manage supplier lead times, create purchase orders automatically from MRP recommendations, and track vendor performance.
Finance teams rely on Syteline to capture cost flows from raw material consumption, labor posting, and overhead allocation so that product costing, inventory valuations, and financial statements reflect actual manufacturing activity. Quality and compliance teams use the system to record inspections, manage deviations, and produce traceability records for regulatory reporting.
Beyond core manufacturing, Syteline is also used to manage multi-site inventory balances, distribute demand across factories, and connect third-party logistics providers via integrations so that shipping, warehousing, and fulfillment processes operate against real-time inventory and order status.
Syteline provides deep manufacturing functionality, which is a major advantage for complex discrete and mixed-mode manufacturers. Strengths include mature MRP and finite capacity scheduling, built-in traceability, and integration paths to shop-floor systems and CAD/PDM environments. The product’s functional breadth means many manufacturing workflows can be handled inside the ERP without heavy customization.
Another positive is that Syteline is offered as part of Infor’s CloudSuite Industrial, which bundles platform services like Infor ION and Infor OS for integrations and analytics. That reduces the integration burden for organizations standardizing on the Infor ecosystem and provides vendor-managed hosting and support options.
On the downside, implementations can be resource-intensive: the breadth of features and the need to configure manufacturing workflows often mean longer project timelines and higher implementation fees compared with simpler cloud-native business apps. Organizations with simple, high-volume repetitive manufacturing may find Syteline’s depth more than necessary and may prefer lighter ERP or MES solutions.
Upgrades and customizations require governance—extensive custom code can increase the cost and risk of future upgrades. For that reason, companies should plan configuration, extensions and integrations carefully and leverage best-practice configuration where possible to minimize technical debt.
Syteline does not commonly publish an open self-service free trial like consumer SaaS products; trial availability is usually arranged through Infor or authorized partners as part of a pilot or proof-of-concept (POC) project. POCs typically scope a subset of transactions and workflows—MRP runs, order entry, and scheduling—to validate fit before committing to a full implementation.
A pilot engagement provides a controlled environment to test data migration, integrations (for example with shop-floor data collection), and the user experience of role-based workspaces. It also allows teams to assess the impact on reporting and financial close timelines before broader rollout.
If you are evaluating Syteline, request a pilot from Infor or a certified partner and specify objectives, success criteria, and which modules or processes will be included. The POC should include a small dataset and clearly defined demonstrable outcomes to inform the final procurement decision.
No, Syteline is not available as a free product for production use. Licensing or subscriptions are required and costs vary by deployment type, number of users, and selected modules. Trial or proof-of-concept engagements may be negotiated with Infor or implementation partners, but long-term use requires a commercial agreement.
For budget planning, include costs for software or subscription, implementation services, training, and ongoing support. Organizations that require low-cost entry points should explore hosted partner packages or phased implementation approaches to spread investment over time.
Syteline exposes integration capabilities through web services, RESTful APIs in the Infor OS platform, and middleware connectivity via Infor ION. The API surfaces typically include endpoints for master data (items, customers, suppliers), transactional data (sales orders, purchase orders, production orders), and inventory movements. Integrations can be synchronous for transactional flows or asynchronous for bulk data exchange.
Infor ION provides workflow and process orchestration that simplifies connecting Syteline to other enterprise systems such as CRM, PLM/CAD, e-commerce platforms, and third-party logistics providers. Organizations can use the API layer to automate order acceptance, update inventory balances from warehouse systems, and post manufacturing transactions into financial ledgers.
Typical API capabilities and integration scenarios include: automated purchase order creation from supplier portals, real-time inventory updates to e-commerce channels, shop-floor data collection integrations for labor and production counts, and EDI communications for suppliers and customers. For developer documentation and API endpoints, consult the Infor CloudSuite Industrial documentation and partner developer portals.
Syteline is used for manufacturing ERP and production management. It handles MRP, production scheduling, inventory control, order management, and cost accounting so manufacturers can coordinate operations, purchasing and finance in a single system. The solution is commonly applied in discrete, mixed-mode, and configure-to-order environments.
Yes, Syteline supports integrations with CAD and PLM systems. Integrations typically exchange BOMs, part revisions, and engineering change data so production and procurement use the correct part definitions. Integration is often implemented via middleware like Infor ION or partner connectors.
Syteline per-user monthly costs are provided by Infor or partners as custom quotes. In practice, cloud ERP per-user subscriptions for comparable manufacturing suites commonly fall in the $100–$500/month per user range depending on modules and support levels.
Yes, Syteline is available as a cloud-hosted solution through Infor CloudSuite Industrial. Cloud hosting options include vendor-managed infrastructure with bundled platform services and managed upgrades, or partner-hosted environments when required.
No, Syteline does not offer a free production edition. Proof-of-concept or pilot engagements can be arranged through Infor or partners, but ongoing use requires a subscription or license agreement.
Yes, Syteline supports lot and serial number tracking. The system records genealogy for components and finished goods, which helps with recalls, regulatory compliance, and warranty management.
Syteline can be deployed as a cloud subscription or as a perpetual license on-premises. Many organizations choose the CloudSuite Industrial subscription for simplified hosting and managed services, while others with strict data residency or customization requirements opt for on-premises deployments.
Yes, Syteline includes finite capacity and shop-floor scheduling capabilities. These features allow planners to simulate and enforce resource constraints, perform sequencing, and visualize load across machines and labor resources.
Syteline supports integrations via web services, REST APIs, and Infor ION middleware. Common integrations include e-commerce channels, WMS/3PL systems, shop-floor data collectors, EDI, and CRM systems.
Infor and certified partners provide implementation services, training, and support for Syteline. Options typically include classroom or virtual training, role-based user guides, and ongoing support plans with defined SLA levels.
Syteline-related careers are typically listed through Infor or implementation partners. Roles commonly associated with Syteline deployments include ERP functional consultants (manufacturing domain), technical consultants (integration and customization), implementation project managers, training specialists, and support analysts. Job descriptions often request experience with manufacturing ERP processes, SQL-based data migrations, and middleware such as Infor ION.
Affiliate or referral programs for Syteline are usually managed by Infor through partner networks and reseller agreements. Organizations that refer clients or resell Syteline typically go through an onboarding and certification process with Infor to ensure they can support pre-sales, implementation, and post-implementation services.
Independent reviews and user feedback for Syteline can be found on enterprise software review sites and manufacturing technology forums. Look for product reviews on specialized ERP review platforms, analyst reports on manufacturing ERP vendors, and case studies published by Infor and certified implementation partners. For vendor-authored case studies and solution briefs, see Infor CloudSuite Industrial customer stories and partner publishings for real-world implementation examples.
Sourced product identity from the provided domain and known product family: SyteLine is commonly delivered as Infor CloudSuite Industrial (often called SyteLine). Publicly available product pages are hosted under Infor’s CloudSuite Industrial and partner sites. Detailed, fixed pricing is not typically published; the product is sold through quotes that factor users, modules, hosting, and services. Integration capabilities are available via Infor ION and platform APIs; typical use cases include MRP, finite scheduling, lot/serial traceability, quality management, and shop-floor integrations. Alternative vendors listed are common competitors in the manufacturing ERP space. For official procurement and technical documentation, consult the Infor CloudSuite Industrial product pages and certified partner resources.