Share:

Top Microsoft Dynamics 365 Partners for Distribution and Supply Chain Management

This post is written by our friends at Winfosoft. Winfosoft is a globally recognized Microsoft Cloud Services Provider with more than 30 years of experience in ERP software solutions. Learn more at: https://winfosoft.com/

 

Choosing a Microsoft Dynamics 365 partner is a major decision for any distributor. The right team can help improve inventory visibility, reduce errors and give leaders clearer numbers to work with. Using the wrong one can slow things down and create more manual work. This guide explores partners with proven experience in distribution and supply chain operations. Each has a slightly different focus, so readers can see which model fits their business best.

 

What Dynamics 365 Partners Specialize in the Distribution Industry?

Microsoft Dynamics 365 combines finance, operations, sales and customer information in one system. For distributors, this means a single place to manage stock, pricing, orders and warehouse activity across locations.

Specialized partners build on that core system. They design the processes and integrations that align with how distributors actually operate their businesses. This list highlights partners based on their clear focus on distribution, demonstrated experience with Dynamics 365 and independent coverage published in the last few years.

 

1. Winfosoft

Winfosoft is a Microsoft Dynamics 365 partner that focuses on enterprise resource planning (ERP) for businesses dealing with metals, manufacturing and distribution. It does not use generic templates — instead, it builds around each client’s operations. 

Winfosoft lets distributors keep an eye on their inventory in real-time, so teams can see how much stock is on hand at all locations and avoid having too much or too little. Instead of guessing, planning tools use real data to predict demand and the movement of goods. Revenue management tools consolidate a company’s financial data into one view, making it easy for decision-makers to monitor margins and growth.

Another advantage is its order tracking capability, which enables users to receive order updates from the moment they are placed until they are delivered. Reporting also helps management track key performance indicators and react quickly. Winsoft is known for its hands-on approach to support and for helping distribution teams get the most out of their ERP.

 

2. Western Computer

Western Computer has been a Microsoft partner for years and has plenty of experience with Dynamics 365 for distributors. It focuses on supply chain and warehouse procedures, such as order handling, picking, shipping and transportation planning. It also helps with complex pricing, rebate structure and customer agreements, which are common in wholesale and distribution work.

Western Computer is unique due to its extensive experience in ERP solutions for mid-market distributors. It’s also known for its structured approach to upgrading from older systems, such as Dynamics NAV and GP.

 

3. Folio3

Folio3 is known for linking Dynamics 365 with e-commerce platforms, which is becoming increasingly important for distributors selling through online stores and marketplaces. It helps bring online and offline channels by centralizing stock levels, prices and customer data. This way, teams do not have to manually update multiple systems. It also enables orders from various channels to be processed through a single fulfillment workflow.

Folio3 stands out for its experience at the point where ERP meets e-commerce — a pain point for many distributors trying to grow online sales without losing control of their inventory.

 

4. Sunrise Technologies

Sunrise Technologies focuses on Microsoft Dynamics 365 for manufacturing, distribution and retail. It is particularly popular in the consumer goods, apparel and related industries.

The company offers solutions in areas such as demand planning, allocation, warehouse management and support for retail and wholesale channels. This is useful for businesses that ship to retailers, sell directly and manage multiple product lines. Sunrise is a top choice because it concentrates on a defined set of industries, instead of trying to cover everything.

 

5. RSM

RSM is a global consulting firm with a large Microsoft practice in the finance and supply chain sectors. Its work with Dynamics 365 covers inventory and logistics optimization, quality control and manufacturing operations.

RSM can handle ERP implementation and broader issues like analytics, data strategy and process improvement. This helps leaders redesign the way they plan, buy and move products. It stands out for its business advisory capabilities and technical delivery, which appeal to companies looking for a total transformation, not just a system upgrade.

 

Comparing the Top Dynamics 365 Partners

Here’s a side-by-side look at what each partner does best. Use this quick guide to narrow your shortlist and flag partners that match your size, channels and growth plans.

 

Partner Specialization Key Benefits Best For
Winfosoft ERP for metals, manufacturing and distribution Real-time stock insight, planning, revenue and KPI views Distributors looking for tailored ERP and close support
Western Computer Cloud ERP for distributors Strong D365 track record, solid supply chain setups Distributors moving out of legacy systems
Folio3 Dynamics 365 and e-commerce integration Unified multi-channel orders and inventory Distributors expanding online or into marketplaces
Sunrise Technologies Manufacturing, distribution and retail focus Industry accelerators and omnichannel know-how Brands selling through both retail and wholesale
RSM Large, global Dynamics 365 projects Multi-country templates and rollouts Multinational distributors and manufacturers

 

Choosing the Right D365 Partner for Your Supply Chain

Working with the right partner is ultimately about matching their strengths to your goals, whether that means tighter control of inventory, better online selling or a unified global view. The providers in this list can all deliver benefits, but each serves a slightly different type of distributor. Before deciding, it can be useful to ask: Which partner understands our business well enough to challenge our current process? Which can help us design the future supply chain we actually want?

 

More Blogs

agentic AI
Blogs
January 19, 2026

Kinaxis’ Fred Baumann on Continuous Disruption, Adaptive Planning, and Turning Turbulence into Opportunity

At the 2025 Gartner Supply Chain Planning Summit in Denver, Scott Luton sat down with Fred Baumann, Senior Industry Principal at Kinaxis, one of the world’s most recognized leaders in supply chain planning and orchestration. Kinaxis has spent over four decades shaping the planning landscape and has been named to the Gartner Leaders Quadrant an extraordinary 11 consecutive times—a testament to its execution strength and long-term vision. Baumann’s role at Kinaxis centers on helping chief supply chain officers and senior leaders shape their strategic transformation roadmaps, quantify value, and build the business cases necessary to achieve breakthrough outcomes.   From Episodic Disruptions to Continuous Turbulence When asked about old and new challenges facing supply chain planning teams, Baumann observed a major shift: disruption is no longer episodic—it’s continuous. Historically, companies faced major disruptions every few years. Today, volatility and constraint-related challenges—whether driven by tariffs, sourcing changes, geopolitical shifts, or supply shortages—are unfolding weekly or even daily. This environment demands a new way of working. The speed of global business is accelerating, and uncertainty is at historic highs. As Baumann noted, organizations must now adjust their supply chains “much faster than they had to even last year.” The shift isn’t only…
supply chain planning
Blogs
January 7, 2026

ToolsGroup CEO Sean Elliott on Embracing Uncertainty, Probabilistic Planning, and Preparing for an Agentic Future

At the Gartner Supply Chain Planning Summit in Denver, Scott Luton sat down with Sean Elliott, CEO of ToolsGroup, to discuss why uncertainty is no longer something supply chain leaders should fear—and how the right technology can turn volatility into advantage. Elliott brings decades of experience across supply chain execution and planning, a background that shapes his pragmatic leadership philosophy. As he noted, bad plans can cripple even the best execution environments, just as poor execution can undermine well-crafted plans. ToolsGroup’s mission sits squarely at that intersection.   What Makes ToolsGroup Different Elliott described ToolsGroup as one of the few truly probabilistic planning providers in the market. While many vendors claim probabilistic capabilities, most stop at probabilistic forecasting. ToolsGroup goes further by embedding probabilistic thinking across the full breadth of its planning technology. The company’s belief is simple but powerful: uncertainty is not the enemy—it’s an asset. Rather than chasing forecast accuracy for its own sake, ToolsGroup focuses on business outcomes. What planning organizations really care about, Elliott argued, is having the right inventory in the right place at the right time to satisfy customers. Customer satisfaction—driven by availability, pricing, and service—is the ultimate goal. Probabilistic planning enables organizations to…