One of the most common questions suppliers ask after landing a new retail account is surprisingly simple: “How long is this going to take?”
The retailer is ready to move forward. Orders are waiting. Everyone wants to start shipping. Then reality sets in.
There are retailer requirements to review, EDI documents to map, testing cycles to complete, systems to connect, and operational workflows to validate. What initially sounded like a straightforward setup can quickly turn into weeks or even months of work. The good news is that EDI onboarding doesn’t have to be painful. The bad news is that the timeline often depends on much more than the EDI itself.
What is EDI onboarding?
EDI onboarding is the process of connecting a supplier with a retailer or trading partner so they can exchange business documents electronically.
That typically includes documents such as:
- Purchase Orders (850)
- Purchase Order Acknowledgements (855)
- Advance Ship Notices (856)
- Invoices (810)
- Inventory documents
- Retailer-specific transactions
While the document exchange is important, onboarding usually involves much more than simply turning on EDI.
Systems need to communicate properly. Operational processes need to align. Retailer requirements need to be tested and validated before orders can flow successfully.
How long does EDI onboarding typically take?
The honest answer is that it depends. A relatively simple onboarding project may take a few weeks. More complex retailer integrations can take several months, particularly when multiple systems, warehouses, or custom workflows are involved.
The timeline is usually influenced by:
- Retailer requirements
- Internal resources
- ERP integrations
- Warehouse processes
- Existing EDI infrastructure
- Testing requirements
- Data quality
This is why two suppliers onboarding with the same retailer can have very different experiences.
The technology is only one part of the equation.
Why do some EDI implementations take so long?
In many cases, delays have very little to do with EDI itself. The real challenge is operational readiness.
A retailer may require specific ASN formats, labeling standards, inventory updates, or shipping workflows. Those requirements need to align with how the supplier’s business actually operates.
If information is spread across multiple systems, onboarding often slows down because teams spend time identifying gaps and building processes to support them.
This is particularly common when ERP systems, warehouse management systems, shipping platforms, and EDI workflows aren’t fully connected. What starts as an EDI project quickly becomes an operational project.
How can suppliers speed up EDI onboarding?
The suppliers that onboard retailers most efficiently usually have one thing in common.
Their systems are already connected.
When ERP, warehouse, shipping, and EDI workflows work together, there are fewer operational surprises during onboarding. Data already moves where it needs to go. Teams have visibility into processes. Testing becomes more straightforward.
That’s one reason many suppliers invest in stronger EDI integrations before expanding retail relationships.
The goal isn’t simply onboarding faster. It’s creating a foundation that makes future retailer onboarding easier as the business grows.
Why retailer requirements matter
Every retailer operates differently. Some have relatively straightforward requirements. Others require extensive testing, custom document mappings, compliance validation, and operational reviews before approving suppliers.
Retailers may also require specific inventory, fulfillment, shipping, or labeling processes that impact how systems are configured.
Understanding those requirements early helps avoid delays later in the process.
You can explore examples of retailer-specific EDI requirements here.
Is EDI onboarding easier with a managed provider?
For many suppliers, yes. One of the biggest advantages of working with a managed EDI provider is experience.
Instead of starting from scratch, suppliers gain access to teams that have already worked with thousands of retailer requirements, document mappings, and onboarding scenarios.
That often reduces both implementation time and operational risk.
Rather than coordinating multiple vendors, internal teams, and technical resources, suppliers have a dedicated partner helping manage the process. Learn more about eZCom’s managed EDI approach.
Final thoughts
EDI onboarding is often viewed as a technical project. In reality, it’s usually an operational project that happens to involve technology.
The suppliers that onboard retailers most successfully are the ones with connected systems, clean operational processes, and strong visibility across their business. When those pieces are already in place, retailer onboarding becomes significantly easier.
If you’re preparing to onboard a new retailer or evaluating your current EDI setup, it’s worth looking beyond the document exchange itself and focusing on the operational foundation supporting it.
To see how eZCom helps suppliers streamline onboarding, reduce implementation timelines, and support long-term growth, visit our customer case studies.
FAQ
What is EDI onboarding?
EDI onboarding is the process of connecting a supplier with a retailer or trading partner to exchange business documents electronically.
How long does EDI onboarding take?
Timelines vary depending on retailer requirements, integrations, testing, and operational complexity. Projects can range from a few weeks to several months.
Why does EDI implementation take so long?
Many delays are caused by operational processes, system integrations, data quality issues, and retailer-specific compliance requirements.
How can suppliers speed up EDI onboarding?
Connected systems, accurate data, strong integrations, and experienced implementation support can significantly reduce onboarding timelines.
Is EDI onboarding different for every retailer?
Yes. Each retailer has unique document requirements, testing procedures, compliance standards, and operational expectations.
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