Best Practices: Implementing EHS Software
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Executive Summary
The adoption of EHS software continues to expand as firms look to digitize safety, compliance and operational workflows. Yet despite growing investment, many implementations fail to deliver their expected impact, suffering from unclear requirements and misaligned stakeholders, as well as an underestimation of the data migration effort and insufficient preparation for system complexity. Firms frequently see costs escalate, through configuration creep and hidden AI‑related expenses, with contractual blind spots and weak long-term governance models exacerbating the issue. This report provides best practice guidance to help EHS managers, IT leads and project managers avoid these pitfalls and accelerate value realization. Effective EHS deployments depend on disciplined design and rigorous testing under real operating conditions, complemented by training approaches that reflect how frontline users actually work.
Figure 1. Hidden and anticipated cost drivers across EHS software implementations
Figure 2. Key questions to ask vendors to mitigate implementation risks
Figure 3. Trade‑offs between single‑phase and multi‑phase deployment models
About the Authors

Brittany Sayers
Senior Analyst
Brittany is a Senior Analyst at Verdantix, specializing in EHSQ software and emerging technologies. She leverages her EHS practitioner experience in EHS data analysis and unde...
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Nathan Goldstein
Senior Manager
Nathan is a Senior Manager at Verdantix, specializing in EHS software and the convergence of sustainability, EHS and operational risk. He leads research that helps corporate d...
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