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Atlo alternatives: what to consider (and why there’s no exact substitute)

Run wholesale like it actually runs. Every day. Sometimes every hour.

May 11, 2026

Atlo alternatives: what to consider (and why there’s no exact substitute)

If you’re searching for an “Atlo alternative,” you’re usually trying to solve one problem:

Run wholesale like it actually runs. Every day. Sometimes every hour.

That’s where most CRMs break. They were built for SaaS sales cycles, not wholesale.

This guide breaks down the closest “alternatives” by category (CRM, ERP, B2B ecommerce, EDI, BI, and spreadsheets), what they do well, and what they don’t. You’ll also see why there’s no one-to-one replacement, and when you’ll need a stack of tools to get halfway there.


Table of contents

  • Why people look for Atlo alternatives

  • Why there’s no one-to-one alternative

  • Alternatives by category

    1. Traditional CRM (Salesforce, HubSpot, Pipedrive)

    2. ERP (Business Central, SAP, Netsuite, etc.)

    3. B2B ecommerce / wholesale portals

    4. EDI and order automation tools

    5. BI dashboards (Power BI, Looker, Tableau)

    6. Spreadsheets + inbox + shared drives

  • Why teams choose Atlo

  • What sets Atlo apart

  • A practical evaluation checklist


Why you might be exploring Atlo alternatives

Most wholesale teams hit the same wall:

You can’t run sell-in from a CRM that assumes deals move in stages over weeks.

Wholesale doesn’t behave like that.

Wholesale is operational. It’s recurring. It’s reactive. It’s tied to stock levels, replenishment patterns, price shifts, inbound orders, and retailer-by-retailer behavior.

So people go looking for “a better CRM.” What they usually mean is:

  • One place to understand what’s happening across retail partners

  • A way to turn that into specific next actions

  • A flow that supports daily follow-up, not quarterly pipeline updates

  • Something that makes ordering easy for the retailer


Traditional CRMs don’t fail because they’re bad. They fail because the model is wrong.


Why there’s no one-to-one alternative

Atlo sits in an awkward gap between systems.

  • CRM is built to track conversations and pipeline progression.

  • ERP is built to record transactions and master data.

  • B2B portals are built to place orders.

  • BI is built to report, not execute.


Wholesale execution needs pieces of all four, but in one workflow.

That’s the core reason you won’t find a clean substitute.

If you try to recreate Atlo with existing tools, you usually end up with:

  • a CRM for notes + tasks

  • spreadsheets for “what should they buy”

  • BI for “what happened last month”

  • email threads for follow-up

  • a portal for order capture

  • manual work to keep it all in sync


It can work. It just becomes a maintenance job.


Alternatives by category


1) Traditional CRM (Salesforce, HubSpot, Pipedrive)


What they’re good at:

  • Contact/account structure

  • Tasks, reminders, meeting notes

  • Pipeline reporting

  • Sales team collaboration


Where they break for wholesale:

  • They don’t understand SKU-level reality.

  • They don’t handle retailer-specific replenishment logic well.

  • They treat “deal” as the unit, not “reorder behavior.”

  • They rely on humans updating fields to stay accurate.


If your team’s main problem is “we forget to follow up,” a CRM helps.

If your main problem is “we don’t know what each retailer should reorder right now,” a CRM doesn’t solve it.


2) ERP (Business Central, SAP, NetSuite, Dynamics, etc.)

What they’re good at:


  • Source of truth for orders, inventory, pricing, terms

  • Financial controls

  • Product master data

  • Operational reliability


Where they break for wholesale execution:

  • They’re not built for outbound activation.

  • They don’t give you retailer-by-retailer next best action.

  • They don’t create a lightweight “send proposal → retailer buys” loop.

  • They’re rarely friendly for daily commercial workflows.


ERP is necessary. It’s not enough.


3) B2B ecommerce / wholesale portals (brand webshops)


What they’re good at:

  • A clean way for retailers to place orders

  • Product browsing and catalog presentation

  • Pricing tiers and login-based access


Where they break:

  • They’re passive. Retailers must show up and shop.

  • They don’t tell you who needs attention today.

  • They don’t create proactive, retailer-specific proposals.

  • They don’t help you run follow-up at scale.


Portals capture demand. They don’t generate it.


4) EDI and order automation tools


What they’re good at:

  • Structured inbound orders

  • Faster order processing

  • Fewer manual entry errors


Where they break:

  • They don’t improve sell-in.

  • They don’t drive activation.

  • They don’t help long-tail partners buy more often.

  • They don’t create commercial workflows, just transaction plumbing.


EDI helps operations. It doesn’t run the commercial motion.


5) BI dashboards (Power BI, Looker, Tableau)


What they’re good at:

  • Consolidated reporting

  • Trend visibility over time

  • Executive-level performance tracking


Where they break:

  • Insights don’t become actions.

  • Dashboards don’t send proposals.

  • Dashboards don’t follow up.

  • You still need someone to translate charts into outreach, every day.


BI is hindsight. Wholesale needs an execution loop.


6) Spreadsheets + inbox + shared drives

This is the default stack. It’s flexible. It’s cheap. It’s also very fragile.

What it’s good at:

  • “Good enough” tracking for a small partner base

  • Quick ad hoc analysis

  • Temporary workflows


Where it breaks:

  • Data goes stale immediately.

  • The process lives in one person’s head.

  • Retailer context gets lost in threads.

  • Follow-up becomes a random process based on gut feel.


Most teams don’t quit spreadsheets because they hate spreadsheets. They quit because the daily workload becomes unmanageable.


Why teams choose Atlo

Teams choose Atlo when the problem is not “we need a database of contacts.”

The problem is:

  • We need to run wholesale every day without adding headcount.

  • We need the long tail to behave more like the top accounts.

  • We need to stop guessing and start sending retailer-specific proposals.

  • We need a workflow retailers can actually buy from quickly.


Atlo is built around the execution cycle. Monitor → identify → propose → purchase → follow up. Repeated across partners.


What sets Atlo apart


Built for wholesale, not SaaS

Wholesale doesn’t move quarterly. It moves continuously.


Atlo is designed for daily operations and frequent follow-up, where the “next step” is driven by what’s happening in the retailer’s business, not what a rep remembers.


The unit is the retailer’s shelf, not the sales rep’s pipeline


CRMs optimize for internal tracking. Atlo optimizes for external reality: what each retailer likely needs next, based on what you can see and what you’ve sold.



Execution, not reporting

Most tools can show you data. Atlo is built to turn that into a concrete order flow.


Retailer-friendly buying, without friction

In wholesale, speed matters. If the retailer can’t buy easily, the proposal dies. Atlo is built around “ready-to-buy” proposals, not “please log in and browse.”


Evaluation checklist: how to compare fairly

If you’re assessing tools, use questions that match wholesale:

Data freshness

  • Can it support daily workflows without manual updates?

  • Does it stay accurate even when reps don’t touch it?


Retailer-level action

  • Can it surface who needs attention today, and why?

  • Can it suggest specific products and quantities per retailer?


Order conversion

  • Can a retailer buy in a few clicks from a proposal?

  • Does the flow reduce back-and-forth?


Follow-up at scale

  • Can you run consistent follow-up without the process living in one person’s inbox?


Fit with ERP

  • Does it complement ERP instead of trying to replace it?

  • Can it use ERP order history and product data without turning into an IT project?


If a tool only answers “where are we in the pipeline,” it’s a SaaS CRM.

If it answers “what should this retailer reorder now,” it’s closer to wholesale execution.


Bottom line

If you want a system that can actually run wholesale, you won’t find a perfect Atlo substitute inside the CRM category.

You’ll find parts of it scattered across CRM, ERP, BI, portals, and manual work.

Atlo exists because wholesale needs its own operating layer.

Casper Brix

Co-founder

Casper Brix is the co-founder of Atlo. He draws on 7 years as Chief Purchasing Officer and commercial leadership, now helping lifestyle brands improve how they manage retail partners and grow their wholesale.

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