OpsUI vs Microlistics & Mintsoft
A lighter, finance-agnostic 3PL ops layer versus two established Australian warehouse platforms.
OpsUI is a modular, finance-agnostic operations layer for 3PLs and growing operators; it differs from Microlistics and Access Mintsoft by trading enterprise WMS weight and per-transaction or per-seat commercials for lighter, configurable multi-client warehouse modules you turn on as you need them.
Microlistics and Access Mintsoft are two of the most recognised warehouse names in the Australian 3PL market, and they sit at very different points on the spectrum. Microlistics is enterprise-grade WMS, adjacent to the WiseTech/CargoWise logistics ecosystem, built for complex, high-throughput distribution and large third-party logistics operations. Access Mintsoft, part of the Access Group, is an integration-first order and warehouse platform aimed squarely at ecommerce fulfilment and smaller-to-mid 3PLs that live and die by marketplace and courier connections.
OpsUI is neither a CargoWise-class enterprise WMS nor a single-purpose ecommerce fulfilment tool. It is a modular ERP, WMS and CRM bought a la carte, where a 3PL or operator switches on only the warehouse capabilities they actually run: multi-client inventory, configurable picking, receiving, cycle counting and client visibility. The pitch is not 'replace everything' — it is 'run your operations on a system priced and scoped to your size, and keep the finance system you already trust'.
That last point is the real divider. OpsUI is deliberately finance-agnostic: you keep Xero, MYOB or NetSuite as your ledger and add OpsUI as the operations layer over the top, rather than absorbing a heavy platform implementation or a finance migration you didn't ask for. Bidirectional NetSuite sync is live in production today; Xero and MYOB sync is wired during rollout through the finance-accounting module.
This page is an honest comparison, not a takedown. If you need CargoWise-ecosystem depth, multi-site enterprise distribution or the very high transaction scale Microlistics is engineered for, that is a genuinely better fit and we say so below. The case for OpsUI is for operators where enterprise weight, per-transaction billing or per-seat models are overkill for the warehouse work they actually do.
OpsUI vs Microlistics & Mintsoft, feature by feature.
| OpsUI | Microlistics / Mintsoft | |
|---|---|---|
| Pricing model | Flat modular subscription: modules from A$399/module/month; starter packs from A$1,499/month (5 users included); additional users A$99/month; Enterprise (all modules, unlimited users) custom-quoted. Priced in AUD. Full breakdown at /pricing. | Typically enterprise or scaled commercial models: per-transaction, per-order or per-seat elements common in 3PL WMS contracts, often with implementation and onboarding fees. Quoted to scale and complexity rather than published flat per module. |
| Best-fit operator size | Smaller-to-mid 3PLs and growing operators that want warehouse ops without enterprise overhead. | Microlistics targets larger, complex enterprise distribution and high-volume 3PLs; Mintsoft suits ecommerce-led smaller-to-mid fulfilment houses. |
| Multi-client (3PL) inventory | Multi-client inventory supported through inventory-management with client separation and per-client visibility. | Both built for multi-client 3PL operation; Microlistics carries deeper enterprise multi-client and billing maturity. |
| Picking strategies | Configurable picking with optional wave-picking, zone-picking and slotting-optimisation modules switched on as needed. | Mature, deeply configurable picking and directed workflows, especially in Microlistics at enterprise scale. |
| Finance / ledger approach | Finance-agnostic: keep Xero, MYOB or NetSuite and add OpsUI as the operations layer. NetSuite bidirectional sync live; Xero/MYOB wired during rollout. | Integrate to accounting systems but are positioned as operations platforms; finance connection depth varies by ecosystem and edition. |
| Ecosystem depth | Standalone modular suite; integrates to finance and channels rather than belonging to a single logistics ecosystem. | Microlistics sits in the WiseTech/CargoWise-adjacent logistics ecosystem; Mintsoft sits within the broader Access Group product family. |
| Marketplace & platform connections | Connects to Amazon.com.au, eBay AU, Catch, The Iconic and platforms including Shopify, WooCommerce and BigCommerce. | Mintsoft is integration-first with a broad ecommerce and courier connector library; Microlistics connects at enterprise integration depth. |
| Carrier integration | NZ Couriers is the one live carrier API today; Australian carriers are wired during rollout (direct API, aggregator or file-based, confirmed during scoping). | Established Australian carrier and shipping connectivity, a particular strength of Mintsoft's ecommerce-dispatch focus. |
| Time to live | Live in weeks; switch on modules incrementally rather than a single big-bang go-live. | Enterprise WMS deployments (Microlistics especially) can be multi-month, scoped implementations; Mintsoft onboarding is lighter. |
| Breadth beyond the warehouse | ERP and CRM modules available alongside WMS: order-management, procurement, returns-management, quality-control, CRM and more, a la carte. | Primarily warehouse and fulfilment focused; broader ERP/CRM needs are met by other products or the wider group portfolio. |
| Data hosting & support region | AUD billing, AU-hosted production data and AU business-hours support on opsui.au. | Both operate in the Australian market with local presence; hosting and support arrangements depend on the contract and edition. |
When Microlistics or Mintsoft is the better fit
- If you are an enterprise 3PL running complex, multi-site, high-throughput distribution and you want depth that has been hardened over many large logistics deployments, Microlistics is built for exactly that scale and earns its enterprise positioning.
- If your business is tied into the WiseTech/CargoWise logistics ecosystem — freight forwarding, customs, global transport management — then a Microlistics WMS sitting adjacent to that stack will integrate more naturally than a standalone suite ever could.
- If you are an ecommerce-led fulfilment house whose competitive edge is the breadth and maturity of marketplace and courier connectors, Access Mintsoft's integration-first design and established Australian carrier connectivity is a strong, proven fit today.
- If you specifically want a single vendor inside the wider Access Group portfolio, or a platform with years of multi-client 3PL billing maturity baked in, those incumbents carry advantages a newer modular suite is still building out.
When OpsUI is the better fit
- When enterprise weight is overkill: you run real warehouse operations but you do not need CargoWise-class distribution depth, and you would rather pay for the handful of modules you actually use than carry an enterprise platform's footprint.
- When per-transaction or per-seat billing punishes growth: flat modular pricing from A$399/module/mo means your bill tracks the capabilities you switch on, not every order processed or every operator who logs in.
- When you want to keep your finance system: OpsUI bolts on as the operations layer over Xero, MYOB or NetSuite, so you get warehouse, inventory, orders and CRM without a ledger migration you didn't ask for.
- When you need more than a warehouse tool: order-management, procurement, returns, quality-control and CRM modules sit beside the WMS, so a growing operator can extend into ERP and CRM without bolting on a second vendor.
- When you want to be live in weeks and scale modules as you grow: start with multi-client inventory and configurable picking, then add wave-picking, zone-picking or slotting-optimisation when the volume justifies it — no big-bang implementation required.
Both Microlistics and Access Mintsoft are well-established in the Australian 3PL and fulfilment market, and any honest comparison has to acknowledge that incumbency. On shipping specifically: NZ Couriers is the one live carrier API in OpsUI today, while Australian carriers — Australia Post, StarTrack, Sendle, Toll, DHL, Aramex, CouriersPlease and the Shippit aggregator — are wired during rollout via direct API, aggregator or file-based integration, confirmed during scoping. Where OpsUI differs in the ANZ context is its finance-agnostic stance and AU-hosted production data with AU business-hours support, so a smaller-to-mid operator can run Australian warehouse operations on a system sized to them while keeping their existing ledger in place.
What buyers ask before choosing.
Is OpsUI a true alternative to Microlistics in Australia?
How does OpsUI's pricing differ from Microlistics and Mintsoft?
Do I have to replace my accounting system to use OpsUI?
Can OpsUI handle multi-client 3PL warehousing?
Which carriers and marketplaces does OpsUI connect to?
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