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5 CRM Solutions for Really Small Businesses

Issue

 

CRM was once the sole province of big enterprise, but times have changed and now there are products galore for the little guy. Trouble is, small-business professionals are always on the run, wearing a stack of hats, with little time to sort good from bad in technology aids. But there are ways to slice and dice CRM choices into bite sized-pieces so you can pick a product that will increase your productivity without slowing you down in the process.

“Let your work style dictate the CRM parameters,” said Sheryl Kingstone, director of customer experience at research powerhouse Yankee Group. “You need to be able to enter and use information easily. If it doesn’t add value to your day-to-day life, then what would be the point?”

In other words, if you use your cell phone frequently, look for CRM solutions that work on phones. “ACT! and Maximizer are both good CRM solutions to use on mobile phones from BlackBerries to the new Storm,” said Kingstone.

If you use laptops frequently, consider a hosted CRM solution that will allow you to pull data in real-time off the Internet. Added bonus: SaaS (Software as a Service), or hosted applications, cost far less than on-premise solutions.

If you work mostly in your company office and fear Internet connectivity problems, then look to CRM solutions that you can install on your own hardware.

Once you’ve determined how you want CRM to work for you and what information you want to use on the system, then you can quickly find good possible solutions. Remember that many CRM vendors offer a free trial period. Trial your top two or three CRM candidates before you make a final decision. That way, you know what works best for you before you invest in anything.

That said, here (in no particular order) are the top five CRM solutions for businesses of 10 or fewer employees.

 

Solutions


1. ACT!: Although most experts classify ACT! as a contact manager rather than a true CRM system, it helps many small businesses stay in touch with customers and on top of orders. It’s very customizable, useable on a large number of mobile phones and add-on developers have recently extended its native capabilities making it highly workable for really small businesses.

2. Maximizer: This CRM solution scales easily as your company grows. It works well for a one-person shop and can scale to over 500 employees, so there’s no need to swap to a different CRM system later. Multiple access options means you can easily enter or retrieve data by phone, Web or in-office.

3. Salesforce.com: The leading name in CRM solutions in most categories is chock-full of features that small businesses can use in creative ways. “In addition to using it for our direct sales and tracking needs, we are opening it up to resellers of our product as a bonus way of helping them to keep track of their sales efforts with our product,” said Mike Ogilvie, principal at Ignite Speed Networking. “This also gives us the great advantages of ensuring that we’re not treading on the toes of the resellers (and vice versa) and of being able to retain critical information should the resellers decide to stop representing us.”

4. SugarCRM: This is an open source solution, so if you are tech-savvy this option is perfect for you. "It is easy to install, it has a huge user community if I have a problem, and the price is right (free!). I can't imagine running my agency without it," said Al Canton, owner of InsuranceSolutions123.com agency.  If you want more features and additional support, consider the new Express version which is only $10 per month per user.

5. Zoho CRM: Cloud-based Zoho CRM offers sales and marketing integration, sales forecasts, customer support tools, role-based security (so information is controlled based on job function), inventory management, a complete suite of reports and dashboards, and even a Microsoft Outlook plugin. The first three users are free and the fourth user account cost only $12 per month for the Professional edition.  “For any small company looking to begin using CRM, this is an excellent tool to get you started,” says Louis Rosas-Guyon, a business technology coach, author and serial entrepreneur with R2 Computing.

If, however, you are using Apple computers rather than PCs, you will find your choices in CRM are a bit limited. Most Focus poll respondents preferred Daylite, developed by a Canadian company called Marketcircle. The application is designed for 100 users or less.

Daylite has a plug-in that enables the capture of emails directly from Apple's Mail application. “Daylite's biggest benefit is the ability to ‘link’ objects to other objects within the application so everything related to a customer can easily be linked together,” said Jarrod Skeggs, ACHDS, vice president of sales and marketing at Digid Solutions, a firm that does Daylite installation, deployment, setup and training. Be careful of the pricing however, because your server counts as a “user” in the cost structure.

Marketcircle recently introduced a companion iPhone application called Daylite Touch, enabling Daylite users to access their CRM application from their iPhone or iPod touch.

 

Next Steps

 

If you want to use CRM within a bigger, more comprehensive solution, rather than as a standalone application, consider joining the Great American Small Business Challenge, a free national business assistance program available both online and through 35 participating SBDC (Small Business Development Center) offices. The product offers a sophisticated suite of online business planning and management tools, including CRM, plus counseling and other assistance for free. This partnership effort of business, nonprofit and federal resources is largely unknown. In fact, it might be accurately characterized as a “best-kept secret.” You can find out more information or register for the GASBC at the program’s Web site.

Also, be sure to check out Focus’ in-depth research on CRM, including the new Hosted CRM Buyer’s Guide and the Hosted CRM Comparison Guide. These comprehensive guides will help you get informed and prepared to make the right CRM purchase for your company.

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cnielsen
Posted on June 19, 2009

May I suggest yet another? infoathand CRBM. I am not just bringing this up as a vender but as a small business owner that has successfully deployed this system. We are mostly a Joomla Development shop and IAH integrates ecommerce and customer portal features with Joomla and then they integrate with MS Outlook and Trixbox for CRM management as well as sync with QuickBooks for a full featured transaction life cycle management and business management solution. This is a serious application suite with a low cost of ownership. Much less than Sugar or Salesforce and for the right business model much more powerful. info@hand is something to keep on your radar since the new 6.1 release due out in the next week has in-depth integration with googlemaps, calendar, Google docs... and more.

I have more information available at my blog and our training support sites.

http://www.cnpintegrations.com/myblog and http://www.learningcrm.com
CNP Blog Post: CRM/ERP, Joomla CMS, QuickBooks all-in-one Solution http://bit.ly/13kQI0

info@hand 6.0.3 released http://bit.ly/498Wz

http://www.learningcrm.com/latest/more-than-just-customer-relationship-manage...

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veidele
Posted on Oct. 28, 2009

I've heard of another CRM that works very well, its Elements CRM. Check the site out at http://www.ntractive.com/.

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Kevin Gilbert
Posted on Aug. 11, 2009
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Good article, but I would like to provide a little clarification for readers that might not realize, based on how you started the section on choices for Apple Mac users:

If, however, you are using Apple computers rather than PCs, you will find your choices in CRM are a bit limited.

This statement is quite misleading. As an Apple Mac user, and business partner to Jarrod Skeggs who is being quoted in reference to Daylite, we would also like to make it clear that the choices are not near as limited as you imply. Just as ACT is PC only, Daylite is Mac only. I'm not familiar with Maximizer, but the last three, Salesforce.com, SugarCRM, and ZohoCRM are all compatible with the Mac and are excellent options for Mac users needing browser based solutions. In fact, these are great options for mixed platform environments since a modern, standards compliant browser running on either a Mac or PC can use the software. I'm sure it was unintentional, but it was a bit misleading. Hope this clears things up a bit.

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Rajesh Kumar
Posted on Aug. 27, 2009
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Interesting list. Clearly on this day, if a small business is keen on serving customers in a well rounded way, they have options that would match their budget and need.

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Rick Davey
Founder, CEO and CRM, BI, Data Warehouse Consultant, Ridge Group LLC
Posted on Sept. 2, 2009
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As stated above the key is understanding some applications are just that... you need either a PC or MAC to house them. Better for most businesses are CRM systems that only use a browser, so no MAC vs PC issue.

Two additional product that come to mind in the mainstream are Microsoft Dynamics 4.x and Sibel on Demand (or the in-house versions). They provide excellent feature sets at about the same prices as Salesforce.com for the SaaS versions.

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Valerie  Hahn
Regional Sales/Marketing Director, Printers Plus LLC
Posted on Oct. 24, 2009
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Good information and explaination of each program. Thank you!

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veidele
Posted on Oct. 28, 2009
  • Recommended by:

What I wrote above is for Apple products

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Todd Hodgen
Open Source VOIP Professional, Misiu Systems LLC
  • Recommended by:

An open source solution, that is based on Sugar CRM is Vtiger. Http://vtiger.com

Works well.

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Greg Standerfer
President, Answer Idaho/All Call Technologies
Posted on May 10, 2010
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I have used ACT! for several years and the most necessary feature is the mail merge for custom documents for clients and prospects. However it has had many problems over the years and we're now looking at SalesForce as a replacement.

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  • Recommended by:

CRMnext is a single platform, ultrascalable CRM solution with the most advanced functionalities to give you a true 360 degree view of the customer. It runs on a single code based and can be deployed OnCloud or OnPremise. CRMnext can be configured to cater Fortune 500 companies to SMEs.

Website: http://www.crmnext.com

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  • Recommended by:

There is also Nutshell CRM, which is based on FileMaker and win/mac compatible. Aimed at small businesses. http://www.teamdf.com/nutshellcrm

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Vana Consulting Group
Posted on Aug. 28, 2009
  • Recommended by:

Additionally and to augment Zoho CRM, Vana Consulting Group (www.vanaconsulting.com) just announced VanaHRM®, an on-demand human resource, talent management, and collaboration solution for small to mid size businesses built on the Zoho® (http://www.zoho.com/) People Management platform. VanaHRM® offers organizations a completely integrated, feature-rich, and turn-key solution to managing the entire workforce, all from a standard web browser, available anywhere and at anytime.

Built on a software-as-a-service, multi-tenant platform and starting at only $19 dollars per month, VanaHRM® requires no installation, no managing of updates and upgrades, and is simple and intuitive to use, resulting in a complete, low cost, and on-demand solution for companies.

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