
What is CRM?
A customer relationship management (CRM) application is a system of records that help salespeople store all customer details, including conversations, deals, contacts, notes, and deal-associated activities in a single location. Without a CRM, salespeople store critical deal information in personal spreadsheets or notes, and when any salesperson leaves the organization, all that context and contact information is lost forever.
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Why do businesses use CRM applications?
Businesses use CRMs to run their backend sales operations and solve specific operational problems:
Prevent knowledge leak: Your sales reps are your lifeline to your customers, so anytime a rep leaves, their departure can hit the business hard. With a CRM, you get a single source of truth for all customer information, including order history, promised offers, customer issues, and intent, so that every rep has complete visibility into customers.
Lack of prioritization: Without prioritization, a $10K deal and $10M deal look the same. With your CRM's rule based or AI-led lead scoring, you can prioritize promising opportunities and put your best reps on the highest-value deals for greater wins.
Misaligned teams: Marketing teams might run campaigns that sales teams have no clue about. Disconnected teams dilute effort and diminish results. With a CRM, leads are tagged to sources and workflow rules are triggered so that sales knows where each lead is coming from and what to pitch.
Reporting blind spots: The CSO wants a forecast, but deal details are locked in your reps' "personal CRM" (usually a spreadsheet). The CSO gets the forecast two weeks later. With a CRM, deals are tracked centrally, so preparing a forecast takes seconds not days.
Lost productivity: Your sales team is still stuck in 2013, manually researching leads, preparing decks, and pitching offers. There's no AI-in-the-loop. A CRM with built-in AI can enrich lead data, summarize customer information, and draft personalized emails, allowing reps to process more opportunities than what was possible before.
What are the types of CRM systems?
No two businesses are alike; neither should their CRMs. Custom-built CRM applications cater to unique business requirements and help companies succeed. Vertical CRMs—a subset of custom CRMs—help save time, lower costs, and bring diverse teams together to serve customers better.
Operational CRM
Useful for managing day-to-day marketing, sales, and support operations. With an operational CRM:
- Sales teams can automate repetitive tasks through the sales cycle, optimize sales tactics, and build better relationships with customers.
- Marketing teams can segment leads, and personalize and send targeted campaigns across various channels.
- Service teams get visibility into customer order history and provide faster resolutions based on priority.
Analytical CRM
Useful for processing large volumes of customer data, identifying patterns and anomalies, and helping teams gain insights to improve sales. With an analytical CRM, businesses can:
- Understand customer preferences to serve curated content and suggest products.
- Create demographic-based customer segments to run targeted campaigns.
- Track KPIs like customer acquisition costs and ROI.
- Generate forecasts to predict regional trends and revenue.
Collaborative CRM
Useful for breaking down silos and eliminating conflicts among sales, marketing, and support teams. With a collaborative CRM:
- Sales and marketing teams can agree on which marketing channels and sources are most profitable.
- Sales and support teams can prioritize customer issues to facilitate cross-sell and upsell initiatives.
- Support and marketing can collaborate to identify the brand's strongest customer advocates.
Strategic CRM
Useful for building long-term strategies based on data-driven insights, nurturing stronger relations, and boosting customer lifetime value. With a strategic CRM, businesses can:
- Go from disjointed activities to streamlined action plans designed to boost revenue and productivity and increase win rates.
- Increase operational efficiency and revenue predictability.
- Create blueprints for internal employees to handle incoming leads.
- Build customer journeys to help them navigate your brand's range of offerings.
How is a CRM software useful for different industries?
No two businesses are alike; neither should their CRMs. Custom-built CRM applications cater to unique business requirements and help companies succeed. Vertical CRMs—a subset of custom CRMs—help save time, lower costs, and bring diverse teams together to serve customers better.
Real estate businesses struggle to manage long sales cycles, multi-touch lead sources, channel partners, and site visits with multiple applications. A CRM tailor-made for real estate—that offers lead-to-site-visit tracking, brokers and solo agent management, inventory visibility, and automated follow-ups based on real estate workflows can result in a 20% revenue increase.Learn how Zoho CRM helps real estate teams.
Technical limitations shouldn't stop you from providing seamless patient journeys. A healthcare CRM comes with tailored workflows for appointment booking, managing insurance, and handling data per HIPAA guidelines, so healthcare staff can focus on patient care and leave the technical burden to the CRM. Explore Zoho healthcare CRM for doctors and clinicians.
Heavily regulated and governed, insurance companies struggle to keep up with policy renewals, application tracking, fraud detection, and secure communications in a single app. Insurance CRM applications help organize prospects, identify opportunities, automate approvals, resolve claims, and leverage data to settle disputes so that insurance companies can focus on building trust with customers and leave data management to their CRM.See how Zoho CRM works for insurance companies.
Financial advice is everywhere, which leaves financial service companies struggling to retain high-value accounts. A CRM made for financial services handles client relationships by feeding them personalized investment suggestions periodically, in addition to handling compliance challenges. This results in improved retention and better customer relationship management.Explore Zoho CRM for financial services.
Who can use a CRM system?
Traditionally, sales teams are the primary users of CRMs—but that's often no longer the case. Today, marketing needs the CRM to track their leads, support needs the CRM to understand customer histories, field sales need the CRM to upsell and cross-sell, and billing needs the CRM to settle payment disputes—not to mention the needs of legal, logistics, inventory, compliance, security, and infrastructure teams. Let's explore a few roles and their CRM use cases.
CRM for sales reps: All businesses struggle to obtain leads, but if your business struggles to handle leads, then you have a problem. Common telltale issues are when all leads are pitched the same template, without prioritization. Reps go in blind on sales calls with no clue about a lead's preferences. With a CRM for sales reps, every lead is tagged to its source, leads are scored by potential revenue opportunity, and reps can walk into sales calls armed with lead information. The result is better calls and higher conversions.
CRM for support agents: A frustrated customer airs out his issues on social media. Your support head reaches out and asks for more details. The customer, already upset, is now aggravated that you don't even know who he is. With a CRM, your support rep can simply enter the customer's name and get his account number, past issue history, issue frequency, resolution times, and his current open request. With a CRM, each support conversation starts with context, so that customers feel valued and resolution times decrease.
CRM for marketing teams The marketing team runs a campaign and the numbers look great. They check in with sales a month later, but sales haven't touched any of the leads. With a CRM, marketing and sales team can collaborate and run campaigns that attract the right audience with the right message, and everyone's in the loop—so conversions go up.
CRM for account managers: Your account managers track leads on spreadsheets. When you want to give exclusive discounts to some of your oldest customers, your account managers have no clue how long each customer has been with you. They suggest looking through billing history. With a CRM, each account—and all contacts associated with that account—are tracked in an exclusive accounts page. You know which contacts are happy, which ones aren't, and which AMs are managing them. Account management becomes simpler and CLV increases.
How AI is changing CRM
How AI is changing CRM AI capabilities in CRM help improve efficiency so that businesses can build better, stronger relationships with their customers. Sales teams can offload high-effort, low-return work such as data entry, writing emails, designing presentations, and curating content for follow-ups, as well as high-value work items such as analyzing customer needs, personalizing communications, and fine-tuning strategies.
Lead scoring: Sales reps usually pick up leads based on recency. A smarter alternative is to use AI-based lead scoring. This approach analyzes historical wins to identify winning signals based on demographics, engagement, and deal stage.Zoho CRM's AI assistant, Zia, scores leads autonomously and surfaces the ones with the highest conversion probabilities.
Next-best action recommendation: Leads want businesses to reach out to them proactively. AI recommendation engines are adept at catching behavior signals and translating them to suitable actions to keep conversations flowing. Zia can suggest the best time and mode to contact leads it can also suggest next best actions, such as sending out an email or setting up a call or meeting, to ensure that opportunities never go cold.
Conversation intelligence: From generating insights into CRM data to drafting personalized emails and creating presentations that help sales reps sell, AI is great at producing contextual responses to voice and text-based questions. AI can also generate summaries of customer records or summarize conversations into bit-sized snippets. Advanced AI systems can apply generative capabilities to churn out insights into reports and dashboards, create workflows when you provide a list of action items and triggers, or a build you a custom module to file customer data; all you have to do is ask questions. Zoho CRM's Zia can recommend next best actions to convert customers, suggest best times and modes to reach customers, or recommend similar records for reference.
Anomaly detection: A high-value customer suddenly shifts to low-ticket purchases. A region that was performing well suddenly has no purchases. Anomaly detection helps flag sudden pattern changes and alert DRIs to prompt quick action. AI-led anomaly detection continuously scans CRM data for transaction patterns and engagement and interest levels, and surfaces records that behave unusually—all of which buys teams the time to react before the anomaly deepens.
AI agents for sales: A major portion of sales reps' time is spent doing ancillary sales work that could be off-loaded to an AI agent. Doing so affords them time to actually build relationships, establish connections, and create winning strategies. With Zoho CRM, you can build your own agents or use pre-built AI agents to handle sales operations, analyze lost deals, train human sales agents, and generate quotes.
Agents fill in critical gaps that exist in most sales teams, where tighter coordination between agents and technology is needed. Agents can give teams the ability to pursue more and bigger opportunities that wouldn't have been possible to pursue previously.
Benefits of using a CRM system
So you've decided that it's time to implement a CRM and you've even chosen your system. What now? Below are some best practices that will help you and your team implement and use your CRM successfully.
- Forrester Research: Publishes CRM adoption and ROI data. Their CRM Wave reports are widely recognized by quality raters.
- Gartner: Analyzes CRM market size and growth projections; often cited in top-ranking CRM content.
- Nucleus Research: Conducts CRM ROI studies that include often-cited ROI-per-dollar-spent figures.
- IDC: Offers CRM market data; particularly strong for enterprise CRM adoption statistics.
How much does a CRM cost?
CRM applications typically cater to businesses of various sizes and industries, from startups to large enterprises.
CRMs can cost anywhere between $12 to $300+ per user per month, depending on feature tier and the brand. Typically, when selecting a CRM, the subscription cost is the least of your worries; the actual bill often includes fees for data migration, implementation, and customization, and often involves external consultants, training and onboarding, and integrations with existing tools such as email, ERP, and accounting software—all of which results in an exorbitantly expensive piece of technology that results in poor adoption and a long ROI timeline.
The alternative is to choose a vendor that offers transparent pricing and free trials. For small businesses, even the free-tier models are sufficient in most cases.
Zoho CRM offers four tiers besides the Free edition. The forever-Free edition supports three users, 5,000 contacts, 150 emails per day, five active workflows, and seven free integrations with other free Zoho apps. The Standard edition start at $X per user per month (paid annually) and goes up to $x per user per month for the Ultimate edition. Check out Zoho CRM's pricing here.
Why do CRM implementations fail and what can be done about it?
Let's face it: A CRM application is not a magic wand that fixes all business problems. Founders and sales leaders often notice their CRM implementation fail for a variety of reasons, ranging from poor adoption to product-requirement mismatches. Popular reasons for CRM implementations to fail are as follows:
Lack of well-defined processes: Sales reps follow their own processes and track their leads in spreadsheets. Marketing and sales can never agree on the criteria for lead qualification. High-value accounts have no clear owners, and several reps manage associated contacts. Lacking a streamlined processes can derail your CRM implementation. To avoid this, first map out your sales processes and get teams to agree on key concepts. Take this information to your CRM for an easier implementation and guaranteed success.
Low user adoption: Even having a powerful CRM means little when your reps are averse to using it. CRM adoption often fails because the people who are meant to use it—your sales reps—are hardly involved in the decision-making process. Involve your teams early on while selecting your CRM; understand the difference between critical requirements and nice-to-have add-ons, and choose a CRM that works with your existing processes so that your team will actually use it to run their daily sales activities.
Hyper-customizing your CRM before increasing adoption: From a management perspective, it would be nice to have a complete CRM from day one without having to go back and customize it often, but the truth is that a successful CRM setup is a work in progress. Those custom fields, workflows, and automation rules that you set up need to evolve and adapt to suit your changing requirements. Unless your team has rock-solid processes, run your CRM on default mode for 90 days. Customize later based on needs that arise without breaking existing workflows.
Lack of accountability: A CRM can help you track sales performance metrics in real time, but it can't infuse accountability. That has to be built as part of your organizational culture. A CRM implementation can only succeed if the reps using it are accountable for their results and maintain CRM discipline.
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brands love us
Manufacturing
1200
Privately held
CIMCO previously relied on ACT! to run their sales, but soon wanted speed and scalability. They set up their sales process in Zoho CRM and not only witnessed a 20% growth in sales, but found that their systems are now so well-connected that their newfound clarity in sales leads to better productivity.
Learn moreFrequently Asked Questions
How does a CRM work?
A CRM can be molded to accommodate and work alongside your sales process. For example, let's say webpage visitors enter their details in your webform and are then created as leads in the CRM; welcome mailers are triggered and calls are scheduled for sales reps to follow up; demos are scheduled and concerned teams are notified; quotes are sent and accepted; deals are closed and reports are generated to track the entire process—throughout which, sales reps can track every interaction and deal stage movement, and get notified of changes instantly.
What are the challenges of implementing a CRM?
Common challenges in implementing a CRM are data migration issues, resistance to user adoption, insufficient planning, unclear processes, scope changes, integration with existing apps and data sources, and a lack of proper training. Overcoming these changes requires strong leadership, vendor support, clear communication, training, and obviously an adaptive mindset.
What are the different types of CRM systems?
There are four types based on usage:
Operational CRMs run day-to-day sales, marketing, and support activities, with a strong focus on automation, process efficiency, and productivity.
Analytical CRMs slice and dice through sales data to glean insights, predict deal propensity, forecast revenue, track goals against achievement, and make long- and short-term plans.
Collaborative CRMs eliminate internal silos and bring together sales, marketing, and support to collaborate effectively over customer data, understand order histories and interaction patterns, and optimize efforts to drive targeted sales.
Strategic CRMs leverage data-driven decision making and provide leadership with insights to build systems, internal processes, and customer journeys that build revenue predictability.
What are the key features of a CRM system?
A CRM should have the following key features in addition to customizability (that is, the ability to customize the CRM to fit specific business processes and needs):
Operational CRMs run day-to-day sales, marketing, and support activities, with a strong focus on automation, process efficiency, and productivity.
Analytical CRMs slice and dice through sales data to glean insights, predict deal propensity, forecast revenue, track goals against achievement, and make long- and short-term plans.
Collaborative CRMs eliminate internal silos and bring together sales, marketing, and support to collaborate effectively over customer data, understand order histories and interaction patterns, and optimize efforts to drive targeted sales.
Strategic CRMs leverage data-driven decision making and provide leadership with insights to build systems, internal processes, and customer journeys that build revenue predictability.
Can I migrate from another CRM?
Yes. Zoho supports imports from Salesforce, HubSpot, spreadsheets, and more—with tools and services to help.