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CRM systems can provide many benefits, but not every business needs one. We’ve listed 7 factors to help you decide if you need a CRM.
How To Identify If A CRM Is Right For Your Business
Your business and customer bases are expanding, and you’ve started to research how to improve your customer's journey and manage your sales. It’s likely you’ve noticed the acronym CRM mentioned frequently. Simply put, CRM, or Customer Relationship Management, refers to business software that tracks your interactions with your sales prospects and customers.
The right CRM system can power up your business like nothing else. When implemented properly, a CRM will store and manage your customer and prospect data, tracking your interactions and helping you win more customers by boosting your sales team’s ability to close deals, improving your support team’s customer service, and automating your marketing. Therefore saving your time, resources, and money.
But does your business need one? CRM systems generally can come with a hefty price tag - is a CRM system worth the investment? Here are our top pointers to identify if your business could benefit from CRM software.
1. You Can’t Remember Every Prospect
The first sign that you need a CRM may well be when you are handling more prospects than you can remember. If you are forgetting to follow up and losing your leads to your competitors then it’s time to take action.
Using a CRM, when you add a new lead to your sales cycle, you will start to build a timeline of your interactions with them, creating a full history of your relationship. At the same time, a CRM system lets you make notes, and set follow tasks and reminders for each prospect so nothing gets forgotten.
2. Your Prospects Have Multiple Points of Contact
If your prospects and customers are talking to multiple people within your organisation, it can be easy to lose track of what’s been communicated over the period of the sales cycle. It can also happen that someone has taken a message and not passed it on to the person dealing with that account.
A CRM system will provide a documented history of all your interactions with them, showing who has said what and when. And using a cloud-based CRM will mean all your team can actively collaborate in real-time, recording messages to the account and setting follow-up tasks for colleagues, even when working remotely.
3. You’re Operating B2B
All the major CRM products are built to a B2B data model with Contacts (the individual people) belonging to Accounts (the companies you do business with). You can use B2B CRM systems, like Hubspot, for B2C (business to consumer) but it isn’t ideal, and you might be better off with a simple contact management system instead such as Active Campaign. If your business operates in a mixed environment of both B2B and B2C, the compromises still make a CRM system worth the investment to cover all your bases.
4. You’re Acting On Instinct
The visibility of data is just as important as collecting it. Rather than relying on gut-feel, a CRM provides the data you need to make your business decisions. If you want to run sales forecasts or review your sales, marketing, or other businesses activities, then a CRM system will give you what you need.
From the probability that a sale will close to the number of customers who clicked on your latest newsletter links, a CRM can pull all your data into a report for easy analysis.
5. You’re Managing Sales People
If you have salespeople, then you’ll want to make sure the details of their prospects are under your control. This means you can monitor what they are doing and make sure, should they leave your organisation, their sales pipeline doesn’t leave with them. Not only that, a CRM system will show you how they are performing and the value of customers they are bringing to your business.
6. You Have a Lengthy Sale Cycle
A lengthy sales cycle could last for many months. Therefore, it’s likely you won’t remember where each prospect is in the sales pipeline, and what happened in the last call. If this is the case, a CRM system is needed to easily pull up your history with the customer and continue where you left off.
Also, if you have personnel changes during the process you are not left trying to decipher what has gone before. A CRM system simplifies the BOFU, MOFU & TOFU stages of a prospect.
7. You’re Running Marketing Campaigns
If you are running PPC campaigns or email marketing campaigns to either send out simple newsletters or to do more sophisticated segmented marketing, then a CRM system brings many benefits. Ideally, select a CRM that has an integrated marketing tool so all your data is held in one place. Then, when you look at a prospect in the CRM you can see if and how they responded to your mailings.
You Don’t Need a CRM System If:
However, there are instances where a CRM system won’t fit your business. A few examples of this are:
- You’re a one man/woman band. If this is the case, you don’t have to manage sales staff or their activities.
- You only get a small number of leads a week. With fewer leads, comes less to remember!
- You only have a few large customers who you can manage easily. If you only have a few key customers, then it's much easier to manage them and a CRM system might not be necessary.
- Your sales cycle is short with no repeat business. If you’re not receiving repeat business, then you don’t need to record customer histories.
In Summary:
To benefit from CRM software, you and your team need to use it regularly and keep it up to date, otherwise, it will fall into disuse and its demise will be self-fulfilling.
A CRM system will be of no use if you are not organised. A CRM system will help you to be organised, but it can’t organise you itself. However, if you implement and use a CRM system properly, it can become a sustainable and scalable tool for your business’s long-term growth.
Sources: Hubspot, Active Campaign, Giphy, RSM