November 15, 2024

Small-Business Guide: Owners Assess Customer-Relationship Software

“They were way too complicated for us and did not have a great user interface,” she said. “I need to spend time running my business, not figuring out technology.”

That is the lament of many small-business owners trying to navigate the world of C.R.M. software, which automates sales and marketing functions and acts as a central database, keeping track of everyone who comes in contact with a business. The software enables businesses to communicate quickly and frequently with customers and keep track of their preferences and needs. For example, it automates tasks like sending out shipping confirmation e-mails and surveying customer satisfaction.

Small businesses generally do not need all the bells and whistles many advanced C.R.M. systems offer; instead, they need a program they can put in place quickly and easily, without the help of an information technology department. Many small businesses began using C.R.M. platforms in greater numbers about five years ago, said Amy Larrimore, managing partner at the Empire Builders Group, a technology consulting firm in Philadelphia.

“Technology makes it easier and cheaper to accomplish things,” she said. “And sales and marketing is traditionally a very labor- and cost-intensive part of a business.”

More recently, the platforms have become cheaper and easier to use, making them more of a crucial buy. With so many options available, we asked some small-business owners to tell us about their experiences.

FOR MICROBUSINESSES “Very small companies usually just need something to manage contacts,” said Ms. Larrimore. Her own firm used Batchbook until it reached 17 staff members, then it switched to Sugar C.R.M.

Taylor Aldredge, who heads branding and marketing for Grasshopper, a company in Needham, Mass., that offers a virtual phone system for small businesses, uses Buzzstream, software that helps manage social media marketing campaigns. It costs the company $40 a month for each of three users.

Mr. Aldredge wanted a way to track conversations with prospects, customers, journalists and bloggers. “I needed something that had the ability to track interactions and mentions — whether that is social media, links or press — to see which conversations were worth pursuing,” he said. The company’s customer base has grown 500 percent over the last five years.

Thanx, a San Francisco start-up that offers retail loyalty programs with rewards linked to a customer’s credit card, started with Salesforce. The service had many useful features, said Zach Goldstein, founder and chief executive of the nine-employee company, but needed “a huge amount of customization.” Mr. Goldstein could not afford to hire a consultant and felt frustrated that the system was not being used properly.

In December, he switched to Close.io, a platform that lets Thanx sales representatives make calls by clicking on a page representing a lead, without leaving the application or having to use the phone. It also sends and receives e-mails. “We started using it the day after we installed it,” he said. Thanx tested Close.io free as an early test user and now has five employees on its Lite plan, which costs $59 a month for each user.

FOR MOST SMALL BUSINESSES Scott Gerber, founder of the Young Entrepreneur Council, an invitation-only professional organization for entrepreneurs under 40, has been using C.R.M. software from Infusionsoft for about a year. The organization offers a mentoring program, and Mr. Gerber uses the software to track those who are being mentored as they go through the program and to send them specific learning materials.

“It’s easy to customize content and create the right tracks for where that content needs to go,” said Mr. Gerber, who added that the software had increased his organization’s productivity. “If I have 50 people I e-mail today and want to follow up in a week, I can send a personalized communication by writing the copy once, adding in the variables, and it will be sent out at the exact time I need to the designee of my choice.”

“Within two quarters of using it, we had 10 times the revenue per month,” Mr. Gerber said.

Derek Christian, owner and chief executive of My Maid Service, with 37 employees in its Cincinnati and Dallas offices and about $2 million in revenue, also began using Infusionsoft a year ago. Mr. Christian paid $1,200 upfront along with a $200 a month licensing fee.

He praised the company’s tech support, and also liked the drag-and-drop interface and the ability to build a customized e-mail marketing campaign. Before employing C.R.M. software, he said, a third of his company’s leads were converted to regular customers; now, he said, conversions are up to 40 percent.

Shelly K. Winson, owner of True Choice Benefits, an independent health insurance agency in Chandler, Ariz., uses Sage ACT!, a C.R.M. system owned by Swiftpage. The software is loaded onto two computers in the office and Ms. Winson pays $300 per user. It has helped increase her database of current and potential clients to 5,500 since she started in 2009. She can segment her audience for marketing purposes, and she believes the system has improved her customer service.

NOT QUITE ENTERPRISE LEVEL Enterprise C.R.M. systems, like those from SAP or Oracle, can take years, millions of dollars and a parade of consultants to put in place, but they include powerful features. Yet some enterprise-level features are available in nonenterprise systems like Salesforce, Microsoft Dynamics and a few newer platforms.

Mike Wolfe, president of WAM Enterprises, a digital marketing firm in Katonah, N.Y., uses Salesforce. His five-employee firm specializes in generating leads using social media, search-engine optimization and e-mail campaigns. Although some small-business owners say Salesforce is too complex for them, Mr. Wolfe likes the basic edition, Contact Manager, and pays $300 a year ($5 a user each month).

He said he especially liked the mobile app. “With the app, if a client needs to reach us and we weren’t planning on it that day, there’s no reason for anyone on our team to say they didn’t have the information they needed to call back,” he said.

Benjamin L. Luftman, a partner and co-founder of Luftman, Heck Associates, a law firm in Columbus, Ohio, that has 30 employees and four offices, likes the AppExchange, an online market where vendors sell a variety of business applications that can be integrated with Salesforce. Mr. Luftman uses Salesforce’s Enterprise edition, which costs $125 per user each month, with the Conga Composer app to create packets of forms needed by the courts for each client.

“I hit one button and all the fields in these forms are populated with that client’s information,” he said.

Acumen Learning, a training company in Orem, Utah, with 18 employees and $5 million in revenue, uses Insightly because it is flexible, said the company’s marketing director, Mike Wright.

“Big business C.R.M. systems tend to dictate your processes — how you will prospect someone and get them in the system,” he said. With Insightly, Mr. Wright said he can design and modify the processes his company uses. “We wanted to add two additional steps to our sales process, and it was changed overnight,” he said. He uses Insightly’s Advanced package, which costs $49 a month.

At RemoteStylist, Ms. Fallis is now using Capsule and paying $12 a user. She said it integrates easily with other applications, and she can customize data fields and segment customers for marketing initiatives.

“And Capsule’s support team is very responsive,” Ms. Fallis said. “I can’t sit back and wait for an answer when my whole operation is on hold.” 

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/04/business/smallbusiness/owners-assess-customer-relationship-software.html?partner=rss&emc=rss