CRM Cloud Software Review (May 2012)

 

In September 2011, I evaluated CRM systems for a contemporary art gallery.  It was a fantastic opportunity to look generally at the CRM market place and consider what CRM system I should have in place for my own marketing consultancy business.

At the outset I had a number of requirements in mind including: the security of data (based on the supplier assurances and, for US suppliers, the Safe Harbor scheme); lists; custom fields; bulk email; online data capture; mobile access; back ups; auto-updates and fundraising capability.  I also wanted to look for a system that would allow a bulk update of existing records using external analysis – such as exporting your data for Mosaic matching, or Suppression matching and being able to update the respective records on bulk within the system.

My top four cloud CRM systems for a small business or an arts organisation that doesn’t need a ticketing system are:

1.      Capsule CRM, £8 per user per month (full review)

In a nutshell:  Growing UK Based company offering a simple budget solution

2.      Sugar CRM, five users (minimum level) for $1800 per year (around £1200 at current exchange rate)

In a nutshell: good functionality and friendly customer service

3.      Sales Force Professional Edition, £45 per user per month

In a nutshell: The market leader for cloud based CRM systems

4.      Zoho CRM, free for up to 3 users, or $12 per user per month

In a nutshell: Popular free/budget solution with a few notable restrictions

Comparison

Overall, I was surprised not to find a cloud CRM system with high quality emarketing functionality included – it would easily be possible for many of the leading email providers to be an ‘all in one’ CRM solution by extending their functionality slightly to include the possibility of postal lists and expand the contact data fields.  For many small businesses with fairly basic CRM requirements, an alternative would be to select an emarketing provider with good contact data fields and use the system for their postal mailings as well.

I concentrated on those products marketing themselves as CRM systems as I knew that my client required more than basic contact data functionality.  During my reviews, I took out a license with all four systems and tried to do basic data imports and some of the typical day to day tasks I knew that my clients would use.  A quick summary of my comparisons are here:

System

Max Records & Notes

Data Secure

Lists

Custom Fields

Bulk Email

Capture Data online

Mobile Access

Back Up Data

Auto-update existing records

Fundraising

Pricing

(correct at time of research)

Capsule CRM

Up to 50K contacts

Yes

Yes

Yes

No but integrates with Mail Chimp

Yes through plugin

Yes

Yes easy under settings

Not with external data

Yes ‘sales pipeline’ tool

Pay as you go - £8/month /user

Sugar CRM

Unlimited records

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes for Android & Iphone

Doesn’t look easy

Further research required

Yes lots of functionality

$360/user/year.  Not available as monthly billing.  Minimum of five users – so $1800 for first year.

Sales Force

1GB per org

Yes

Yes

Yes

Limited to 1000 sends per day

Mailchimp integration with Professional.

Yes

Yes

With Enterprise level

Yes

See links

Prof: £45/user/month

Enterprise:£85/user/ month

Non Profit Package looks well worth investigation

Zoho CRM

Up to 100K contacts on free version

Yes

Max of 2000 per list

Yes

Limited to 250 emails per day

One way import to mailchimp

Yes

Yes

$10 per request to export all data

Yes

Yes ’sales’ tabs that could be used

Free for up to 3 users.

Pay as you go Professional edition: $12 /User /Month

Enterprise: $25 /user / month

What system did I select?

For both my own business, and my art gallery client, I selected Capsule CRM.  My choice was largely based on the trial I took out with each system –  Capsule CRM was by far the most intuitive system with lots of lovely features.  For clients who have previously been using Excel or address books, it’s not a difficult transition which is a big plus.

Interested in a full review of each system?

We’ve written a fuller review of Capsule CRM.  We’ll be writing fuller reviews of the other CRM systems soon… watch this space!

One Comment

  1. Nice comparison. I think the interface is one of the most important features, having an intuitive interface can get people on board with using CRM software much faster, and you’ll never get the full potential from your software if your team aren’t on board with it.

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