CRM stands for “Customer Relationship Management” and is a software system that helps business owners easily track all communications and nurture relationships with their leads and clients. A CRM replaces the multitude of spreadsheets, databases and apps that many businesses patch together to track client data. The result: organization, efficiency, better time management, and impressed clients.
Client management platforms like CRMs connect all the data from your sales leads and customers, all in one place. A CRM consolidates all communications (form fills, calls, emails, text messages, and meetings), documents, quotes, purchases, and tasks associated with each lead and client. Your entire team can access those details at the right time–to close a sale or deliver outstanding service

What Does a CRM System Do?
Contact management is the core function of any customer information system including CRM software. The purpose of a CRM is to store and manage all data for every kind of contact, from leads to business partners.
ou might be thinking, “Ok, this sounds kind of like a spreadsheet. What does a CRM do that a spreadsheet can’t?”
Level Up with a CRM
A spreadsheet is great if you have under 100 contacts or you’re tracking only static info like name, email address, phone number, company name, website, etc. A spreadsheet can’t compete with a CRM in tracking more complex, dynamic data like what emails a contact has opened, what pages they’ve visited on your website, or their last purchase date. Your CRM is always updating automatically as your leads and customers take actions, while data in a spreadsheet becomes stale the second you stop manually adding to it.
The best CRM software shows – at a glance – how hot or cold a lead really is with lead scoring. Based on rules you set, points are added to a lead record for important actions your lead takes (like submitting a form or clicking a link) so your sales team can identify the hottest leads to focus on. Lead scoring is next to impossible without a CRM.
What a CRM Doesn’t Do
CRMs aren’t designed to help with backend operations like production, warehousing, shipping, engineering or finance.
And of course, CRM tools can't manage what they can't see. So if people work leads or deals outside the system, that lowers its effectiveness for the whole team.
Some CRM software is used for data management only. However, an all-in-one CRM system like Keap also offers important features like sales and marketing automation, landing pages, quotes, and invoicing to help entrepreneurs manage their entire businesses more efficiently.
Examples of How a CRM Platform Works
A good CRM doesn’t stop at collecting information; it helps you harness all of that data to:
- Get personal at scale, sending the right messages at the right times to leads and clients
- Focus sales teams on the hottest prospects
- Shorten the sales cycle
- Monitor, analyze, and improve results
Here’s an example of a personalized email that a consultant might send to a lead, utilizing data captured in their CRM.
A CRM absorbs as much information as possible on leads before guiding them—or helping you guide them—through a planned journey toward purchase.
For example: Suppose a real estate agent is looking to grow her contact list by offering a free educational course on home-buying basics. She runs a Facebook ad campaign, linking to a course registration page with questions about desired location, property type, price range, and timing.
Each lead’s responses will trigger different automated follow-up communications from the realtor.
A lead looking to buy a home within two months in the realtor’s service area would be tagged as a “hot lead” and enter a fast-track communication sequence.
A lead in the realtor’s area whose purchase timeframe is six months out would be tagged as “long-term nurture” and receive a series of emails offering home-buying resources, designed to keep the realtor top-of-mind until the lead is ready to buy. The CRM could also create a follow-up task to contact the lead via phone four months later.
Leads whose target purchase location is outside of the realtor’s area will be tagged as such and will only receive communications related to the course.
As you can see, there are many benefits of CRM software. Two business functions that benefit most from CRM software are sales and marketing. Let’s see how.
How Does CRM Make Sales and Marketing Easier?
A CRM platform amplifies your sales and marketing, without building huge teams or blowing your advertising budget. If your CRM is coupled with sales and marketing automation (like Keap), you can create a sales and marketing engine that takes sales to a whole new level.
Sales
Sales CRM software streamlines the entire sales process with improved visibility, prioritization, and follow-up.
Greater Visibility
A CRM provides the visibility that your sales team needs to be most effective. Having all lead and customer data in one place facilitates easy handoffs between teammates if the account owner changes–everything about an individual or company is documented and accessible.
As a sales rep, you can see exactly what a lead has done, which allows you to personalize your conversation and encourage the appropriate next step. For example, you see that a lead has watched your overview video and checked out your case studies. When you speak with them, you can encourage them to sign up for a webinar or consultation to learn more.
CRM systems, in conjunction with VoIP telephone systems, improve visibility for inbound calls, too. When a lead calls a sales rep, their phone number is recognized and their record appears on the sales rep's computer screen instantly.
Greater visibility is also available to sales management through a CRM. A sales manager can easily track individual sales rep activities and performance as well as monitor the entire sales pipeline.
Clear Prioritization
A CRM helps the sales team prioritize their outreach efforts through lead scoring, which calculates a lead’s interest in your product or service. Leads with the highest lead scores are pushed to the top of the sales team’s tasks.
Your CRM can also prioritize outreach to customers. Records with approaching contract renewal dates and customers who are likely to be interested in a new product can be flagged for sales team follow-up.
Better Follow-Up
Amazing follow-up (and more sales) is made possible with a CRM. By automating follow-up with leads and clients, you no longer have to manage sticky notes on your desk or copy and paste the same email to every new lead. Your system initiates follow-up at the right times, creating a consistent customer journey and converting more leads into clients.
Marketing
CRM in marketing is often game-changing, as it offers powerful insights, personalization, and testing opportunities that ultimately lead to increased sales.
Insights
With data consolidated in a CRM, it’s possible to analyze patterns and find insights that lead to greater profitability. For example, a business can evaluate what characteristics are common in their ideal customers with the largest lifetime value. This allows you to spend your advertising dollars more efficiently and prevent budget going to leads that likely won’t be interested in your product or service.
Insights from your data can also help you increase revenue. For example, if you identify common purchase combinations, you can create packages or bundles to increase sales. Similarly, your data can tell you when customers are most likely to repurchase. You can plan follow-ups and offers to align with likely repurchase timing.
Segmentation/Personalization
CRM makes sending the right message to the right person at the right time a reality. With your CRM connected to a sales and marketing automation tool, you can send emails and text messages based on a customer’s recent actions.
Let’s say a lead who hasn’t engaged recently just clicked a link in an email you sent announcing a special promotion. You might want to tag that lead as “re-engaged,” follow up with an email containing a compelling customer story, and create a task for a sales rep to call them.
Thanks