Insightly Named A Top Rated CRM Platform for Enterprises and Small Businesses by Software Users on TrustRadius

Ranking Based on 480+ in-depth reviews and user ratings

We are happy to announce that Insightly was named a top-rated CRM platform by enterprise and small business users on TrustRadius, a leading peer review site for business software. We are very grateful to our customers who took the time to submit their high reviews and provide their opinions on Insightly.

TrustRadius Top Rated CRM Badge

Reviewers pointed out that Insightly is affordable and is easy to set up and use. Insightly’s task management features, customization, and integrations with a variety of software are all listed as reasons to use our CRM.

We believe that the movement of Insightly into the enterprise-level ratings is an indication that our responsiveness to customers’ needs is helping us add all the right features at the right time, allowing our CRM to grow as our customers’ businesses do.

Insightly is one of the top 12 CRM platforms listed in TrustRadius’ Buyers Guide to CRM Software, an in-depth guide to help stakeholders understand the benefits of CRM and compare available products to make the right purchase decision for their business.

You can download a free copy of the report here:
https://www.trustradius.com/guides/crm

 

Insightly offers an easy 14-day free trial, so you can give our CRM a try.

Free-trial-button
 
About the author: Tony Roma is Insightly’s Content Manager. He’s been helping businesses implement software solutions and improve their work processes for over ten years.

The Best CRM Client

Meet Joe. The Best CRM Client Ever.

Every year, about five to ten times a year, I get the same call.

“Yeah,” the voice says to me on the phone. “I’m Joe. I’m a sales manager. And I need a CRM system.”

“OK,” I say. Time to ask some questions. Except before I do, Joe keeps going.

“I just switched jobs. At my last job I used a CRM system called XYZ. I understand you guys sell that, too. I’m not saying XYZ is the greatest, but I’m happy with it. So I want you to come out to my new place and set it up for me. I want it to look exactly like the system at my last job. I want you to teach my guys how to use it.”

Gold medal

“OK,” I say. So far so good.

“Except there’s just one thing,” the guy says.

Uh-oh, I think. Here it comes.

“I need you to make sure you’ve set up three reports for me. I need these reports to do my job. You set up the system and set up the reports and teach my guys just to do the data entry and the rest will be up to me.”

“When can I start?” I say. I love my wife, but I want to kiss Joe.

Because I love Joe, too. I love when I get these calls. Joe, a sales manager, knows exactly what’s needed from a CRM system for it to be useful. He’s not a technical guy. But when I get calls like this I know from the start that he will be successful with his CRM system. That’s because he understands four core things about CRM systems.

For starters, CRM systems are nothing more than databases. With all due respect to the great CRM vendors and software out there, Joe knows this. The fact that these databases can now be hosted and maintained online only makes them that much more available and easier to use. But putting aside all of the buzzwords and features—opportunity management, campaigns, workflows, alerts, and social integration—in the end, the data is just stored in a database. Joe knows that he needs a good, reliable repository of data to run his organization and wants to be sure that it’s configured the right way and his people are trained to get the data in accurately.

He also knows the 20% rule. Joe is a sales manager. And like all workers in today’s organizations he uses software: word processing, spreadsheets, online applications. But he also knows that he doesn’t use all the capabilities of all the software applications available to him. Who does? The same goes for CRM applications. My best clients, like Joe, use maybe 20-30% of what their CRM applications do. There are entire areas that they don’t even touch. But that’s OK. No one has to be 100% good at everything. Joe and other sales managers like him focus on those aspects of the software that help their teams the most and don’t get caught up in features or functions that have no value for them.

He’s very direct: Use it or don’t work here. Joe and sales managers like him are brutally frank. He tells his team that the CRM is not about them. It’s his system. It’s the company’s system. He will do his best to employ experts (like me) to make it as user-friendly as possible and provide as much training as needed. “But in the end,” he says to them. “I need the information from this system to manage this group. I need it to do my job. And you’re going to have to get that data in there if you want to do your job.” No wimps here! That’s what it’s like to run a sales team in 2015. Good sales managers need data. They are sympathetic to their employees, but they don’t bow down to them.

Finally, it’s all about the reports. Joe wants his reports. He lives by his reports. He is a manager. And managers need accurate, complete reports to help them manage their teams, their organizations, and their businesses. A CRM system is completely useless unless good data is coming out of it, routinely, consistently, and accurately. Joe knows that to be a good manager, you have to be a data-driven manager. And that is the core function of his CRM system. What reports does he like the most? Stay tuned….

So thank God for Joe. He knows what he wants. He’s asked for very black-and-white deliverables. He’s all about the data, all about the reports. He values his CRM system as a tool to help him get his job done, not some miracle technology that will change his life. I wish every one of my CRM clients was as focused and pragmatic as he is.
 

Check out Insightly’s features for managing your sales process and collaborating with your team by registering for our 14-day trial.

Free-trial-button
 
About the Author: Gene Marks is a small business owner, technology expert, author and columnist. He writes regularly for leading US media outlets such as The New York Times, Forbes, Inc. Magazine and Entrepreneur. He has authored five books on business management and appears regularly on Fox News, Fox Business, MSNBC and CNBC. Gene runs a ten-person CRM and technology consulting firm outside of Philadelphia. Learn more at genemarks.com
 
Image courtesy of khunaspix at FreeDigitalPhotos.net.

Manage Your Finances and Make Tax Time Easier

Turn It Up Tuesday: Tips from Insightly to Take Your Business to 11

Welcome to Turn It Up Tuesday, where we bring you 3 weekly tips—a tip on using Insightly CRM, a tip on running your business, and a tip on improving your life. April 15 is tax day here in the U.S., so today’s tips focus on keeping your accounting in order to make tax time less stressful. Enjoy!

tips on tuesday logo 198x194

tip-for-insightly 60x58

Connect Insightly to QuickBooks Online

Wouldn’t it be great to view your customers’ payments and invoices right in their CRM records? If you’re using QuickBooks Online (QBO) and subscribe to an Insightly paid plan, you can connect the two to do just that. By activating the Insightly-QBO integration, you’ll see the current payment status and balance for each record you link to a QBO record. Any user who can view the record will also see the QuickBooks icon and be able to see that information. And if you need to take action in QBO, you can jump right over with a click or two if you have a QuickBooks login. Easy information, easy access!
 
QBO-Contact-Show-menu
tip-for-biz 60x58

Keep Good Records to Make Tax Time Easier

Tax preparation is an often-procrastinated task. As with most large and looming duties, it can be managed more effectively if you keep good records throughout the year. Talk with your accountant or a tax advisor about what you need to keep and file those items away as they happen. Starting a filing system for receipts can seem like a huge task, but there are many apps and online options to help, and the time you put into it will pay off in reduced stress and easier management at tax time.
 
Clock image
tip-for-life 61x58

Tax Day, Don’t Delay!

There are millions of Americans who pay penalties and interest for late tax filings every year. Since tax day comes around regularly, that says a lot about the human tendency toward procrastination. If you can, bite the bullet and be ready to file on tax day, otherwise you’re delaying your payments and making that intimidating bill even more costly. Your local and national government is likely to have plenty of information available online and might even be able to answer questions to diminish your anxiety about the whole process. If you’re still having trouble with it all, look into other resources like local organizations or friends and family who can guide you. Need some motivation? Think about the relief you’ll feel when it’s done and behind you!

 

Send Us Your Tips

Would you like to share your tips with other Insightly customers? Send them to us!
If we use one in our weekly feature we’ll send you a $10 Amazon Gift Card!

Contact us on Facebook, Twitter, Google+, or send us an email.

And if you haven’t tried the best CRM around, check out Insightly’s features and sign up for a free trial.

Free-trial-button
About the author: Tony Roma is Insightly’s Content Manager. He’s been helping businesses implement software solutions and improve their work processes for over ten years.

Image courtesy of hywards at FreeDigitalPhotos.net.

Guest Post: Avoiding Obvious Mistakes – Project Management Tips from the Trenches

Project management meeting image

Competent and proactive project management is a major aspect of any company’s overall success – if you can’t deliver for your clients or yourselves on time and on budget, then the only way is down. Managing your projects in a controlled way will ensure that they are able to be completed in a timely fashion and that key stakeholders know exactly where they stand and what to expect throughout the process.

Problems will occur anyway – sometimes things just happen, and even the best-laid plans can’t do anything to prevent them. However, you can limit the likelihood of things happening by learning from mistakes made previously, whether they were made by you, someone at your company or someone you don’t know at all.

Here are four tips from the trenches, stemming from mistakes that have been made in the past. Keep these points in mind when planning any project and you’ll go a long way towards ensuring its success.

Decide upon and freeze expected outcomes

In 1997, EDS and SHL Systemhouse began work on a Canadian firearms registration system, a project which was only expected to cost $2 million once $117 million had been offset by licensing fees. Unfortunately, over a thousand changes in the first two years of operation were demanded by gun lobbyists and other groups, work which hadn’t been specified in the original contract. The government had to pay for this extra work, with costs standing at nearly $700 million by 2001, when the system was costing an additional $75 million to run annually.

The lesson here is to set the deliverables of the project before work has started and ensure that all stakeholders are aware of what they are. They should then be frozen and everyone should be aware that no further changes or expectations can be made – the project will deliver what has already been decided upon. This will prevent overspending and time delays as accommodations for new deliverables are made.

Consider long-term effects in the planning stage

The Y2K crisis occurred in the late 1990s when it was realised that digital legacy software would not be able to distinguish between the year 2000 and the year 1900 due to only being able to differentiate between years based on the last two digits of them (2000 and 1900 obviously both end in 00, which is where the problems arose). The designers of the original software systems had not foreseen the problem and it was feared that the millennium would destroy infrastructure and telecommunications across the globe.

Eventually, vast amounts of money were spent on updating the software systems and very little of note occurred, but the crisis demonstrates the effects of a lack of forward planning and no consideration for the long-term effects of one’s actions. When planning any project, think about how the project and its processes might affect things in the future or for other departments and try to come up with alternative ways of doing something if you think it might be problematic in any way.

Try not to trial new processes

The redevelopment of Wembley Stadium was heralded as a much-needed boost for English football, but the project was ultimately completed four years late (2007 rather than 2003) at a total cost of around £1 billion. There were a number of reasons for this, some unpredictable, but one issue that could have been avoided was the construction of the stadium’s now-iconic arch which stands above the pitch. It was justified as a design feature, despite having never been built by anyone, because it was load-bearing and would minimise the need for internal, potentially view-obscuring support posts inside the ground.

Projects that have formal budgets and deadlines are not the places to be trying out new things that have never been done before. It was inevitable that delays would occur because of the prototype arch design and, coupled with other problems throughout the construction process, it ensured that the project was completed late and over budget. While you might have new ideas for project processes, try not to experiment too much (if at all) with the way things are done unless it is clear that they are not working as they are.

Avoid micromanagement

While the pressure of being a project manager can be immense, micromanagement doesn’t help your team or the project. You need to trust the team to complete the tasks they are assigned by the deadlines specified – if they don’t, then you can hold them accountable, but you should do what you can to help them if they run into problems.

Insightly CRM helps you assign and monitor tasks, manage your projects, and keep track of every contact who is involved. Register for a 14-day free trial to see if it’s the right CRM software for you.

Free-trial-button

Darren-LeyAbout the Author: Darren Ley is an L&D Consultant at Thales Learning & Development in the U.K. He began his career in research and development and project management, eventually making the natural switch to training and development with Thales, for whom he delivers accredited and non-accredited project management training.

Darren is a regular contributor to Enhance – The Magazine for Learning and Development.

Make Every Business Call Count – Phone Tips from Insightly

Welcome to Turn It Up Tuesday, where we bring you 3 weekly tips—a tip on using Insightly, a tip on running your business, and a tip on improving your life. Enjoy this week’s phone tips!

tips on tuesday logo 198x194

tip-for-insightly 60x58

Optimize Contact Numbers for Your Mobile Phone

If you’re using either of Insightly’s mobile apps for Android or iOS, you can include dialing codes when you enter a phone number in Insightly and make dialing easier from your mobile phone. For example, phone numbers with extensions or phone trees will require a pause between the dialed phone number and the option number or telephone extension. Most mobile phones allow you to include a comma (,) to allow for a 2-3 second pause and a semicolon (;) to wait for your okay to continue.
 
When entering the phone number into Insightly, you can include these characters directly in the phone number string (for example, “1-800-555-7662,101”). Anytime you dial a contact from one of our mobile apps, the pause and extension will then be dialed for you with no additional steps required!
tip-for-biz 60x58

Common Sense Phone Etiquette is Good for Business

Communicating with your prospects or customers over the telephone always requires knowledge about your products or services to effectively make a sale or resolve a problem. But the way you communicate is just as important as the information you’re sharing. Your greeting influences your initial impression, so err on the side of formality as you identify yourself and your business. Smile while you’re on a call to help you maintain a friendly tone—you can even install a small mirror on your desk as a reminder. Phone calls are like any other conversation, so listening carefully will go a long way toward understanding the customer’s needs and addressing them properly. Keeping these basic practices in mind will help your customers feel welcome and respected.
Yelling is an example of poor phone etiquette
Callers can’t smell your breath, but they can tell if you’re not smiling.
tip-for-life 61x58

Protect Your Smartphone

Today’s $600 smartphones hold exponentially more information than a computer from the 1970’s that cost $2,638. With all the apps, contacts, and communications available, the data on your phone is certainly more valuable, too, so it’s important to protect it from unauthorized access. Setting up a PIN or password is a simple step that will help keep your personal information safe. When you change phones or upgrade, restoring the factory settings on your old phone will wipe out your own information before you sell it or trade it in. The FCC Smartphone Security Checker can provide you with specific steps to secure your brand of phone as well as other links to help you better understand mobile security.

 

Send Us Your Tips

Would you like to share your tips with other Insightly customers? Send them to us!
If we use one in our weekly feature we’ll send you a $10 Amazon Gift Card!

Contact us on Facebook, Twitter, Google+, or send us an email.

And if you haven’t tried the best CRM around, check out Insightly’s features and sign up for a free trial.

Free-trial-button
About the author: Tony Roma is Insightly’s Content Manager. He’s been helping businesses implement software solutions and improve their work processes for over ten years.

Image courtesy of imagerymajestic at FreeDigitalPhotos.net.

Insightly Launches a Monthly #LoveYourCRM Twitter Chat!

The best online CRM has the best customers in the business and we want to help you connect!
Twitter chats provide a forum to both follow and participate in a question-and-answer session on Twitter, and Insightly’s first #LoveYourCRM Twitter chat will take place on Wednesday, April 1, 2015 at noon, eastern time. (Nope, this is not an April Fools’ Day joke!)

With the #LoveYourCRM chat, Insightly will bring together business owners to share success stories, best practices, and tips for using CRM. The focus will be on the creative and innovative ways that companies are using CRM to improve productivity and efficiency across the organization. Each month, we’ll feature a different guest to share his or her story and then everyone else is invited to share ideas and ask questions.

Our first chat will be with marketing expert and CEO of Flight Media Joshua Coffy, and will focus on how he has implemented CRM to improve organization and significantly increase revenue.

Twitter_icon_speaks_Insightly

If you can make it, we’d love to see you participate in our CRM Twitter chat and hear your feedback afterwards. With your contribution, we can make this an informative and valuable experience for all participants!

To learn more about how to join a Twitter chat, see Janet Fouts’ great article, How to Participate in a Tweet Chat.

Guest Post: 10 Tips for Maximizing Your CRM Software

Excellent customer relationship management (CRM) has always been important, but it has gotten even more so over the past few years. Today, your customers have many choices of goods and service providers, and many avenues for finding and spreading information about your products and your company (for example, social media). CRM is a growing industry, especially as more tech companies are getting into the game and producing more sophisticated CRM software products with an ever-growing list of functions and features.

But as the field expands and more tools become available, too many businesses are focusing so narrowly on the management aspect that they are losing track of what is at the heart of customer relationship management: relationships with customers. The secret to excellent CRM is really just excellent customer relationships. CRM software can automate and streamline the management part of the process so that you and your employees can concentrate on what’s really important.

Handshake-V2
Image courtesy of FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Here are 10 tips for how to use CRM software to build and improve customer relationships. Sign up for a free 14-day trial of Insightly to put these tips into action.

    1. Track everything
      CRM software is commonly used to house contact information and to track contact history, sales history, and so on. But real customer relationships are based on more than just who bought what and when. Use your system to also track personal information about your customers, such as their birthdays, hobbies and interests, and so on—anything that might give you further insight into your customers as individuals. You can consider conducting an online survey to obtain information that falls outside of your sales process.
    2. Identify your top customers
      All of your customers are important, and they all deserve excellent customer service. But remember the Pareto principle (aka the 80:20 rule): 80% of your profits come from 20% of your customers. CRM software provides analytical tools that can help you identify that vital 20%. It can also help you identify the 20% of customers who are taking up 80% of your agents’ time—they likely aren’t the same 20%! Using this information, you can better manage workflow and allocate resources to make sure that your top customers are getting the very best service from your organization.
    3. Schedule regular customer contacts
      Use your CRM system to make sure no customers get left behind. As you no doubt know, keeping your existing customers is far more profitable over the long term than constantly having to search for new ones. Make your customers feel valued by scheduling regular contacts including thank-yous, service follow-ups, and other check-ins.
    4. Contact customers using their preferred channels
      Some customers like email, others engage with your company primarily via Twitter, and still others prefer the good old fashioned phone call. Knowing how your customers prefer to interact, and respecting their preferences, makes them feel valued by your organization. Not only that, but many customers often ignore messages that don’t come in via their preferred channels.
    5. Respond more quickly to customer questions and complaints
      These days, if it takes you longer than a few hours to acknowledge a customer’s question or complaint, chances are it’s too late—that customer has probably already posted something on Facebook, Twitter, or Yelp about your poor customer service. CRM software can help you monitor the social networks for problems. Since all of the customer’s data is housed within the software, it can also help you respond to that problem as fast as possible, which will leave your customers with a good impression. It doesn’t take very many bad reviews to irreparably damage your reputation. The flip side is that positive reviews and referrals can quickly bring you new customers.
    6. Provide offsite access to customer information
      Your employees don’t interact with customers only when they’re sitting at their desk. They may also have contact with them during on-site sales pitches, at trade shows, and (for sales reps) even on their mobile phones during off-hours. In today’s instant gratification world, customers certainly don’t want to wait until your employees can get back to their computers to have their questions answered and issues resolved. CRM software that supports remote and mobile access puts relevant information at your employees’ fingertips so that customers always receive the same high-quality service, regardless of whether they are calling in to the help line or talking with your company’s representatives at an industry event.
    7. Make sure your CRM system is fully integrated
      Most CRM software can be integrated with other data tracking systems, and they should be. Full integration allows each employee who deals with a specific account to have a complete picture of the customer and the customer’s history with the organization. For example, this knowledge can come in handy when identifying untapped sales opportunities and when dealing with questions and complaints—customers don’t want to have to explain their problem more than once.
    8. Offer a more consistent, streamlined experience
      What is the typical process by which customers interact with your company? Do you have certain salespeople and customer service agents assigned to each account, or do your customer interactions operate on more of a first come, first serve basis? Customer relationships don’t move down a one-way street—many clients prefer to deal with the same employees each time because they feel those employees best understand their particular requirements. CRM software allows managers to delegate tasks and manage workflow in a way that provides customers with a more consistent, streamlined experience every time they contact the company.
    9. Identify upselling opportunities
      The more you know about your current customers, the more you will be able to make recommendations about additional products and services to meet their needs. You might even help them identify needs they didn’t know they had and that your products can solve. CRM software gives you the ability not only to get to know your customers on a more personal level, but also to analyze their buying patterns so you can get the most benefit out of your sales opportunities with each and every customer.
    10. Personalize your marketing campaigns
      One of the most powerful, and most underused, functions of CRM software is the ability to target marketing campaigns to specific customers. By combining data about customers’ purchases with information about the customers themselves, you can develop personalized marketing campaigns that have a much greater rate of return than campaigns that take a shotgun approach.

 

Insightly includes features to help you implement all of Sameer’s tips. Register for a 14-day free trial to see if it’s the right CRM software for you.

Free-trial-button

About the Author: Sameer Bhatia is founder & CEO of ProProfs, a leading provider of online learning tools for building, testing, and applying knowledge. ProProfs Knowledge Base Software is used to create highly-searchable online FAQ’s to improve customer service and reduce tickets. It helps centralize access to organizational files, documents and how-to articles ensuring they can be accessed across multiple devices and platforms.

Sameer founded ProProfs based on the vision that knowledge should be freely available to people from all walks of life. The site hosts 1,000,000+ pieces of content in 90+ languages, and is a leading platform for online training and assessment with the world’s largest library of professional tests & quizzes. He has a Master’s degree in Computer Science from the University of Southern California and is an ed-tech industry veteran. You can find him on Google+ & Twitter.

With Focus and a Smile, You Can Keep Moving Forward

Turn It Up Tuesday: Tips from Insightly to Take Your Business to 11

Welcome to Turn It Up Tuesday, where we bring you 3 weekly tips—a tip on using Insightly CRM, a tip on running your business, and a tip on improving your life. For this week’s tips, we pay tribute to some amazing women during Women’s History Month with quotes that will help you have a happier and more productive day.

tips on tuesday logo 198x194

tip-for-insightly 60x58

Create Many Tasks in Fewer Steps

“In a world where there is so much to be done, I felt strongly impressed that there must be something for me to do.”

Samuel Bell Waugh - Dorothea Lynde Dix - Google Art Project-cropDorothea Dix took on an astounding number of tough tasks to improve society and raise awareness about the less fortunate. Your tasks might or might not be taking you toward such lofty goals, but keeping them in Insightly gives you an easy way to manage and monitor them. If you’ve got many tasks to enter, typing them into Insightly can be a task, in and of itself. Instead of entering so many tasks field-by-field, you can use a spreadsheet program to enter them, copy and paste them, or use calculations to more quickly create them in a file which can be saved in CSV format for importing to Insightly. With columns for task name, due date, responsible user, and other available fields, you can import them to create the Insightly task list in just a minute or two!

tip-for-biz 60x58

Don’t Let Obstacles Stop You.

“I never dwell on what happened. You can’t change it. Move forward.”

Joan Rivers
Joan Rivers encountered many setbacks in her professional and personal life and continued to push through to success. In order to move your business forward, know where you’re headed and keep moving toward your goals. That doesn’t mean you need to stubbornly beat your head against a wall when something isn’t working; instead, try to have a sense of humor about the failures and flops and then find creative solutions around the roadblocks. This could mean finding another path, getting some help, or tweaking your goal a bit as you go along. As long as you’re moving toward a destination, you’re making progress!

tip-for-life 61x58

Smile! It Can Make You Happier.

“If you have only one smile in you, give it to the people you love. Don’t be surly at home, then go out in the street and start grinning ‘Good morning’ at total strangers.”

Maya Angelou speech for Barack Obama campaign 2008Maya Angelou knew where smiles count most, just as Joan Rivers made them count as often as possible. The act of smiling, even if forced, is known to improve mood and reduce stress levels as your brain reacts to the expression on your face. This could even set a chain reaction of events, since when your brain is in a positive state it “performs significantly better than at negative, neutral or stressed. Your intelligence rises, your creativity rises, your energy levels rise.” This video explains the idea and will likely put a smile on your face as it helps you accomplish a little more today.

 

Send Us Your Tips

Would you like to share your tips with other Insightly customers? Send them to us!
If we use one in our weekly feature we’ll send you a $10 Amazon Gift Card!

Contact us on Facebook, Twitter, Google+, or send us an email.

And if you haven’t tried the best CRM around, check out Insightly’s features and sign up for a free trial.

Free-trial-button
About the author: Tony Roma is Insightly’s Content Manager. He’s been helping businesses implement software solutions and improve their work processes for over ten years.

How a CRM System Can Lead to Increased Profits for Your Business

Investing in a CRM system is an essential part of growing any business, but many business owners tend to try and scale down their CRM to save money. If you look at buying a CRM system as making a one-time purchase that you have to log as a loss, then you’re looking at the entire idea of customer relationship management the wrong way. A good CRM is an investment that pays for itself over and over again by increasing profits and helping your company retain clients.

CRM system
A CRM system allows you to give customers individual attention and increases profits.

Information Is Power

When your sales professionals have a good CRM at their disposal, they are able to quickly access information that can close sales and generate profit. Sales professionals who are equipped with the right information can make fast decisions and deliver accurate sales information that will get your company in front of clients before the competition and grab a larger percentage of your market share. A good CRM will give you a 360-degree view of this information.

Choosing The Right CRM System Is Critical

The sales and marketing experts at the Marketing Donut speculate that a good CRM can pay for itself in higher profits over a 12-month period. The key is to know exactly what kind of information your sales and customer service teams need to make sales and retain customers before you invest in any software platform.

A business that is prepared is a business that maximizes all of its potential. If you want to get the highest return on a CRM investment, take the time to understand what your company needs and what CRM software can deliver.

CRM System
Give your sales professionals the tools they need by investing in a good CRM system.

Segmenting Customers Allows For More Effective Conversation

So how can a CRM help a company generate more profit? As an example, let’s look at a company that sells sporting goods to various retail outlets. If the company looked at all of its customers the same way, then it risks alienating its smaller retail customers when it puts together programs that favor retail outlets that generate a considerable amount of sales.

With a good CRM, the company can segment its customers into different groups and create marketing plans that would appeal directly to each group. This would allow each group to feel like they are getting treated with respect and strengthens the bond between the company and its customers.

Segmenting customers also makes it easier to talk to customers about new products and accessories. If there are certain customers that don’t want to carry a particular brand of sports shoe, then you can create a group of customers that separates those clients from the others and eliminates wasting your time talking about new products from that brand to those clients that are not interested.

Insightly includes many features to help you have the right information at your fingertips when you need it. Try out the 14-day free trial so that you can see what a good CRM system looks like and make an investment that will benefit your business for many years to come.

Free-trial-button
George N Root III is a professional freelance writer who has expertise in topics such as Internet marketing, business, advertising, and personal finance.

Refresh Your CRM, Your Job, and Your Style

Turn It Up Tuesday: Tips from Insightly to Take Your Business to 11

Welcome to Turn It Up Tuesday, where we bring you 3 weekly tips—a tip on using Insightly CRM, a tip on running your business, and a tip on improving your life. Enjoy this week’s tips!

tips on tuesday logo 198x194

tip-for-insightly 60x58

Tidy Up Your CRM Data

Most customers take their CRM for an initial test drive by adding test contacts, tasks, and other records to get an understanding of how everything fits together. “After learning how to effectively use Insightly to meet the needs of your organization,” customer Clayton Dike suggests, “purge all the data used to ‘play around’ in Insightly.” This will clean up information that could throw off your opportunity or task activity reports. You can even use custom filters and bulk editing to help you zero in on specific records. It’s almost time for spring cleaning, after all!
 
As thanks for submitting this week’s Insightly tip, Clayton will be receiving a $10 Amazon gift card! Use our links below to submit your own suggestion.
tip-for-biz 60x58

What’s Your Job(s)?

While large corporations are doing away with outdated annual job reviews, it’s important to regularly take stock of the work you and your staff are doing. If you’re a busy solo entrepreneur, write down all the jobs you’re juggling in a ranked order. As your business grows, hire for the roles at the bottom of your list to free yourself from work that can easily be handled by someone else. If you have staff, sit down with them on a regular basis to perform the same assessment with their jobs. It’s easy to assign an extra duty here and there and forget how they add up, so your employees will appreciate the attention and you’ll gain a greater appreciation for their contributions to the success of the business.
 

Juggler by kosmolaut, on Flickr
Creative Commons Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic License   by  kosmolaut 
tip-for-life 61x58

Update Your Look

How we look and what we wear can have a powerful effect on our confidence. Updating your wardrobe or changing your style doesn’t have to break the bank, and small changes can make a big difference in the way you see yourself. You can part your hair differently or get an entirely new hair style, shine your old shoes or start wearing something pointier, flatter, or in a new color. If you think you don’t have new ideas, go out and try on clothes at the local department store, including something you wouldn’t normally wear. Try adding a little color and pay attention to a good fit; you might even find a particular brand is a better fit for your body style. Most importantly, find new styles that you’re comfortable with—both in the way you look and the way you feel.

 

Send Us Your Tips

Would you like to share your tips with other Insightly customers? Send them to us!
If we use one in our weekly feature we’ll send you a $10 Amazon Gift Card!

Contact us on Facebook, Twitter, Google+, or send us an email.

 

And if you haven’t tried the best CRM around, check out Insightly’s features and sign up for a free trial.

Free-trial-button
About the author: Tony Roma is Insightly’s Content Manager. He’s been helping businesses implement software solutions and improve their work processes for over ten years.