5 signs you need a CRM (when you think you don’t)
If you run sales from notebooks, Viber and memory — here are five signs it is time for a CRM.
“We’re a small company, we don’t need a CRM.” Maybe. Or maybe you’re already losing deals and just don’t see it. Here are five signs.
1. You forget to follow up
A customer said “call me next week,” and you remember a month later. Every forgotten call is a deal that went to a competitor.
2. Your quotes live in email
When a customer asks “what did you send me again,” you dig through the inbox for five minutes. A CRM keeps the whole history next to the client.
3. A salesperson leaves — and the database leaves with them
If contacts and agreements live in someone’s head (or phone), one person leaving costs you half the market. In a CRM, everything stays with the company.
4. You don’t know what’s in play
How many quotes are open? What are they worth? What’s the next step? Without a pipeline, sales is guesswork.
5. You don’t know who brings in what
Without records you can’t see which customer really drives revenue and which just eats time.
Key takeaways
- Forgotten calls = lost deals
- The history of a relationship must stay with the company, not in someone’s head
- A pipeline turns guesswork into a plan
Frequently asked questions
It doesn’t have to be. A good CRM is like a tidy notebook that reminds you — you add a client, log a contact, get a reminder.
Yes — you import contacts from a spreadsheet, no typing from scratch.
Read more
e-Invoicing in Serbia 2026: who must comply, deadlines, and how → The KPO book for flat-rate entrepreneurs: what it is, the 6M limit, how to keep it → Fiscalization for freelancers and service businesses: what you actually need →Try Tefter free
Contacts, deals and reminders — the whole sales process clear, nothing slips through.