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Richard Conyard said:I don't see the relevancy of the question to CRM?
Through lightweight CRM packages the uptake and market for CRM has broadened considerably. Packages such as Business Contact Manager from Microsoft (free with Office Professional), offer an inexpensive and not unduly taxing route for CRM use even for small companies.
In-house we do not actively use CRM for marketing which seems to be the given perception, rather we use it for as it says on the tin - Client Relationship Management. Each phone call, e-mail and task is logged with minimal overhead allowing us to see each and every stage of our relationship with the client so we can manage our time and resources more effectively. Within a week common trends started to show themselves in the analysis of the CRM logs and I would say our admin team probably have managed to gain an extra hour per day per head through changed working habits and pin pointing "problem" clients.