How to best choose and set up a CRM for your agency business
Any marketing agency, whether digital or creative, is a true relationship business.
That's why for marketing agency owners a customer relationship management (CRM) system can be a real game changer.
We said "can" because, to actually make it work for you, you need to carefully choose and implement your CRM.
To help you succeed, let us introduce you to some of the best CRM software for agencies and then give you some advice on how to set one up and use it successfully.
Hereâs what weâll cover in short: đ
- What makes a great CRM for marketing agencies?
- The 7 best CRMs for marketing agencies ranked
- How to set up and use a CRM for an agency
- Frequently asked questions
What makes a CRM great for marketing agencies?
Here are 10 core features a CRM software solution for agencies can offer you to help better follow up your leads:
- Visualize your leads in multiple drag-and-drop pipelines
- Add and manage your leads from LinkedIn (personal & Sales Nav) with a Chrome extension
- See who your colleagues know and how well, with ârelationship strength scoresâ based on their email traffic
- Be reminded of emails you havenât replied to and customer conversations that have gone quiet
- Auto-create contacts for people youâre emailing or meeting with
- Automatically enrich your contact database by syncing your contactsâ email signatures
- Track whether people open your emails and click on the links in your emails sent from Gmail and Outlook
- Live sync your email inbox & calendar meetings to the CRM
- Send automated, personalized email sequences
- Digitize contact information with a built-in business card scanner
Now, these are all useful features that will help you (and your team) build better relationships and make more sales... but, to be honest, something else is even more important: whether you'll actually use the CRM (or not). đ
Getting a CRM system that you won't use for your marketing agency is pretty useless after all. And with many CRMs being overly complex, work intensive and difficult to navigate, it's clear that you have to look out for that just as much.
Because of that, we include the current scoring for each software on G2 so you get a better idea of how they stack up. Itâs broken down as follows:
- Ease of Use
- Ease of Setup
- Meets Requirements
- Quality of Support
- Ease of Doing Business With
- Ease of Admin
And to make sure the CRM also works well on the phone, as many account managers at agencies are quite heavy mobile phone users, we sourced a mobile score as well from Google Play.
To finally rank the different top CRMs for marketing agencies, we'll take the average of the G2 review scores, and then combine it with the mobile score and the agency CRM feature score, to calculate... the final score! đ„
The 7 Best CRMs for Marketing Agencies ranked
Donât want to read the whole comparison? đ€
Hereâs a quick overview of how the agency CRM software stacks up:
- Salesflare: 9.7/10 đ
- HubSpot CRM & Sales Hub: 7.9/10
- Pipeliner CRM: 7.6/10
- Freshworks CRM: 6.9/10
- Zoho CRM: 6.7/10
- Salesforce Sales Cloud: 6.5/10
- Pipedrive: 6.4/10
Want to dig into the details? Read on!
1. Salesflare [9.7/10] đ
If we ask our marketing agency customers what theyâre essentially using Salesflare for, the answer is usually: to better follow up our relationships.
Salesflareâs mission is to make following up leads super easy for you, without you having to input data to keep the system alive. And with a ton of built-in automation to make you more productive.
Salesflare (founded in 2014) is used by thousands of small and medium-sized businesses who sell B2B (mostly agencies, consultancies, development houses, tech companies, âŠ). Itâs top ranked across review platforms and is the #1 agency CRM software on Product Hunt, the leading community for product enthusiasts.
Interestingly, Salesflare is the only CRM in this listing that is exclusively built for B2B sales. As it doesnât need to support B2C use, the software is more tailored and easier to use if youâre an agency selling B2B.
The app is very tightly integrated with Gmail, Outlook and LinkedIn, so you donât need to switch between your inboxes and sales software while tracking sales leads. Plus it adds some handy features like integrated email and website tracking, email templates, and email sequences.
Features Salesflare offers: 10/10
- Visualize your leads in multiple drag-and-drop pipelines
- Add and manage your leads from LinkedIn (personal & Sales Nav) with a Chrome extension
- See who your colleagues know and how well, with ârelationship strength scoresâ based on their email traffic
- Be reminded of emails you havenât replied to and customer conversations that have gone quiet
- Auto-create contacts for people youâre emailing or meeting with
- Automatically enrich your contact database by syncing your contactsâ email signatures
- Track whether people open your emails and click on the links in your emails sent from Gmail and Outlook
- Live sync your email inbox & calendar meetings to the CRM
- Send automated, personalized email sequences
- Digitize contact information with a built-in business card scanner
Features Salesflare doesnât offer: none
Salesflare's G2 review scores:
- Ease of Use: 9.5
- Ease of Setup: 9.5
- Meets Requirements: 9.3
- Quality of Support: 9.7
- Ease of Doing Business With: 9.9
- Ease of Admin: 9.5
Salesflare's final scores:
- Agency CRM feature score: 10/10
- Overall score (G2): 9.6/10
- Mobile app score: 4.8/5 â 9.6/10
- FINAL REVIEW SCORE: 9.7/10
Price of the Pro plan (includes 10 of 10 features):
- $49/user/month (billed annually)
- $55/user/month (billed monthly)
If youâre not doing work for other businesses (i.e. for consumers instead) and don't actively follow up your relationships, one of the below CRMs might then be a better fit for you. But, if you do, give Salesflare a try.
It only takes a few minutes to start a Salesflare trial and follow up your leads in a better way.đ
We guarantee you won't find any better CRM for your marketing agency! đ
2. HubSpot CRM + Sales Hub [7.9/10]
HubSpot is a marketing automation platform turned everything platform. It was founded in 2005 to make marketing automation easier.
Nowadays, HubSpotâs main selling point is offering an all-in-one solution, including marketing, sales, service and operations. If you donât like using different apps and integrating them (using tools like Zapier and native integrations), then HubSpot might be what youâre looking for.
To get functionality that is comparable to what youâre getting with the other agency CRM software in this ranking, you need to get two HubSpot products: its CRM and its Sales Hub.
That makes the pricing to get all this handy functionality (8 features) a little steep, starting at $450/month billed annually (for 5 users, which is the minimum they impose).
Features HubSpot CRM + Sales Hub offers: 6/10
- Visualize your leads in multiple drag-and-drop pipelines
- Automatically enrich your contact database by syncing your contactsâ email signatures
- Track whether people open your emails and click on the links in your emails sent from Gmail and Outlook
- Live sync your email inbox & calendar meetings to the CRM
- Send automated, personalized email sequences
- Digitize contact information with a built-in business card scanner
Features HubSpot CRM + Sales Hub doesnât offer:
- Add and manage your leads from LinkedIn (personal & Sales Nav) with a Chrome extension
- See who your colleagues know and how well, with ârelationship strength scoresâ based on their email traffic
- Be reminded of emails you havenât replied to and customer conversations that have gone quiet
- Auto-create contacts for people youâre emailing or meeting with
HubSpot CRM + Sales Hub's G2 review scores:
- Ease of Use: 8.6
- Ease of Setup: 8.3
- Meets Requirements: 8.5
- Quality of Support: 8.5
- Ease of Doing Business With: 8.7
- Ease of Admin: 8.6
HubSpot CRM + Sales Hub's final scores:
- Agency CRM feature score: 6/10
- Overall score (G2): 8.5/10
- Mobile app score: 4.6/5 â 9.2/10
- FINAL REVIEW SCORE: 7.9/10
Price of the Professional plan (includes 6 of 10 features):
- $90/user/month (billed annually - minimum 5 users)
- $100/user/month (billed monthly - minimum 5 users)
3. Pipeliner CRM [7.6/10]
Pipeliner CRM (formerly Pipelinersales) is a software company founded in 2009 with the goal of building better software for salespeople.
Although Salesflare hardly ever gets compared to Pipeliner by people who want to follow up their relationship in a better way, we decided to include them in this comparison because the software is used by many agencies and focuses on âputting the âRâ back into CRMâ.
The software is relatively feature rich compared to the other platforms in this comparison, although also a little dated and not too easy to use.
Pipelinerâs pricing rises quite steeply as you need more functionality, which probably makes it a better fit for mid-sized companies with deeper pockets.
Features Pipeliner CRM offers: 5/10
- Visualize your leads in multiple drag-and-drop pipelines
- Track whether people open your emails and click on the links in your emails sent from Gmail and Outlook
- Live sync your email inbox & calendar meetings to the CRM
- Send automated, personalized email sequences
- Digitize contact information with a built-in business card scanner
Features Pipeliner CRM doesnât offer:
- Add and manage your leads from LinkedIn (personal & Sales Nav) with a Chrome extension
- See who your colleagues know and how well, with ârelationship strength scoresâ based on their email traffic
- Be reminded of emails you havenât replied to and customer conversations that have gone quiet
- Auto-create contacts for people youâre emailing or meeting with
- Automatically enrich your contact database by syncing your contactsâ email signatures
Pipeliner CRM's G2 review scores:
- Ease of Use: 9.4
- Ease of Setup: 9.2
- Meets Requirements: 9.3
- Quality of Support: 9.3
- Ease of Doing Business With: 9.4
- Ease of Admin: 9.3
Pipeliner CRM's final scores:
- Agency CRM feature score: 5/10
- Overall score (G2): 9.3/10
- Mobile app score: 4.3/5 â 8.6/10
- FINAL REVIEW SCORE: 7.6/10
Price of the Business plan (includes 5 of 10 features):
- $85/user/month (billed annually)
- $100/user/month (billed monthly)
4. Freshworks CRM [6.9/10]
Freshworks CRM (formerly known as Freshsales) is a popular CRM from Freshworks, the company behind / initially called Freshdesk. Freshworks was founded in 2010 to provide a better, cheaper solution for customer service teams.
The CRMâs main selling point is its feature depth. It has also managed to offer this range of functionality through an easier to use interface than its competitor/predecessor from the same city, Zoho.
What makes Freshworks strong is also its weakness: the interface is full of so many little buttons that common side-effects of using the platform include a mild headache, fatigue and dizziness. đ
Features Freshworks CRM offers: 4/10
- Visualize your leads in multiple drag-and-drop pipelines
- Track whether people open your emails and click on the links in your emails sent from Gmail and Outlook
- Live sync your email inbox & calendar meetings to the CRM
- Send automated, personalized email sequences
Features Freshworks CRM doesnât offer:
- Add and manage your leads from LinkedIn (personal & Sales Nav) with a Chrome extension
- See who your colleagues know and how well, with ârelationship strength scoresâ based on their email traffic
- Be reminded of emails you havenât replied to and customer conversations that have gone quiet
- Auto-create contacts for people youâre emailing or meeting with
- Automatically enrich your contact database by syncing your contactsâ email signatures
- Digitize contact information with a built-in business card scanner
Freshworks CRM's G2 review scores:
- Ease of Use: 9.1
- Ease of Setup: 8.9
- Meets Requirements: 8.9
- Quality of Support: 9.0
- Ease of Doing Business With: 9.1
- Ease of Admin: 9.0
Freshworks CRM's final scores:
- Agency CRM feature score: 4/10
- Overall score (G2): 9.0/10
- Mobile app score: 3.8/5 â 7.2/10
- FINAL REVIEW SCORE: 6.9/10
Price of the Enterprise plan (includes 4 of 10 features):
- $69/user/month (billed annually)
- $83/user/month (billed monthly)
5. Zoho CRM [6.7/10]
Zoho is a true household name in the CRM industry, so we couldnât omit them from this ranking.
The company launched its small business CRM product in 2005 and has historically been positioning itself as a cheaper alternative to Salesforce. That is immediately its main selling point.
If youâre looking for an agency CRM software, Zoho has many tiers (and products even: Zoho CRM, Zoho CRM Plus, Zoho One, âŠ). Most of the four features below come on Zoho CRMâs Standard plan, which offers the lowest pricing of the platforms in this comparison.
Features Zoho CRM offers: 4/10
- Visualize your leads in multiple drag-and-drop pipelines
- Track whether people open your emails and click on the links in your emails sent from Gmail and Outlook
- Live sync your email inbox & calendar meetings to the CRM
- Digitize contact information with a built-in business card scanner
Features Zoho CRM doesnât offer:
- Add and manage your leads from LinkedIn (personal & Sales Nav) with a Chrome extension
- See who your colleagues know and how well, with ârelationship strength scoresâ based on their email traffic
- Be reminded of emails you havenât replied to and customer conversations that have gone quiet
- Auto-create contacts for people youâre emailing or meeting with
- Automatically enrich your contact database by syncing your contactsâ email signatures
- Send automated, personalized email sequences
Zoho CRM's G2 review scores:
- Ease of Use: 8.1
- Ease of Setup: 7.6
- Meets Requirements: 8.2
- Quality of Support: 7.4
- Ease of Doing Business With: 7.9
- Ease of Admin: 7.8
Zoho CRM's final scores:
- Agency CRM feature score: 4/10
- Overall score (G2): 7.8/10
- Mobile app score: 4.2/5 â 8.4/10
- FINAL REVIEW SCORE: 6.7/10
Price of the Standard plan (includes 4 of 10 features):
- $23/user/month (billed annually)
- $35/user/month (billed monthly)
6. Salesforce Sales Cloud [6.5/10]
Salesforce is by far the biggest CRM company in the world, controlling about 23% of the market in 2023. It was founded in 1999 in California by an ex-Oracle executive.
Salesforce offers a huge platform to enterprises that basically consists of a set of building blocks with which you can build anything, gives the possibility to customize everything, and the promise to connect to whatever other software youâre using.
A Salesforce implementation typically requires a dedicated CRM agency to map the business needs and workflow, build all this in Salesforce, connect with other software, train the employees and follow up with additional changes afterwards.
While the software is not a great match for small and medium-sized marketing agencies, nor really built for sales follow up, no comparison is complete without mentioning the market leader.
Features Salesforce Sales Cloud offers: 3/10
- Visualize your leads in multiple drag-and-drop pipelines
- Track whether people open your emails and click on the links in your emails sent from Gmail and Outlook
- Live sync your email inbox & calendar meetings to the CRM
Features Salesforce Sales Cloud doesnât offer:
- Add and manage your leads from LinkedIn (personal & Sales Nav) with a Chrome extension
- See who your colleagues know and how well, with ârelationship strength scoresâ based on their email traffic
- Be reminded of emails you havenât replied to and customer conversations that have gone quiet
- Auto-create contacts for people youâre emailing or meeting with
- Automatically enrich your contact database by syncing your contactsâ email signatures
- Send automated, personalized email sequences
- Digitize contact information with a built-in business card scanner
Salesforce Sales Cloud's G2 review scores:
- Ease of Use: 8.1
- Ease of Setup: 7.5
- Meets Requirements: 8.8
- Quality of Support: 8.2
- Ease of Doing Business With: 8.3
- Ease of Admin: 8.0
Salesforce Sales Cloud's final scores:
- Agency CRM feature score: 3/10
- Overall score (G2): 8.2/10
- Mobile app score: 4.2/5 â 8.4/10
- FINAL REVIEW SCORE:6.5/10
Price of the Professional plan (includes 3 of 10 features):
- $75/user/month (billed annually)
7. Pipedrive [6.4/10]
Pipedrive is an easy-to-use and easy-to-setup CRM software for small businesses, including many marketing agencies, and is therefore compared to Salesflare very often.
The company was founded in 2011 to launch a counterreaction to enterprise systems like Salesforce, which are built more for enterprise needs than they are for sales teams. Pipedrive set out to change that.
While the company is focused on helping you manage your sales in a better way, it keeps missing some of the more modern functionality offered by other platforms in this area, which unfortunately makes it land at the bottom of this ranking.
Features Pipedrive offers: 4/10
- Visualize your leads in multiple drag-and-drop pipelines
- Track whether people open your emails and click on the links in your emails sent from Gmail and Outlook
- Live sync your email inbox & calendar meetings to the CRM
- Send automated, personalized email sequences
Features Pipedrive doesnât offer:
- Add and manage your leads from LinkedIn (personal & Sales Nav) with a Chrome extension
- See who your colleagues know and how well, with ârelationship strength scoresâ based on their email traffic
- Be reminded of emails you havenât replied to and customer conversations that have gone quiet
- Auto-create contacts for people youâre emailing or meeting with
- Automatically enrich your contact database by syncing your contactsâ email signatures
- Digitize contact information with a built-in business card scanner
Pipedrive's G2 review scores:
- Ease of Use: 8.9
- Ease of Setup: 8.7
- Meets Requirements: 8.4
- Quality of Support: 8.4
- Ease of Doing Business With: 8.7
- Ease of Admin: 8.6
Pipedriveâs final scores:
- Agency CRM feature score: 4/10
- Overall score (G2): 8.6/10
- Mobile app score: 3.3/5 â 6.6/10
- FINAL REVIEW SCORE: 6.4/10
Price of the Professional plan (includes 4 of 10 features):
- $49.90/user/month (billed annually)
- $59/user/month (billed monthly)
How to set up and use a CRM for an agency
Here are some basic tips on how to set up your CRM and use it successfully.
They are based on our vast experience supporting marketing agencies, digital as well as creative, with their relationship management and sales processes.
1. Build a repeatable sales process that is simple enough to follow
If youâre juggling a series of different leads through relatively long sales cycles, itâs important to always clearly keep in mind the next step for every one of those leads.
That way you can easily guide them all from having a business problem to hiring you as an agency to solve it.
Commonly, such a sales process consists of the following stages:
- Lead: Someone you want to reach out to.
- Contacted: Youâve contacted this lead about your services.
- Qualified: Youâve established that youâre able to sell the lead your services (they have a need, a budget, a timeline and youâre talking to the right person at the company).
- Proposal made: Youâve made a proposal for them.
- Won: Theyâve accepted your proposal.
- Lost: They werenât qualified or they didnât accept your proposal.
- Fridge (optional): They were qualified, except for the timeline bit. It was a âyes, totally, but not nowâ kind of case. Keep nurturing these!
Itâs best to take a moment to sit down and consider what it looks like for you. Write down the names of the stages and a short description of each stage in a document that you can keep as a reference for yourself and for your team. The more customized the better, but keep it simple.
2. Agree as a team how youâll use the CRM
While an action driven approach has clear merits, most companies who implement a CRM donât reserve that short, but essential moment to sit together with their teams. And it doesnât have to be complicated.
Hereâs how you can go about this:
1. Fire up a shared document
Just start a new shared document in Google Docs or Microsoft Office 365. Itâs important that the full (sales) team has access to it.
You can use the following section titles (and discussion points between brackets):
- How do we track our sales process? (sales pipeline stages (cf. above), use tasks or not, when to set up automated reminders, filtered views, âŠ)
- How do we pick up and follow up leads? (responsibilities, timelines, automation, âŠ)
- What is the core data we keep track of? (most important fields and custom fields â what is essential and what does it mean)
- Who can access and do what? (permission roles, core data and pipeline access, email templates, saved filters, âŠ)
- What metrics do we track? (dashboards and reports)
- What is our CRM integrated with? (simple integrations)
- Who to contact with issues or questions? (point(s) of contact)
2. Discuss each section as a team
Have a short discussion to share ideas and align on a way of working. Write down your decisions briefly but clearly.
This discussion does not have to take longer than a few hours, but it will make your chance of success many orders higher.
After all, if everyone in the team uses the CRM a little differently, it canât really be used as a collaboration tool, a source of insights, a single point of truth, or anything else you were expecting it to help you with.
3. Use it as a reference and update it when needed
From now on, this document is not just a shared reference for how youâll work together in the CRM. It can also be a handy onboarding document for future hires.
3. Commit to never dropping a good lead
It may seem like a moot point, but committing to never dropping a good lead can make a huge difference in your sales results.
One of our agency customers (a team of 3) reported an extra one million dollars in sales simply by switching from an Excel sheet to Salesflare and following up their leads better.
To state the obvious once more: itâs much easier to generate extra revenue by managing your current leads better than by generating more leads.
Two stumbling blocks we often identify:
- A company doesnât actively decide to focus on good follow up (busy busy!)
- They didnât manage to get it done with their previous CRM (too much work)
In case you decide to use Salesflare, our CRM will keep track of your leads and customers for you and even remind you to follow up when you forget about it.
In general, itâs good to stand still for a moment and ask yourself the question: how will I know which deals are slipping? Is it through tasks, automated reminders (based on inactivity), filtered views (by last email date, last meeting date, last interaction date, last stage change date), âŠ?
4. Send personalized emails at scale to keep relationships alive (webinars, case studies, âŠ)
If youâre already taking the three above tips to heart, then this one is the cherry on the cake.
Even if youâre following up perfectly with the leads in your pipeline, many of them will not make it to the âWonâ stage: they donât need your services right now, they donât have time, they donât have budget yet, they have other priorities first, âŠ
If your initial targeting was good, many of those will make good leads in the future though, so it would be a waste to just let them go.
Instead, itâs good to invest a little bit of time each month or quarter into building a stronger relationship with them.
Adding them on LinkedIn and posting some relevant content is a good starting point there, but to really build relationships, youâll need to stay closer by.
The best way to do that is to deliver value straight in their email inbox. This can be a personal invite to a webinar, some insightful research about a topic they work on, a guide, a practical case study of a customer you helped, âŠ
5 of the 7 CRMs above allow you to send personalized emails or email sequences to your leads, so make good use of it!
Frequently asked questions
What is an agency CRM?
An âagency CRMâ refers to a software platform for Customer Relationship Management that is tailored to agencies. Popular CRMs used by agencies include Salesflare, HubSpot CRM, Pipeliner CRM, Zoho CRM and others. Weâve put those to the test.
What is the best CRM for an agency owner?
The best CRM for an agency owner is the CRM that their team actually wants to use. That means it canât be too much work to update it, it needs to be easy to use, and actually help the team follow up their leads better.
Which CRM is best for a marketing agency?
In this article, weâve ranked some of the best CRMs for marketing agencies. The results: 1. Salesflare: 9.7/10 - 2. HubSpot CRM & Sales Hub: 7.9/10 - 3. Pipeliner CRM: 7.6/10 - 4. Freshworks CRM: 6.9/10 - 5. Zoho CRM: 6.7/10 - 6. Salesforce Sales Cloud: 6.5/10 - 7. Pipedrive: 6.4/10.
How much does an agency CRM cost?
An agency CRM with sufficient functionality costs between $23 and $100 per user per month. Cheaper options (and more expensive options) are available, but keep in mind that a free CRM that doesnât actually help you manage your business costs you time and money instead of saving it.
What is the best CRM for a digital marketing agency?
Digital marketing agencies usually communicate heavily through digital channels too, primarily via email. Thatâs why a great email integration (usually with Google or Microsoft inboxes) is essential. Popular options include Salesflare, HubSpot CRM, Streak CRM and others.
Want more guidance? Let us know!
Our team is here to help. Even if you donât end up picking Salesflare for your agency.
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