5 Ways to Foster CRM Adoption

When you present a new CRM system to a sales team without a solid adoption plan, you’re throwing your car keys at a 15-year-old and hoping for the best.

Sure, you know the CRM you’ve chosen is an amazing tool that will help deals from getting overlooked and assist your team in focusing their energy. But your team may be a little suspicious, so handling the introduction with care really matters. The best tool in the world is pointless if no one uses it — or worse, use it as little as possible and with a bad attitude.

If consistent CRM use is your goal, start on the right foot. Take a few key steps during the introduction process to avoid adoption issues.

1. Involve your team in CRM selection

Get your team’s input when it comes to choosing a CRM for your company’s needs. Keith Fix, CEO of Omaha, Nebraska-based blabfeed.com, a technology integration company that grew B2B sales 403% last year says: “My advice to sales managers considering sales and customer relationship management software is to look at alternatives to the default big-name CRM suites.”

Certain CRMs may have extra features that add complexity and cost to something that should be seamless and simple to use. It’s all about matching the specific requirements of your organization to the right tool.

“I found that adoption was super easy once we found the right CRM because it didn’t create more work, but actually made our sales team more productive,” Fix says. “I think the biggest mistake team leads make when they introduce a CRM is to not let the team evaluate multiple options and be part of the process. Our team was very involved throughout the process. This created greater buy-in and ultimately a more desirable outcome.”

If your team knows you’ve taken into account their feedback and needs during the selection process, adoption won’t be a big hurdle.

2. Show the value

No one likes busy work. Sales professionals are driven by their desire to help others and make good deals happen. If you make it clear how the CRM does both — by cutting down on chores, not creating more — your team will get onboard.

Sales professionals understand that their industry is becoming increasingly more data-driven. The more data you can collect about your prospects and customers, the better your ability to optimize your sales performance.

Ben Landers, president and CEO of Blue Corona, a four-time Inc. 5000 online marketing company, points out that data-driven companies dominate the current business landscape, and this trend is only accelerating. “I recommend sales managers invest the appropriate amount of time and resources to explain the ‘why’ of a robust CRM to their sales team,” he says.

Sales professionals know that their prospects need to see numbers and data. The right CRM helps keep complex numbers at the sales professional’s fingertips.

3. Lead by example

Sales managers must lead by example.

Tying the sales performance review process — and even compensation — to the CRM is a great way to get adoption. Trying to operate outside of it becomes more work than the alternative. But the process of switching requires leadership and patience — and that comes from the top.

“If your team knows you don’t use the CRM you keep telling them to use, they’re not going to use it,” says Ryan Hulland, president and founder of Netfloor USA Access Flooring in Charlotte, North Carolina.

“If, however, their leads flow to them from the CRM, they have to log in,” Hulland adds. “If your sales team has to go through the CRM to get backend support from inside sales or customer service, they will automatically change their behavior. Before you know it, you have an efficient team with a high CRM adoption rate.”

Start by integrating your CRM into the beginning of your existing sales pipeline, by using it to qualify leads and set goals.

4. Commit to training

It can feel like a mistake to take even a day away from revenue-generating activities to train your team on a CRM — but it’s time well-spent in the long run. Involve key members of your sales team in the implementation and training process and don’t rush through it.

“A good training program will give the users the base knowledge they need, so that they can focus on using the software effectively, rather than doing everything the hard way,” says Liz Wolfe, president of Wintec Group Inc. in New York. “The ‘do-it-yourself’ mentality might work when doing home improvements, but in this case it is better to hire consultants who have expertise to help you get started.”

Here are some more tips from Ben Landers, founder of Blue Corona, on how to make training more effective:

Create games around adoption.
Over-communicate how the system should be used.
Run the traps-check on a continual basis to make sure your team is using the system.
Publicly acknowledge those leading the charge.

5. Keep it simple

“Starting out, your No. 1 goal should be to create buy-in among your sales staff — but don’t get overzealous,” says Greg Archbald, founder and CEO of the oil and gas tech company GreaseBook. “Be mindful and limit the amount of information your sales team is required to enter into your new CRM system.”

A CRM without users is just a toolbox in a locked garage — it needs people. The partnership between sales professionals and useful technology creates powerful and consistent results. By minimizing angst during the adoption process, your bottom line will benefit.

 

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