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Is This the Cure for the Common CRM?

Written by Steven Walling / August 18, 2009 2:59 PM / 4 Comments

curecrm-logo.pngCureCRM is new software as a service that aspires to be the "cure for the common CRM." As you might be able to tell from its logo, the service is first and foremost about integrating closely with email.

It acts as an email-based assistant for CRM work, and it can automatically log business-related email activity on both its own site and Salesforce.com. The product also focuses on including Twitter in the mix, making it a promising, if not entirely complete, addition to the social CRM space that is rapidly maturing in 2009.

Twitter Relationship Manager

In addition to the relationship management that you're probably used to, CureCRM includes a little bit of character from the social CRM space by integrating smoothly with Twitter. If you opt to connect your company's account with OAuth, tweets become a part of the workflow. Twitter friends become a part of the contacts system, you can track conversations just like email, and team leaders can assign an ongoing Twitter conversation.

Email-powered CRM

The core paradigm of CureCRM is built around connecting closely with email. It extracts your contacts to seed your CRM, it feeds out assigned tasks and reminders, and it can automatically log related emails into both their site and Salesforce.com if you opt to integrate the two.

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In addition to connecting with Google Apps/Gmail, as well as Outlook and Exchange servers, CureCRM features a personal email assistant somewhat reminiscent of the now-defunct Sandy.

CureCRM might seem a little strange for those familiar with more common CRM systems. But that's because it's more like an application that sits on top of your typical CRM, allowing you to do a better job of managing and automating the pipeline of activity. The system creates a central administrative view that is a stream of emails and tweets.

In practice, that kind of management means you can do things like automatically pull in prospect-related emails into your CRM, rather than relying on salespeople to go to your CRM and manually log them.

The basic package with CureCRM is $29.95/month, or $49.95 if you want the whole shebang with the Outlook plugin and Salesforce.com integration.

Room to Improve

In our tests, CureCRM was fairly intuitive, especially to someone who might already be familiar with Twitter. As someone who has felt the frustrations of having to manually chronicle customer interactions in a CRM, I could see this system improving things for people.

But if it wants to continue as something that feels like an improvement to the typical CRM, then they need to connect with more than just Salesforce.com and Twitter. Integration, both the ability to do it and how easy it is, is a huge concern for enterprises looking to adopt SaaS solutions.

The software needs to work with other kinds of CRMs (which might not be SaaS) and connect to other public networks where conversations are happening. By doing both, CureCRM could show real potential for building on what it has gotten right with CRM already.


Comments

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  1. All of our service levels @ launch have a Twitter discount if you tweet about us. Please contact us with any questions about Salesforce integration or advanced integrations with systems like Sugar.

    Great write-up!

    Posted by: Alex Schliker | August 18, 2009 3:40 PM



  2. Don't see this useful at all.

    twitter-related != hot

    Posted by: John | August 19, 2009 8:05 AM



  3. I'm excited by the Social CRM tools coming along, but many seem to miss the mark.

    Social networks/media, not Twitter alone, are becoming widely used by companies as yet another method of engagement. It's quite likely that a network may be built online, but that those contacts will mature into customers using a number of different communication methods, including e-mails, the phone and even face to face.

    So CRM needs to become social media aware, to enable communciation across those media can be recorded; but NOT social media centric with the assumption that all the customer communication happens around that.

    And this is where many of the Social CRM tools frustrate, because they seem to be designed specifically to exploit social media, rather than be a thoroughly considered and fully integrated extension to a well established CRM system which already records all other communication.

    It's great to see the market moving, but it's not moving fast enough for me.

    Ian Hendry
    CEO, WeCanDo.BIZ
    http://www.wecando.biz

     Posted by: Ian Hendry Author Profile Page | August 19, 2009 9:16 AM



  4. Our WorkXpress CRM is also fully customizable and allows for easy integration without programming. www.workxpress.com

    Posted by: Jake Burns | August 19, 2009 11:33 AM



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