Four Ways to Drive CRM Adoption and Accountability

If your company is struggling to drive consistent usage of the customer relationship management system, try these approaches.

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One of the most common complaints we hear from sales concerns the challenge of driving consistent usage of the company’s customer relationship management system (CRM). No matter the organization's size, sales managers worldwide teams are about the challenge of consistently using the company’s customer relationship management system (CRM). No matter the size of the organization, sales managers from across the globe share the same frustration with CRM adoption.

“Our salespeople are treating the company CRM as a glorified rolodex.”

“We have invested in expensive technology and our salespeople still aren’t using it properly!”

Does this sound familiar?

At Venator, we have a saying, “You can’t coach what you can’t see, and you can’t manage what you don’t look at.” If we are going to encourage the sales team to use the CRM, first, we must drive management to use it as a coaching tool. All too often, we see companies attempt to make up for their lack of coaching culture by investing in CRM applications—thinking the more money they spend on administrators and consultants to customize reports and dashboards, the more they will optimize the sales team’s use of CRM. Although these intentions are good, it only causes confusion and frustration and creates a minimalist approach to entering data. At best, salespeople are inconsistent in their use and at worst, they refuse to use it altogether.


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Most companies are learning that technology does not fix foundational management issues. For sales management to show their commitment to the technology, it will require going far beyond reviewing activity dashboards, revenue reports, and exported pipeline spreadsheets. If sales managers are not engaged and reviewing weekly call notes, opportunities at all stages of the pipeline—as well as behavior patterns related to hunting and closing—then the organization would be better tracking opportunities in spreadsheets and paper call logs. A company CRM should be a tool for improving management coaching, not a band-aid for lack of it.