Customer Relationship Management (CRM) 3rd-Party Platform
A Customer Relationship Management (CRM) 3rd-Party Platform is a customer management platform that enables the creation of a CRM system (for CRM tasks).
- Context:
- It can (often) include analytics and reporting features to track customer interactions and derive insights for business decisions.
- It can (often) provide customizable options to tailor the CRM system to specific business needs and processes.
- It can (often) include features for marketing automation and lead management to streamline and enhance marketing efforts.
- It can (often) incorporate social CRM features to manage and analyze customer interactions on social media platforms.
- It can (often) offer a range of pricing models to cater to businesses of different sizes and requirements.
- It can (often) integrate data analysis, communication channels, customer information, and other business systems and applications for seamless data flow and enhanced functionality.
- It can support compile data from a range of different communication channels, including a company's website, telephone, email, live chat, marketing materials, and social media.
- It can (often) provide a 360-degree view of customer interactions, helping businesses to better understand and cater to their target audiences.
- It can enable companies to automate and optimize workflows, track customer interactions, and offer personalized customer experiences across multiple platforms.
- It can assist businesses in identifying and engaging with the right customers, improving customer interaction, and tracking progress across the customer journey.
- It can emphasize data security and privacy, especially in cloud-based solutions, to protect sensitive customer information.
- It can increase team productivity by providing improved visibility and streamlined processes.
- It can be beneficial for marketing teams by enabling multichannel marketing campaigns and providing insights into brand reputation and market through customized dashboards of data analysis.
- It can empower sales teams by offering insights into customer needs and automating sales execution with contextual prompts for a personalized experience.
- It can enhance customer service by providing agents with the tools for personalized service and optimizing resources based on real-time service trends.
- It can range from being a Cloud-based CRM Platform to being an On-Premise CRM Platform.
- It can range from being a Web Browser UI-based CRM Platform to being a Mobile UI-based CRM Platform, allowing remote access and management of customer relationships.
- …
 
- Example(s):
- Counter-Example(s):
- an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), which focuses on managing business operations and integrating core business processes, without the emphasis on customer interactions and relationship management.
- a Supply Chain Management (SCM), which is designed to optimize supply chain operations and logistics management but lacks the ability to manage customer relationships or track customer interactions.
- a Database Management System (DBMS), which focuses on data storage and database operations but does not offer tools for managing customer relationships or performing CRM tasks.
- a Customer Feedback Management (CFM) 3rd-Party Platform, which is primarily focused on collecting customer feedback and measuring customer satisfaction, without managing customer interactions across the entire customer journey.
- a Customer Data Management (CDM) System, which organizes and maintains customer data but lacks the workflow management, sales tracking, and marketing automation features of a CRM system.
- an Accounting System, which manages financial records and bookkeeping but does not facilitate customer interactions or provide relationship management tools.
- a Customer Data Management Platform, which specializes in managing customer data for insights and segmentation, without providing tools for tracking customer interactions or facilitating sales and marketing workflows.
- a Vendor Relationship Management (VRM) Platform, which is designed to manage relationships with vendors or suppliers rather than managing customer relationships.
- a Human Resources Management System (HRMS), which focuses on managing employee data and human resources processes without supporting customer relationship tasks.
- a Marketing Automation Platform, which helps businesses manage and automate marketing campaigns but does not provide sales management, customer service, or contact management functionalities central to CRM.
- a Content Management System (CMS), which manages digital content and websites but does not offer the relationship tracking, customer engagement, or sales process management features of a CRM system.
- Conversational AI Platforms, which provide AI-driven conversations and natural language understanding, but does not offer workflow management, sales tracking, or customer data management functionalities typically found in a CRM system.
 
- See: BI System, Customer, Customer DMP, Sales Force Automation, Lead Management System, Contact Management System, Data Analysis, Marketing Automation, Sales Force Automation, Social CRM, Mobile CRM, Data Processing Platform, Data Warehouse Technology, Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) System Accounting System, Corporate Social Responsibility, Customer Value Model.
References
2023a
- (Wikipedia, 2023) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Customer_relationship_management Retrieved:2023-1-8.
- Customer relationship management (CRM) is a process in which a business or other organization administers its interactions with customers, typically using data analysis to study large amounts of information. CRM systems compile data from a range of different communication channels, including a company's website, telephone, email, live chat, marketing materials and more recently, social media. They allow businesses to learn more about their target audiences and how to best cater for their needs, thus retaining customers and driving sales growth. CRM may be used with past, present or potential customers. The concepts, procedures, and rules that a corporation follows when communicating with its consumers are referred to as CRM. This complete connection covers direct contact with customers, such as sales and service-related operations, forecasting, and the analysis of consumer patterns and behaviors, from the perspective of the company. According to Gartner, the global CRM market size is estimated at $69 billion in 2020.
 
2023b
- (Wikipedia, 2023) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Customer_relationship_management#Components Retrieved:2023-1-8.
- The main components of CRM are building and managing customer relationships through marketing, observing relationships as they mature through distinct phases, managing these relationships at each stage and recognizing that the distribution of the value of a relationship to the firm is not homogeneous. When building and managing customer relationships through marketing, firms might benefit from using a variety of tools to help organizational design, incentive schemes, customer structures, and more to optimize the reach of their marketing campaigns. Through the acknowledgment of the distinct phases of CRM, businesses will be able to benefit from seeing the interaction of multiple relationships as connected transactions. The final factor of CRM highlights the importance of CRM through accounting for the profitability of customer relationships. Through studying the particular spending habits of customers, a firm may be able to dedicate different resources and amounts of attention to different types of consumers.[1] 	Relational Intelligence, which is the awareness of the variety of relationships a customer can have with a firm and the ability of the firm to reinforce or change those connections, is an important component to the main phases of CRM. Companies may be good at capturing demographic data, such as gender, age, income, and education, and connecting them with purchasing information to categorize customers into profitability tiers, but this is only a firm's industrial view of customer relationships.[2] A lack in relational intelligence is a sign that firms still see customers as resources that can be used for up-sell or cross-sell opportunities, rather than people looking for interesting and personalized interactions.[3] CRM systems include: - Data warehouse technology, used to aggregate transaction information, to merge the information with CRM products, and to provide key performance indicators.
- Opportunity management which helps the company to manage unpredictable growth and demand, and implement a good forecasting model to integrate sales history with sales projections.[4]
- CRM systems that track and measure marketing campaigns over multiple networks, tracking customer analysis by customer clicks and sales.
- Some CRM software is available as a software as a service (SaaS), delivered via the internet and accessed via a web browser instead of being installed on a local computer. Businesses using the software do not purchase it, but typically pay a recurring subscription fee to the software vendor.[5]
- For small businesses a CRM system may consist of a contact management system that integrates emails, documents, jobs, faxes, and scheduling for individual accounts. CRM systems available for specific markets (legal, finance) frequently focus on event management and relationship tracking as opposed to financial return on investment (ROI).
- CRM systems for eCommerce, focused on marketing automation tasks, like cart rescue, re-engage users with email, personalization.
- Customer-centric relationship management (CCRM) is a nascent sub-discipline that focuses on customer preferences instead of customer leverage. CCRM aims to add value by engaging customers in individual, interactive relationships.[1]
- Systems for non-profit and membership-based organizations help track constituents, fundraising, sponsors' demographics, membership levels, membership directories, volunteering and communication with individuals.
- CRM not only indicates to technology and strategy but also indicates to an integrated approach which includes employees knowledge, organizational culture to embrace the CRM philosophy.
 
 
- The main components of CRM are building and managing customer relationships through marketing, observing relationships as they mature through distinct phases, managing these relationships at each stage and recognizing that the distribution of the value of a relationship to the firm is not homogeneous. When building and managing customer relationships through marketing, firms might benefit from using a variety of tools to help organizational design, incentive schemes, customer structures, and more to optimize the reach of their marketing campaigns. Through the acknowledgment of the distinct phases of CRM, businesses will be able to benefit from seeing the interaction of multiple relationships as connected transactions. The final factor of CRM highlights the importance of CRM through accounting for the profitability of customer relationships. Through studying the particular spending habits of customers, a firm may be able to dedicate different resources and amounts of attention to different types of consumers.[1] 	
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Reinartz, Werner; Krafft, Manfred; Hoyer, Wayne D. (August 2004). “The Customer Relationship Management Process: Its Measurement and Impact on Performance". Journal of Marketing Research. 41 (3): 293–305. doi:10.1509/jmkr.41.3.293.35991. S2CID 167683988.
- ↑ "What's Your Relational Intelligence?". strategy+business. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ↑ Avery, Jill; Fournier, Susan; Wittenbraker, John (July 2014). "Unlock the Mysteries of Your Customer Relationships". Harvard Business Review. Retrieved 22 November 2015.
- ↑ Zeng, Yun E; Wen, H. Joseph; Yen, David C (1 March 2003). “Customer relationship management (CRM) in business‐to‐business (B2B) e‐commercenull". Information Management & Computer Security. 11 (1): 39–44. doi:10.1108/09685220310463722. ISSN 0968-5227.
- ↑ "Types of CRM and Examples | CRM Software". www.crmsoftware.com. Retrieved 22 November 2015.
2023d
- (Wikipedia, 2023) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_CRM_systems#General Retrieved:2023-1-8.
- Only stable releases are mentioned.
 
- Systems - Creator - Last Stable Version - Release Date - License - Implementation language(s) - Server Operating System - Database backend - First Release Date - Act! CRM - Pat Sullivan and Mike Muhney - 22.1 - June 2020 - Proprietary or SaaS - C#, .NET - Windows, Web, iOS, Android - MS SQL - 1987 - Adempiere - Jorg Janke - 3.9.3 - December 2019 - GPLv2 - Java - Windows, Linux, Unix, Mac - 2006 - Base CRM - Base CRM - 2016 - 2009 - SaaS - Ruby on Rails, Python - Cloud Computing, iOS, Android, Windows Phone - MySQL - 2009 - Capsule (CRM) - Zestia Ltd. - 2019 - 2009 - SaaS - Java, Scala and JavaScript - Web, iOS, Android - MySQL - 2009 - CiviCRM - Dave Greenberg, Donald Lobo, Michal Mach - 5.56[1] - November 2022[1] - AGPLv3 - PHP 7.2+ - Cross-platform - MySQL 5.7+ or MariaDB 10.0+ - 2004 - Dolibarr - Rodolphe Quiedeville, Laurent Destailleur - 13.0.3 - June 2021 - GPLv3 or SaaS - PHP 5.6.x, 7.x - Cross-platform - MySQL or PostgreSQL - 2003 - Dynamics CRM - Microsoft - Dynamics 365 9.1 - July 2019 - Proprietary or SaaS - .NET, ASP.NET - Windows - MS SQL - 2003 - Epesi CRM - Janusz Tylek & Karina Tylek - 1.9.1 - September 11 2022 - MIT or SaaS - PHP 7.x - Cross-platform cloud-native - phpAdoDB, MySQL, PostgreSQL - 2006 - GNU Enterprise - FSF - GPLv3 - Python - Linux, Unix, Mac OS X, Windows - Firebird/Interbase, MySQL, MaxDB, MS ADO (MS SQL-Server/MS Access), Oracle, PostgreSQL, SQLite, SQLite3, CSV files,DBF files (DBase, XBase etc.), INI style configuration files - 2003 - Group-Office - Intermesh BV - 6.4.178 - October 2020 - AGPLv3, SaaS and proprietary - PHP/JavaScript - Windows, Linux, Unix, Mac OS - MySQL - 2003 - HubSpot CRM Free - HubSpot - N/A - N/A - SaaS[2] - Java [3] - Cloud computing - HBase - 2014[4] - Neolane - Adobe - v6 - 2012 - Proprietary or SaaS - C++, JavaScript - Windows, Linux - MS SQL, Oracle, PostgreSQL, MySQL - 2001 - Nutshell CRM - Nutshell CRM - 2017 - 2017 - SaaS - PHP - Web, iOS, Android - MySQL - 2010 - Oracle Advertising and Customer Experience (CX) - Oracle Corporation - 2021 - Sept 2021 - Proprietary or SaaS - Java, PL/SQL, C/C++, Python - Cloud computing - Oracle Database - 2011 - Pega CRM[5] - Chordiant - ? - ? - Proprietary - ? - Windows, Linux, Mac, web browser - ? - ? - Pipedrive - Pipedrive - 2018 - 2018 - SaaS - JavaScript, PHP - Web, iOS, Android - MySQL - 2011 - Pivotal CRM - Aptean - 6.6 - January 2019 - Proprietary - .NET - Windows - MS SQL, Oracle - 1996 - Really Simple Systems - Really Simple Systems - 2016 - 2006 - SaaS - VBScript, JavaScript, ASP - Cloud Computing - MySQL - 2006 - SageCRM - Sage Group - Sage CRM 2019 R1 - February 2019 - Proprietary or SaaS - ASP.NET, ASP - Windows - MS SQL, ORACLE, DB2 - 1981 - Salesbox CRM - Salesbox CRM - 2019 - 2019 - SaaS - JS, React - Web, iOS, Android - PostgreSQL - 2014 - Salesforce.com - Marc Benioff - Winter '21 - June 2019 - Proprietary - APEX (Proprietary Language Java-like) - Cloud Computing - Proprietary - 1999 - SAP CRM - SAP SE - 7.0 EHP4 SP11 - 2018 - Proprietary - ABAP - Windows, Linux, Unix - SAP HANA, MS SQL, Oracle - 2000 - SAP Cloud for Customer - SAP SE - 1811 - 2018 - Proprietary - ABAP - Linux - SAP HANA - 2009 - Snapforce CRM - Snapforce CRM - 2016 - 2013 - SaaS - PHP - Cloud Computing - MySQL - 2011 - Streak - Aleem Mawani, Omar Ismail - Proprietary - Java - Windows, Mac - Google App Engine - 2012 - SugarCRM - John Roberts, Clint Oram, Jacob Taylor - 9.0.1[6] - June 2019 - Proprietary or SaaS - PHP - Cross-platform - MySQL, Microsoft SQL Server, IBM DB2, and Oracle (IBM DB2 and Oracle only available for Sugar Enterprise edition) - 2004 - SuiteCRM - SalesAgility - 8.0.4 - March 2022 - AGPLv3 - PHP - Cross-platform - MariaDB, MySQL, Microsoft SQL Server - 2013 - SuperOffice CRM - SuperOffice - 7.5 - 2014 - Proprietary - C++,C# and ASP.NET - Windows - SQL Server - 1990 - OnlyOffice - Ascensio System SIA - 10.5.1 - December 2019 - GPLv3, SaaS - ASP.NET - Windows - Microsoft SQL Server, Amazon Server - 2010 - Tryton - Tryton - 5.6 - May 2020 - GPLv3 - Python, JavaScript - Cross-platform - PostgreSQL, MySQL, SQLite - 2008 - WORKetc - Daniel Barnett - v4.0 - 2013 - SaaS - C#, .NET - Windows - Microsoft SQL Server, Amazon Server - 2009 - Zoho CRM - Zoho CRM - Zoho CRM 2018 - 2018 - SaaS - Java - Cloud Computing, Cross Platform - Proprietary - 1999 
 
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "CiviCRM 5.56 Release". 9 December 2022. https://civicrm.org/blog/dev-team/civicrm-556-release. Retrieved 9 December 2022.
- ↑ Robinson, Scott (June 2017). "Comparison of the top CRM platforms and marketing automation tools". http://searchcrm.techtarget.com/feature/A-comparison-of-the-leading-CRM-platforms-Which-is-right-for-you. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
- ↑ Sorenson, Whitney (20 January 2016). "Modern Java at HubSpot". HubSpot. https://product.hubspot.com/blog/modern-java-at-hubspot. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
- ↑ Salager, Serge (10 December 2014). "The effect of HubSpot's CRM launch on Salesforce". TechCrunch. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
- ↑ The Forrester Wave: CRM Suites For Enterprise Organizations, Q4 2016, Forrester, November 21, 2016, retrieved September 13, 2017
- ↑ "Version 9.0.1 Now Available". https://community.sugarcrm.com/community/releases/blog/2019/06/28/version-901-now-available.
2023d
- (OpenAI, 2023a) ⇒ chat.openai.com
- Q: What is the difference between a CRM application package and an instance of a CRM application operating at a specific organization?
- A: A CRM (customer relationship management) application package is a software program or suite of programs designed to help businesses manage and analyze customer interactions and data throughout the customer lifecycle. This can include features such as tracking customer interactions, managing customer accounts and contact information, and analyzing customer data to identify trends and patterns. An instance of a CRM application operating at a specific organization refers to the specific implementation and use of a CRM application by that organization. This might include customizing the application to meet the specific needs and processes of the organization, integrating the application with other systems and tools, and training employees on how to use the application. Essentially, an instance of a CRM application is the unique way in which a particular organization uses a CRM application package to support its customer relationship management efforts. 
 
2023e
- (OpenAI, 2023b) ⇒ chat.openai.com
- Q: what are some examples of CRM platforms?
- A: There are many customer relationship management (CRM) platforms available. Some examples include:
- Salesforce: a cloud-based CRM platform that offers a wide range of tools for sales, customer service, and marketing.
- Zoho CRM: a comprehensive CRM platform that includes tools for sales, marketing, and customer support.
- HubSpot CRM: a free CRM platform that includes tools for contact management, deal management, and email marketing.
- Microsoft Dynamics CRM: a CRM platform that integrates with other Microsoft products and offers tools for sales, customer service, and marketing.
- SugarCRM: a flexible CRM platform that can be customized to fit the needs of various businesses.
- Freshsales: a CRM platform designed for small and medium-sized businesses, with a focus on sales and customer management.
- Nutshell: a CRM platform that is specifically designed for small businesses and includes tools for sales, marketing, and customer support.