Monday, January 10, 2011

The Best Small Business CRM Software? Here are some tips.


Customer relationship management (CRM) programs were once been best suited to large enterprises, but today they are essential to businesses of all sizes, and are available to small businesses in various forms. CRM solutions will enhance any business's productivity in sales, marketing, and for the customer service staff, as well as reduce the costs of finding and retaining leads, and increase revenues by unifying many business management processes in one platform. Of course, the trick to success with small business CRM is finding the right solution for your company.
Enterprise-scale CRM can be intimidating for smaller businesses, and it also tends to offer many more capabilities than smaller companies require, and at a price small-business owners will likely balk at paying. Adding even more expenses, large-scale CRM often requires more IT support than small businesses can readily provide. Thankfully, the growing need among small businesses for streamlined sales, marketing, and customer management processes has led to the emergence of small business CRM software, which many refer to as "CRM lite." These solutions acknowledge that employees of small businesses tend to wear many hats and have a variety of responsibilities, and these platforms are traditionally dialed-down versions of the large-enterprise products.
This brings us to an important thing to consider when selecting a small business CRM solution for your company: scalability. Most businesses start small, but when choosing a CRM solution, you have to look down the line and take consideration for growth. Your chosen solution should be able to both accommodate an increase in the user base, and allow for more capabilities as the company's needs evolve. Numbers-wise, small business CRM platforms are designed for companies with fewer than 500 clients, or fewer than 50 customer-facing staff members. And though CRM lite products have a small-business slant, they can still be fitting for divisions of larger enterprises with fewer than 100 simultaneous CRM users. For the most part, small business CRM caters to companies whose user bases are physically concentrated, rather than spread out over multi-server networks. 
Almost as important as selecting the appropriate system for a certain number of end-users: deciding which type of deployment is best for your company: on-premise or hosted. Most small business CRM solutions are offered as software-as-a-service (SaaS), or on-demand platforms, which is an option that provides numerous benefits to small enterprise. For starters, on-demand solutions require much less up-front capital, as they require neither hardware nor the licensing fees necessary for on-premise CRM platforms. On-demand CRM solutions are ideal for budding companies in need of a system than can be deployed quickly, and with little impact on IT resources, as on-premise solutions often call for long and complicated implementation processes. On-premise solutions tend to work best for large enterprises that need a constant pulse on their CRM data, and that can afford the temporal and monetary costs of implementation.
The best small business CRM solutions will allow companies to customize the platform's dashboards and key features. This customization is usually offered in the form of smaller "license bundles" that allow users to pick and choose only the features needed, and therefore prevent them for overpaying on extensive packages with features that will remain unused. Small business CRM solutions also reflect the tendency smaller companies have of managing business across a number of different (and sometimes disjointed) productivity applications. This propensity to work across disparate applications adds to the importance of a simple user interface and options for customization, and explains why CRM systems that resemble basic word processing and reporting applications are so successful.
Many small business CRM offerings are primarily contact managers that secondarily provide the ability to organize sales and marketing campaigns, and offer some standard reporting capabilities. Common add-ons include help desk automation, sales forecasting, order-processing and tracking, and advanced analytics. Two companies that offer web-based CRM solutions and recently released contact management tools are Salesforce.com and SugarCRM. Salesforce's Contact Management Edition and Sugar's SugarExpress are both very basic forms of CRM, offering simple contact information and communications records, and both are meant for a small number of users (about 5-10). They are intended for the smallest business users, but the good thing about these products-and another advantage of SaaS solutions-is that they are wholly integrative into Salesforce's and Sugar's more extensive CRM products should the company grow. 
Another thing you'll want to look for when choosing the right small business CRM: social networking tools. There has been great debate as to how helpful integrating products like Twitter and Facebook is to CRM processes, but there is no doubt that small businesses benefit greatly from incorporating social media. Unlike large enterprises, small businesses have more direct interactions with their customers, so while large enterprises use social networking tools to maintain a strong web presence and track conversations about their brand, small businesses have the advantage of using these platforms to nurture their existing relationships with customers. Most SaaS CRM solutions have social networking integrations, so look for a system that provides basic social media functionality and has a good tool for monitoring conversations. 
The best small business CRM solution is out there. Just remember to assess your needs, and find a product that is scalable, and offers good contact management and social media integrations.

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

SOA Infrastructure




Software AG continues to be a world leader in the ranking of SOA governance technologies
The company is the second consecutive year the first position in the market for SOA governanceService Oriented Architecture (SOA) is a business-centric IT architectural approach that supports integrating the enterprise as integrated, reusable business processes or services. The vision of SOA infrastructure is powerful because service-oriented architecture (SOA) promises to make businesses more agile, make business services broadly available and re-usable, and eliminate boundaries between business functions and value chains.
The vision is achievable, but real-world SOA infrastructure can be challenging. In today's highly competitive landscape, many enterprise infrastructures span departments and geographies. IT professionals must find an easy and affordable way to integrate, and provide visibility and business insight across many different platforms, data sources and applications. And all of these systems need to be fast, always available and secure.
Today's enterprise integration dilemma has become one of the core reasons why SOA has become the preferred mechanism for IT professionals who want to deliver business agility and complete visibility to information and processes across the enterprise. In choosing an SOA infrastructure provider, you need to start by looking for a vendor who shares a similar SOA vision. Progress Software believes that this is a prerequisite for aligning the technology with your business goals.
The Progress® SOA Portfolio provides a comprehensive range of capabilities for the entire SOA lifecycle. Together, they deliver the agility, re-use and integration you expect from SOA with the manageability and robustness you require. Free from cross-product dependencies, each best-in-class SOA infrastructure product can be deployed independently, and delivers its full benefit in a real-world, multi-vendor environment.
Figure: The Progress® SOA Portfolio


The Progress SOA Portfolio is comprised of interoperable, best-in-class service infrastructure products used to build, deploy and manage an SOA. From first project to global deployment, our portfolio provides robust, yet agile SOA infrastructure designed for challenging, real-world environments. Over 1000 customers rely on Progress as their independent supplier of reliable, interoperable SOA infrastructure software.
Read the white paper, The Right Infrastructure for SOA. Now That's Progress., to learn about a couple of SOA infrastructure choices that are critical to supporting the incremental roll-out of an optimal SOA design center.