Sage CRM

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  • 1.  What would be helpful?

    Posted 02-07-2023 18:05

    Hi All!

    It's been about four years since I joined 90 Minds, and it doesn't look like the Sage CRM community within 90 Minds has been super active other than the odd post about older versions/files of Sage CRM for Sage 100.

    Rather than starting up random threads and hoping the community engages, I wanted to ask - what would you all like to see or learn about Sage CRM? 

    • Sales-focused?
      • How to sell more Sage CRM?
      • What are some common points of interest that get Sage 100 customers engaged in a conversation about Sage CRM?
      • Would a demo of the latest versions be helpful?
      • Would seeing ISV Solutions for the product help generate buzz and excitement? 
    • Operations-focused?
      • How to streamline implementations and training?
      • How can my Sage 100 practice develop/cultivate Sage CRM consulting resources?
    • Education/Integration-focused?
      • How can we get more relevant data out of Sage 100 and into Sage CRM without third-party plug-ins or costly consulting resource?
      • Who are some of the consulting firms that still "do" Sage CRM?
    • Relevance-focused?
      • Is Sage CRM even relevant at this point?
      • Why should I even be interested in Sage CRM?
      • Sage CRM is still a thing?
      • What does Sage CRM 2023 R1 even look like? (I have a beta release that I'm happy to take screenshots of if the team would like to provide feedback on the product)

    I'd love to get some feedback from the group. I've been integrating Sage 100 and Sage CRM for 10+ years, so I'd love to share some best practices in some community posts if it's something some or all would like to see.

    ------------------------------
    Basil Malik
    e: basil@ss-adv.com
    p: (918)600-8700

    "Whatever you are, try to be a good one."
    ------------------------------


  • 2.  RE: What would be helpful?

    Posted 02-07-2023 18:12
    And for the record - if someone is in need of older versions of Sage CRM for Sage 100 - I am a bit of a digital packrat...



    ------------------------------
    Basil Malik
    e: basil@ss-adv.com
    p: (918)600-8700

    "Whatever you are, try to be a good one."
    ------------------------------



  • 3.  RE: What would be helpful?

    Posted 02-07-2023 19:08
    These for sure (for me) ... 

    • Operations-focused?
      • How to streamline implementations and training?
      • How can my Sage 100 practice develop/cultivate Sage CRM consulting resources?
    • Education/Integration-focused?
      • How can we get more relevant data out of Sage 100 and into Sage CRM without third-party plug-ins or costly consulting resource?
      • Who are some of the consulting firms that still "do" Sage CRM?


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    John Wilder
    Technology Integrators
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  • 4.  RE: What would be helpful?

    Posted 02-08-2023 09:51
    Thank you for the feedback, @John Wilder! ​I'll be happy to create some posts within the Sage CRM group that expands on these items over the next couple of weeks.

    The point that you bolded is actually surprisingly easy if you're familiar with SQL Server and Sage 100's 64-bit ODBC driver. Once you understand how to get the data across (whether accessing real-time or replicating it within SQL tables (for Sage 100 STD/ADV), you begin unlocking more and more value with Sage CRM.

    ------------------------------
    Basil Malik
    e: basil@ss-adv.com
    p: (918)600-8700

    "Whatever you are, try to be a good one."
    ------------------------------



  • 5.  RE: What would be helpful?

    Posted 02-07-2023 21:31
    That's a lot of questions so I'll summarize my overall feeling about CRM into this: 

    • Sage is at a disadvantage with CRM because it's a bolt-on and not built-in
    • It's hard to make money at CRM unless I do more than one or two a year - so working with CRM never becomes more than reactionary and only when a customer insists
    • CRM is yet another thing to upgrade - at additional cost - come N-2 upgrade time
    • Many customers aren't really sure what they're buying or how to use it
    What it all boils down to is that I don't make much - if anything - and my consulting efforts are more complicated with an integration that the customer has to pay a CRM consultant to install/maintain on a SQL server. This also adds costs and some complexity to upgrades.


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    Wayne Schulz
    wayne@s-consult.com
    Schulz Consulting
    (860) 516-8990
    Moodus, CT
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  • 6.  RE: What would be helpful?

    Posted 02-08-2023 09:46
    THAT is fantastic insight, @Wayne Schulz! ​I don't have a counter-position or anything along those lines as all points are 100% valid. I sit on the North American PAC (which includes @Dan Cousins) and the Global Sage CRM PAC - and speculation as to why Sage 100 VARs don't push CRM is something that's discussed at great length.

    People get caught up in the "I need a CRM" that they don't consider the implications of what it means to implement one or what the scope of that project should be. Is the complexity of implementing CRM worth the potential for ROI, cost avoidance, or process efficiencies? 

    I have a follow-up question and some comments to your points. The question: What do you do when a customer begins asking about CRM? Do you steer them away from Sage CRM entirely or does it remain a part of the conversation? (I resell more than Sage CRM, so I'm curious how you navigate the request when you are reacting to it.)

    The comments, I've highlighted below inline in red below.

    • Sage is at a disadvantage with CRM because it's a bolt-on and not built-in
      • 100% agreed. Additionally, integration to Sage 100 has not been made easy. You have three options - native integration, Greytrix, or build your own (i.e. Microsoft 365 Connector). Each of which has their own considerations/challenges, and it does not alleviate any of the other points you raised (added complexity to upgrades, additional cost, etc.).

    • CRM is yet another thing to upgrade - at additional cost - come N-2 upgrade time
      • Indeed. And depending on how Sage 100 is integrated with that CRM (Sage CRM and other platforms all share similar challenges), there are other implications that add additional complexity to the upgrade.

    • Many customers aren't really sure what they're buying or how to use it
      • This is actually a common response. It's why I began shifting CRM deployments from "you can have whatever you want" to, "here are the common things most Sage 100 customers ask for. Use these pre-defined packages of functionality and we can continue building value once you have a better understanding of Sage CRM." This "solution"-style implementation of Sage CRM (as an example) resonates far more with customers than the old addage of "CRM can do anything... so long as you're willing to invest." Demystifying the ambiguous into something more tangible and specific when it comes to CRM tends to work out far better.

    • ...the customer has to pay a CRM consultant to install/maintain on a SQL server.
      • Don't forget that the complexity of SQL licensing is still lost on many and introduces risk of license compliance and fees from Microsoft if you buy the wrong type of SQL Server license. 


    ------------------------------
    Basil Malik
    e: basil@ss-adv.com
    p: (918)600-8700

    "Whatever you are, try to be a good one."
    ------------------------------



  • 7.  RE: What would be helpful?

    Posted 02-08-2023 10:13
    Edited by Wayne Schulz 02-08-2023 10:13

    What do you do when a customer begins asking about CRM?

    First, make sure they are aware that there are additional costs. This solves 50% of the curiosity seekers.
    I will bring a CRM consultant to meet and quote if they are still interested.
    I don't get involved at all  - unless paid - for non-customers.

    Do you steer them away from Sage CRM entirely, or does it remain a part of the conversation?

    I leave that to the CRM specialist. If the customer asks about Sage CRM - especially if they request their "free" license - I tend to keep the conversation on Sage CRM because I make zero point zero dollars in either case. Hence, it never is really on my radar to get very involved.

    From a VAR perspective:

    • More meetings to sit through that are very tough to add value to and, therefore, unlikely to be billed/collected 
    • Long term, I won't make a profit and will only add risk/complexity to the customer relationship
    • More meetings that I can't bill
    • In worse situations, I become the unpaid complaint department - this tends to happen more frequently with integrations that undergo ownership changes or adhere to the model of multiple "account managers" ( I'm convinced 90% of these account manager jobs exist only to push the buck around the company ).
    • Sage is making zero point zero dollar investments into new non-manufacturing functionality for Sage 100 - so be prepared to disclose to the customer that what they see is what they'll be paying $$ + annual 10% increases a year for
    • The model of selling a highly profitable software license and using that margin as compensation for meetings with the prospect/customer is gone, over, done.
    • And it's never coming back.
    • It's a great fairy tale to recommend setting up a paid consultation with customers to "help" them buy CRM.
    • My experience is that unless you have done 5+ deals and can tell stories of 5+ happy customers and how you helped them specifically, don't even bother engaging or proposing a paid engagement. Why should the customer pay you to learn on their dime? Customers aren't crazy. At least not when it comes to paying us our fee.

    Much of this is Sage's somewhat unique problem. As a consultant making money from a multi-year customer relationship, it's our job to guide the customer through the landmines. And there are many.

    Microsoft has a similar situation though they have a substantially larger installed base to dull the pain. 




    ------------------------------
    Wayne Schulz
    wayne@s-consult.com
    Schulz Consulting
    (860) 516-8990
    Moodus, CT
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  • 8.  RE: What would be helpful?

    Posted 02-08-2023 10:54
    A couple of other points:
    Usually my first question to ownership if they ask about CRM is "Are you going to enforce using CRM for ALL your salespeople?"
    Second is to explain that CRM is NOT 'another module", but another system with multiple modules.  "What specifically do you want to get out of a CRM system?"
    and the usual answers are "No..." and "I'm not sure.  My buddy told me I need to have one."

    And Sage 100 feature additions is also "gone, over, done.  And it's never coming back.." - the manufacturing thing is taking YEARS to get back to where they were 20 years ago...

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    Phil McIntosh
    President
    Friendly Systems, Inc.
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  • 9.  RE: What would be helpful?

    Posted 02-08-2023 12:05
    Thank you for the feedback, @Phil McIntosh!

    100% agreed on those two points. CRMs can fail for many reasons, and ​lack of accountability or enforcement are high up the list. Another one being the reason why CRM was implemented in the first place. If it doesn't enable/support salespeople in doing their jobs more effectively, get enforced top-down (even going so far as to tie compensation to it), and/or the customer doesn't understand the depth of what they're getting themselves into - it creates a failed implementation or a negative response since the engagement went from "my buddy said I needed one" to now supporting multiple applications.

    And also agreed on the manufacturing side. It's been painful to watch as a CRM bystander on what's been happening to manufacturing within Sage 100. Sage CRM had a similar setback (not to the same degree) when Stephen Kelly allowed Salesforce to be the primary sponsor of Sage Summit (2014). It's still trying to recover from that setback.

    ------------------------------
    Basil Malik
    e: basil@ss-adv.com
    p: (918)600-8700

    "Whatever you are, try to be a good one."
    ------------------------------



  • 10.  RE: What would be helpful?

    Posted 02-08-2023 12:00
    Thank you again for another round of great feedback, @Wayne Schulz - this is super helpful for me as someone who has only worked with specific Sage 100 VARs​ (Blytheco, Pabian Partners, etc.). Each has their own challenges with CRM - both from a selling and delivery standpoint that align with several of the comments you've provided. Depending on how far you/Sage ERP VARs want to take the conversation, this is also where it starts to make more sense to build a relationship with a CRM specialist (like you have) and "outsource" to them to handle all things CRM and simply collect both margin and referral fees for sending CRM opportunities their way. It minimizes the time you're expected to spend on "CRM stuff," increases potential profitability, a but still introduces points of contention with any form of integration to Sage 100.

    To a couple of your points:
    • In worse situations, I become the unpaid complaint department - this tends to happen more frequently with integrations that undergo ownership changes or adhere to the model of multiple "account managers" ( I'm convinced 90% of these account manager jobs exist only to push the buck around the company ).
      • I legitimately cackled at your comment about account manager jobs, lol.
    • Sage is making zero point zero dollar investments into new non-manufacturing functionality for Sage 100 - so be prepared to disclose to the customer that what they see is what they'll be paying $$ + annual 10% increases a year for
      • To be fair, Sage stopped pushing investment dollars into Sage CRM long before it dialed down its investment in Sage 100. It felt like a lot of the oxygen that was in the Sage 100 VAR ecosystem and ISV ecosystem left the room once Intacct began being pushed as the premier ERP solution. Sage CRM's health has been directly tied to the various Sage ERP VAR ecosystems, and with all of them collectively reactively pushing or entirely neglecting it - the growth has been minimized.
        Sage has invested a bit more than in recent years into CRM
    • As a consultant making money from a multi-year customer relationship, it's our job to guide the customer through the landmines. And there are many.
      • This is actually the point I was hoping to elicit from someone and learning more about this and processes Sage 100 VARs employ when a customer does raise their hand about CRM. The Sage 100 VARs know their customers better than anyone. They are the first trusted entity to have their fingers on the pulse of the company to know:
        • a) the maturity level of the customer
        • b) how defined are their processes
        • c) how savvy is their workforce with technology
        • d) what is the strategic focus of the customer
        • e) how structured/metrics-driven is the organization and how does that tied back to where they're investing money in technology, etc. 
      • Depending on all of the above factors, that generally dictates where I suggest starting the conversation around CRM. Relying on the relationship that exists b/t the Sage ERP VAR and the customer to navigate the conversation of CRM is tricky. But getting the customer on a CRM solution that allows them to "test the waters," or completely invest in (depending on their front office maturity) is something most Sage ERP VARs either start or quickly flip to a CRM specialist to minimize time spent on non-billable engagements for things that they don't specialize.

    Thank you again, Wayne - this is great!

    ------------------------------
    Basil Malik
    e: basil@ss-adv.com
    p: (918)600-8700

    "Whatever you are, try to be a good one."
    ------------------------------