Ask HN: Which CRM for a solo-freelancer in 2014?
42 points| KhalPanda | 12 years ago
What CRM are all the freelancers out there using? I'm about to go solo and am not sure what to go for (Salesforce, Zoho, Highrise (though I'm put off a bit by 37 Signals' Basecamp direction) all seem 'up there'). Too many choices, could really use some HN advice.
I was planning on using Wave for accounts, and still undecided on project management, but I guess any integration possible would be desirable!
[+] [-] keithwarren|12 years ago|reply
I don't mean to be contrarian but if you want to be successful as a independent developer (I have been for almost 15 years now) and you are looking for a CRM you are off the rails.
CRM systems are for the most part, for companies or sales individuals who need help managing the number of contacts they have at any given time and ensuring they follow a structured interaction pattern.
I know about a dozen people like me, some of whom float in and out of full-time gigs and consulting and others who are years or decades into the independent consulting arrangement. Not a single one interacts with a high volume of customers. At any given time I have two or three I interact with and maybe one in the pipeline. If I make contact with new potential customers I create a contact record for them in Outlook/Gmail/Whatever and record any extraneous details in the notes section. That is all, if you need more than that I question the approach.
ps - Another tip. 'Freelancers' are cheap and not serious, 'consultants' or 'developers' or 'independent developers' take home the big checks. Just a perception thing.
[+] [-] Loic|12 years ago|reply
The only thing I have at a "large number" level is a very stupid web application storing just 2 things: an email address and a corresponding full address like you print on the envelope. Then every year, I can send 125+ new year cards. I take the time to include a nice design for the card, people enjoy them and this is a nice way to keep in contact with a large number of people.
[+] [-] brudgers|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] ulisesrmzroche|12 years ago|reply
This is a good question, not something to dismiss just out of hand.
[+] [-] joshdance|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] soci|12 years ago|reply
We have the plain TXT files stored in dropbox shared location.
Easy, slick, cost 0, and accessible by search through OSX Spotlight. Also, we don't depend on third parties (we can move disconnect from dropbox at any time)
[+] [-] EC1|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] girvo|12 years ago|reply
I personally use Pancake[0]. It's a self-hosted, one-time-payment (but comes with updates) web application that will handle invoicing, CRM, time-tracking, and do it all with a really nice interface.
Also, if you know PHP at all, it's quite fun to hack on, but of course a lot of people dislike PHP. Even if you don't do that, it's a brilliant web app that was a life-saver[1] for myself when I was freelancing. Give the demo a try, see what you think.
---
[0] https://pancakeapp.com/
[1] I just took a full-time job, so I won't be freelancing anymore, but I am going to continue to use it for my time-tracking and project management for personal stuff :)
[+] [-] ommunist|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] matttah|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] j21|12 years ago|reply
Unless you need a "special" CRM feature, I think you can get by on using a generic tool that fits your workflow, and is simpler to get going with.
I'm building Notedock[0], it's really a general tool underneath all messaging on the homepage. I actually use it as a CRM, with a page for each contact (you can put all relevant details here, discussions, contact info, etc.)
If anyone's interested, send me an email and I can show how I get by with this "CRM".
[0] https://notedock.com
[+] [-] girvo|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] cmadan|12 years ago|reply
We're always improving the application and welcome any feedback on it. Feel free to reply to this comment or email me at [email protected].
Disclosure: I'm the Founder of ClinchPad.
[+] [-] alphydan|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] joshdance|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] gexla|12 years ago|reply
http://spreadsheetcrm.com/
I couldn't find the article. Seems about right though. It's easy to spend a lot of time looking for something that we feel we need when a simple spreadsheet app probably works well enough for solo use.
[+] [-] zeroDivisible|12 years ago|reply
The thing is that you're a single developer, so don't you waste time managing customers and choose the simplest tool which gets the job done.
I know that others are saying Asana or Trello - and those are good tools, but with a bit of customisation and 20$ you might get yourself Jira + Confluence - those will work like a charm and you will be able to not only manage customers, but also projects and all that crap, everything in one place. One often overlooked fact is that customers like to ignore all those sexy markdown files with requirements and they don't care about code versioning - you will be receiving PowerPoint presentations and Word documents and Excel spreadsheets - all of which can be easily managed / kept in Confluence.
Remember - CRMs are for business people and whatever you choose, the time spent using it should be as minimal as possible as it is not directly bringing you any revenue.
[+] [-] stigi|12 years ago|reply
These days we use Trello with a card for each lead, where we keep track of the current status. The card moves between different states as we engage with the client (kanban style).
If you keep your mails in Gmail you already have a powerful tool to handle them and don't need CRM support for that.
[+] [-] samspenc|12 years ago|reply
The cool thing about Zhen CRM is that its self-hosted and a one-time fee - so you pay for the software one-time, and download and self-host on your local server (LAMP stack) and off you go! You can create as many users as you want, and you don't have to worry about it being hosted at a third party.
What I find really cool about it is the price - right now its only $25! (used to be even less, the price must have gone up recently) I purchased it to experiment, but found it has enough features to use as a primary CRM.
[+] [-] egeozcan|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] ohado|12 years ago|reply
I completely agree with what I've read here on previous answers.. Being a solo freelancer or a small business owner you don't need a CRM. At least not the good old fashion CRM solutions our there.
What you do need is a simple to use, easy to on-board and free solution. It should also be mobile as we're constantly on the go and rarely sit all day in front of the desktop.
That is exactly what we had in mind when we started working on ONDiGO. Check it out.. I'm sure you are going to love it!
http://ondigo.me/
[+] [-] joshcrowder|12 years ago|reply
1. Manages projects - Like Jira but simpler
2. Allows us to create documents and share them with clients - Like email but with commets
3. Track time - Like the notepad that lives on my desk
4. Keep everyone on the project informed
Its called http://matterhorn.io and its coming along we've been using it for months. We are a small agency (6 of us) and its designed mainly for teams from 1 - 20 who work directly with clients.
If you're interested drop me a line I'd love to get your thoughts on it. josh[at]seriousfox.co.uk
[+] [-] ukoki|12 years ago|reply
http://www.streak.com/
[+] [-] danvoell|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] dmoo|12 years ago|reply
open source so you can install it on your own box or sign up to one of their plans.
[+] [-] mschuster91|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] rschmitty|12 years ago|reply
https://asana.com/guide/explore/videos/crm
Plus you can use those for your projects/tickets/personal todos too.
I hate having <Dr Evil>one million</Dr Evil> webapps to do <Dr Evil>one million</Dr Evil> things. Even if they aren't best in class for _everything_ there is something to be said for _good enough_ in a single location
[+] [-] Battochon|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Battochon|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] KhalPanda|12 years ago|reply
Not reinventing the wheel this time, but thanks anyway! :-)
[+] [-] ZanyProgrammer|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] xerophyte|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] wj|12 years ago|reply