The problem before the product
Picture a company with twenty salespeople. Each keeps their deals in their own head, their own notebook, their own spreadsheet. When one of them is out sick — or quits — everything they knew about their customers walks out the door with them. Nobody else can answer a simple question: “What did we last promise this client?” That gap is expensive, and it is the exact gap a CRM fills.
CRM stands for Customer Relationship Management. Strip the jargon and it is a shared, organized place where a company keeps everything it knows about the people and businesses it sells to and supports: who they are, what they have bought, every conversation, every open request, every promise made.
Where the information lives today — and why that breaks
Before a CRM, that information is scattered across email inboxes, a stack of business cards, three different spreadsheets, and someone's memory. It works fine at five customers. At five hundred it collapses: two people email the same client in the same week, a renewal quietly gets missed, a complaint falls through a crack. A CRM is the single shared record that stops all of that.
Why companies pay real money for it
A CRM is never really bought for the software. It is bought for the outcome: nothing falls through the cracks, anyone can pick up where anyone else left off, and the leaders can finally see what is actually happening across sales and service. That is worth a great deal, which is why CRM is one of the largest categories of business software in the world.