Real Estate CRMs: Pros and cons and which is best?

Inman special report highlights how real estate CRMs stack up
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If there’s any piece of software that’s supposed to be integral to a real estate agent’s success, it’s the CRM (customer relationship manager). After all, pursuing new leads while maintaining close contact with previous clients takes precious time.

If there’s any piece of software that’s supposed to be integral to an agent’s success, it’s their real estate CRM (customer relationship management system). After all, pursuing new leads while maintaining close contact with previous clients takes precious time.

But with hundreds of real estate CRM options — some free and some costing thousands of dollars a month — how do agents know which will be the best product for their business? Are these tools investments or expenses?

Inman surveyed agents and brokers about whether they use a real estate CRM, which one they chose, and how they feel about the choice they made.

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Both agents (71.3 percent of respondents) and brokers (28.7 percent of respondents) answered the questions; just over half of the 777 survey respondents said they have been in the real estate industry for more than 10 years (50.1 percent), and 7.4 percent of respondents said they have been working in real estate less than one year.

Question 2 (JPEG)

More than two-thirds (71.5 percent) of respondents said they use a CRM. The top five CRMs that respondents use, in descending order of popularity, were Top Producer, Market Leader and eEdge; Contactually and Realty Juggler were tied for fourth place.

Question 4 (JPEG)

Three features were listed as important to more than half of respondents who selected their own CRMs — contact organization (61.2 percent), activity management (56.5 percent) and ease of use (50.3 percent).

Question 9 (JPEG)

Contact organization was also listed as the feature that 25.9 percent of respondents like most, followed by activity management (15 percent) and ease of use (12.8 percent). And several respondents (10 total) said they couldn’t think of anything they liked about their CRMs.

Question 11 (JPEG)

Most respondents (69 percent) said they pay monthly subscription fees to use their CRMs. Respondents who paid single, one-time licensing fees comprised 8.9 percent of the total, and 3.7 percent said they use free CRMs. A total of 18.4 percent of respondents said that either their broker or franchisor pays for the CRM, or the CRM is included in their broker or franchisor fees.

Question 12 (JPEG)

And how much does the typical agent pay for a CRM? Answers ranged from a low of “free” to a high of $26,400 per year. The median respondent investment was $600 per year, or about $50 per month.

Most respondents (84.1 percent) said they manage their own CRM. Others have an assistant to manage their CRM (11.4 percent), or their brokers manage the CRM (4.5 percent).

Question 15 (JPEG)

Overall, respondents seemed more happy than unhappy with their current CRM. Almost half (47.8 percent) ranked their CRMs as an 8, 9 or 10 on a scale of 1 to 10, and 13.4 percent ranked their CRMs as a 1, 2 or 3 on a scale of 1 to 10.

Question 16 (JPEG)

A little more than one-third of respondents who use Top Producer (38.7 percent) said they thought the CRM rated an 8, 9 or 10 out of 10 for satisfaction, with 1 being the lowest and 10 being the highest.

“I can track the whole transaction from lead to close,” said one respondent. “I can group contacts by transaction. It integrates with other lead management sources.”

“I like being overly organized, and this is a great tool,” said another.

“I don’t like how much it costs, but it does more than any other I have found,” said a third.

“While trying other CRMs, I keep going back to Top Producer. It’s not perfect, but it keeps getting better,” said another.

But 16 percent of respondents who use Top Producer ranked it as a 1, 2 or 3 out of 10.

“I don’t know how to use it,” said one.

“It’s crap,” said another. “Reports are inadequate, activities and contact modules do not integrate adequately — cannot even do simple, common tasks such as filter a call list and download or print it out. Most tasks take 6-8 clicks to search, open a lead and update it. Seriously?? What is this, 1987?”

“It has a lot to offer but feel like it is not that easy to use,” said a third.

“Trying to like Top Producer, but it’s complicated,” said a fourth.

Not quite a third (29.3 percent) of Top Producer users ranked it as an 8, 9 or 10 on a scale of 1 to 10 for ease of use, with 1 being the lowest and 10 being the highest. On the other end of the scale, 22.7 percent said that Top Producer is a 1, 2 or 3 for ease of use.

And of the respondents who use Top Producer, 38.7 percent said it was an 8, 9 or 10 on a scale of 1 to 10 when it comes to the product’s value to their overall success, with 1 being the lowest and 10 being the highest. Top Producer-using respondents who thought the product was a 1, 2 or 3 on the value-success scale comprised 14.7 percent of all Top Producer users.

The next most popular CRM, Market Leader, had 18.4 percent of respondents give it an 8, 9 or 10 for satisfaction.

“For someone who never used a CRM or knew what one was, I found this system to be very easy to input contacts, set up drip campaigns and see what properties they were viewing from my website,” said one respondent. “This CRM allows clients who contact agents from sites like Zillow, Trulia, etc., to automatically flow into the database.”

“It does everything my team needs it to at this time — it’s still smarter than we are about online marketing!” said another.

An equal number of respondents who use Market Leader — 18.4 percent — ranked it a 1, 2 or 3 on the satisfaction scale.

“It is great for agents who are starting out but not longtime agents who want more marketing options and capabilities and are more tech-savvy,” said one respondent. “The website options are horrible compared to some of the options that are available in the regular market — meaning non-real-estate-focused CRMs.”

Another respondent offered a numbered list of complaints with Market Leader: “1. Can’t search or select on any Address field; 2. Primary and secondary source field is not editable; 3. Can’t select contacts based on first letter of last name. In general, it is a marketing system, not a CRM.”

Less than one-third (30.6 percent) of Market Leader users said it ranked an 8, 9, or 10 in ease of use, but no Market Leader users ranked it a 1, 2 or 3 out of 10 for ease of use.

And just over one-quarter (28.6 percent) of Market Leader users who responded said that they ranked the product an 8, 9 or 10 out of 10 in terms of its value to their overall success, while 20.4 percent of Market Leader users ranked it a 1, 2 or 3 in terms of value to success.

For eEdge, the proprietary CRM affiliated with Market Leader but offered exclusively to Keller Williams agents, less than one-quarter (22.2 percent) said the CRM is an 8, 9 or 10 on the satisfaction scale.

“Ease of use, comprehensive content, premade campaigns, price” listed one respondent when asked why eEdge deserved that rank.

“It has many options that I need,” said another. “[I’m] able to grow into it and sometimes feel it’s got too many features.”

“It is a great system, but it could always be improved,” said a third.

Still, 16.7 percent of eEdge users who responded ranked it a 1, 2 or 3 for satisfaction.

“Provider won’t allow us to remain online for more than 10-15 minutes at a time — constantly having to log in,” said one respondent.

“I do not feel eEdge is easy to use and does not display contacts in a user-friendly format,” said another. “Too many email drip campaign options, too many fields displayed in entering a contact. They do not keep it simple in my opinion.”

Just under one-third of respondents who use eEdge (30.6 percent) ranked it an 8, 9 or 10 on the ease-of-use scale, and 2.8 percent ranked it a 1, 2 or 3.

Most respondents (78.1 percent) said their CRMs integrate with Salesforce or another sales platform. Most respondents (65.5 percent) also said their CRMs are customizable, and most respondents (57 percent) also said they had customized their CRM.

More respondents rated their own CRM use level at 8 out of 10 (with one being the lowest and 10 being the highest) than any other rating. Just more than half of respondents (51.79 percent) ranked themselves at 8, 9 or 10. A total of 7.74 percent of respondents ranked themselves at 1, 2 or 3.

Question 24 (JPEG)

When asked what features they wished their CRMs would add, respondents listed more (or better) integration with Google, lead integration or lead generation services, calendar functions and more customization.

Most respondents (78.2 percent) said they consider their CRM to be an investment rather than an expense.

Question 28 (JPEG)

“It’s necessary to keep me organized, so not just an expense,” said one respondent.

“It is an investment,” said another. “Without my database, and a way to track and stay in contact with my database, I would loose 90 percent of my business.”

Others, however, disagreed.

“I expect an ROI from an investment,” said one. “A CRM is simply a tool.”

“It is an expense and not an investment because it requires an investment of my waking hours to get myself familiar with its functionality,” said another. “I feel like I shouldn’t spend my time doing that kind of admin work.”

“It costs money; it’s an expense,” stated a third.

Nearly three-quarters of respondents (72.9 percent) said their CRM offers features that they don’t use.

Question 30 (JPEG)

Those respondents said that marketing, email and drip campaign tools were the most common tools they did not use.

A little more than half of respondents (55 percent) were trained to use their CRMs; the remainder (45 percent) said they were not trained. Of those who were trained, they were nearly equally split among vendor training and in-house training.

Question 34 (JPEG)

When asked what advice they had for colleagues looking to invest in an CRM in 2015, respondents had a lot to say.

“Figure out how you will use it in the first year,” said one. “Forget about all the bells and whistles it offers unless you will use them immediately.”

“Just know there isn’t a perfect CRM system out there,” said another. “Adapt and use what you need out of a system.”

“Be disciplined and committed to use it, otherwise it is not worth it,” said a third.

“I wouldn’t give them any,” said a fourth. “I come from a different sales world where CRMs are integral to the marketing and sales cycle. The fact that my colleagues haven’t caught onto this fact en masse is a competitive advantage to me.”

More than a quarter of respondents (28.5 percent) said they do not use a CRM. Instead, these respondents cited email, digital calendars, electronic contact databases, email marketing software and other tools in assorted combinations.

Question 39 (JPEG)

Respondents also mentioned that social media, Excel spreadsheets and postcards or mailers are important tools that they use to grow their businesses.

See the report with more questions and details — exclusively for Select members.