Archive for June, 2008

Simpler Software: The Promise of Less Work, More Value

June 20, 2008

My mom taught herself how to use computers. She bought the Dummies and Idiots books, took a class or two, and wrote lots of step-by-step instructions on how to use software like Microsoft Word. I’d try to show her something, and she’d write down the steps. When she’d try it, her eyes would get that glassy look you get when you don’t quite know what you’re expected to do next. Frustrating.

Software like Microsoft Word can be very useful, but the way tasks are organized is difficult for a lot of people. Products like Word and Act contact management software are stuffed with menus stuffed with features, and as a result the classes for them are stuffed with people seeking understanding and the bookshelves in the computer self-help section are stuffed with Dummies books. But customers aren’t dummies.

We’ve been led down a path by Microsoft and other software companies from the 80’s and 90’s that established the convention of burying functionality in a series of drop-down menus. And instead of offering just what people need, these companies would build customer functionality for a few customers, then include that for every customer, regardless of the relevance of the features. It’s not wonder that numerous studies show that most computer users use less than 10% of the functionality offered in Word, Excel, and Act.

And then everything is available all the time through crowded and redundant menu-based toolbars, packed with so many icons you need a separate guide to learn what the icons mean.

So most software follows this convention. CRMbrella doesn’t. We chose to design around what’s relevant, rather than what’s possible. If software offers everything all at once on every screen, it’s very hard to understand just what is expected of you. So we make things much more focused, contextual, and relevant to your intended actions. Instructions are usually clear (let us know when they aren’t), and help is always available for the current screen–it’s context-sensitive so you don’t have to go searching for it.

We’re close to the goal of giving our customers deep, relevant functionality in the easiest way possible. You’ll notice we’re very careful about navigation and presenting relevant tasks only when, well, relevant. We’re still including two top-level dropdown menus–File and Help–in which a number of functions are, well, buried. And we’re considering how best to remove them. It’s not easy designing software this way, but we’ve found that most customers understand it right away: Sections are on the top, relevant tasks are on the left, help is on the right and follows you where you go.

If you find yourself stuck, if something in the software isn’t obvious and easy for you–please tell us. Your honest, open, and frequent feedback is so important to building better software. By the way–Mom uses GiftWorks fundraising software, available over on the Mission Research site.

 

 

 

 

Available now on Amazon.com…

June 12, 2008

In the meantime, we’ve been working on CRMbrella Pro. The Outlook integration looks pretty good, and I can see moving that into Standard. We’ll see–up to the product manager, Amy…

Customizing CRMbrella

June 9, 2008

One of our customers has clients in other countries, and wanted to be able to change the country listing.

Changing CRMbrella field values is quite easy. Simply click on Settings, then Customize CRMbrella, then Change CRMbrella Fields. You’ll see a list of fields, the values for which you can change, add to, and remove.

 changing the country field

Spend some time in the customization section; a lot of the power of CRMbrella comes from the basis of customization that reflects your business. You then apply that power through SmartLists, which give you the ability to create highly targeted lists–segmentation. After you create those lists that reflect a useful segmentation of your customers and contacts, you can send targeted email and mail to them, creating separate messages for each list (where it makes sense).

Segmentation can go a long way toward helping you increase revenue, and will give you a lot more insight into your marketing activities than simple generic mailings. For instance, if you have 3 price points for your services–bargain, standard, and “executive”, for instance, you will want to send a different message to your potential bargain customers than the likely executive customers. SmartLists and Mailings allow you to do this, and customization gives you greater depth.

The Reports Section ties everything together and gives you insight into your business. You can run reports on any SmartList, giving you very specific, granular insight into how well things are working. For instance, out of people who were sent the last mailing, how many purchased? How much revenue did it generate?

In the Pro version, we’ll be adding a lot more custom fields, to give you even deeper customization. Let us know other ways we can improve, as well.

Importing from Outlook

June 4, 2008
I’ve done a lot of importing from Outlook into CRMbrella recently, and there are two things I really like, and one I don’t like:

–it takes just a few clicks to import all of my contacts
–I can import folders and organize them into groups automatically.
–it doesn’t import emails! i know this, because I run the division, but it’s something I’d really like to see in the next version.

But then the point came up–do we really need to import emaiL? Can’t we just reference emails? And I think that’s a valid point–lightweight, etc.

But that only works for a single PC. We’d have to have the ability to search an index every PC on a network, or even Exchange, and while there are solutions for that kind of search and indexing, it’s not a trivial implementation.

What we’re finding is that while our target is very small business,larger businesses with more sophisticated needs really want to use this, but with a few more features. SalesWOrsk CRMbrella Pro will get us some of the way, but I can see beyond that…

anyone else try the Outlook import?