Choosing a CRM system is one of the most important strategic decisions a business makes. Computer systems require investment in implementation, maintenance, adjustment of processes and monthly licensing - and they cannot be easily replaced. Moreover, if the system is cumbersome, employees will refuse to use it and data—the most important asset—will be lost. Here is a practical guide with 9 criteria and a scoring system to make the right decision.
Why choosing a CRM is a strategic decision — not an emotional one
Choosing a CRM is similar to choosing a commercial vehicle for the company — do you need a heavy truck, a nimble SUV or an executive car? But unlike a car, a CRM system is not easily replaced. Businesses that choose a CRM based on brand, price alone or a friend's recommendation often find out in retrospect that they made the wrong choice. The right approach: Make a list of the following criteria, rate each one from 0 to 10 according to the importance to your business, and test each system accordingly.
Criteria 1–3: Mobile, communication and UX
The first three criteria concern accessibility and the daily user experience of the staff:
- Mobile First: Sales and field personnel must be effective from anywhere. The CRM must offer dedicated apps for iOS and Android — not just a customized website — without losing functionality.
- Flowing team communication: the system should break organizational boundaries. When sales, marketing and customer service work on one database with internal chat and tagging — the information passes between departments without friction and loss of revenue.
- User experience (UX) and efficient implementation: Don't choose a system that requires months of training for a basic report. Daily operations must be simple - even for non-technical employees. An intuitive interface in multiple languages is also suitable for organizations with international employees.
Criteria 4–6: Automation, integrations and process enforcement
The three technological criteria that determine the true business value of the CRM:
- Data synchronization and advanced automations: Manual data entry kills productivity. A strong CRM must collect data automatically — syncing calendars and emails, capturing leads with accurate UTM, and automating repetitive tasks.
- Ecosystem integrations and one source of truth: every organization should have one place where the critical information is found and conflicting information is compared to it. The CRM should be used as a 'Single Source of Truth' - otherwise there will be friction between departments and data loss.
- Enforcement of sales processes: an excellent system not only stores information, but directs action. Validation rules (blocking a step in the transaction without meeting the criteria), approval processes for price deviations, and checks that salespeople have filled in all the required details.
Criteria 7–9: Pricing, support and adoption rates
The three criteria that usually do not receive the proper weight in the decision:
- Value-Oriented Pricing (MAX ROI): Many systems are enticing with low base prices but overcharge for standard features. Look for a transparent pricing model, without hidden extras, that allows growth without dramatic jumps in cost.
- Available and human support: the CRM is the beating heart of the business. A provider that requires a high fee just to open a service call is a red flag. Make sure there is multi-channel support (phone, email, chat) and proper response.
- Staff adoption rates: According to Gartner, adoption rates for new CRM projects don't often cross the 50% mark. A CRM that employees do not use is a failure - even if it is technologically superior. Choose a system with proven UX and an implementation partner who understands human processes.
The scoring method — making a data-based decision
After mapping out the criteria, this is how you arrive at an objective decision:
- Prioritize: give weight to each criterion between 0 and 10 (10 = critical to your activity). For example, a business with field personnel would give 10 to Mobile; A business with many departments will give 10 to team communication.
- Vendor evaluation: Examine each system and give it a score between 0 and 10 on each criterion. It is better to perform the evaluation after a demo meeting with each supplier.
- Weighting: Multiply the weight of each criterion by the score received by the system. Add up the sums — the system with the highest weighted score is the correct choice.
- Bonus: Low-Code tool — when business requirements grow, the platform should grow with it. The Zoho Creator platform enables the development of intra-organizational applications that interface directly with the CRM data.
Conclusion
We at 1T Solutions are here to help you make technology the engine of business growth. If you are debating how to choose a CRM, want to implement Zoho, or are looking to optimize automation processes — contact us for a free consultation.



