There's a pattern we see over and over again when talking to Indian SME founders. They implement a CRM — usually Zoho or a cheaper alternative — with genuine optimism. Within 18 months, they're back to running critical processes on WhatsApp and Excel.
It's not that CRM doesn't work. It's that the wrong CRM was chosen for the wrong reasons. And for most Indian SMEs, the mismatch is fundamental, not superficial.
The core problem: CRMs built for Western sales teams
The CRM industry was built around the American B2B SaaS sales model — a team of 5–20 salespeople working a pipeline of prospects, logging calls, and sending emails. That's it. Everything else is a bolt-on.
If you're running a construction company, your "CRM" needs to track sites, contractors, BOQ changes, and client billing milestones. If you're a wealth advisor, you need portfolio views, SIP renewals, and KYC compliance dates. Neither of these fits in a generic pipeline.
💡 The insight: Most CRM implementations fail not because the software is bad — but because it was designed for a different type of business than the one trying to use it.
The per-user pricing trap
Here's what happens at almost every 20-person Indian SME that buys a mainstream CRM: they start with 5 licences to "keep costs down." They give access to the sales team only. The operations team is excluded. The finance team is excluded. So data never gets properly populated, because the people who create most of the work are locked out.
Six months later, management complains the CRM isn't useful. The CRM vendor suggests buying more seats. The business instead reverts to WhatsApp groups.
What the actual cost looks like
Take a 20-person SME on Zoho CRM Professional (₹1,300/user/month). That's ₹26,000/month, ₹3.12 lakhs per year — before any implementation, training, or add-on costs. Scale to 35 people and you're at ₹45,500/month. The software bill becomes a growth tax.
Why Indian businesses specifically feel this more
Three things make this worse for Indian SMEs than their Western counterparts:
- GST and Tally: Indian businesses run financial workflows through Tally and need GST-compliant invoicing baked in — not as a third-party integration that costs extra.
- WhatsApp-first communication: Client communication in India happens on WhatsApp, not email. A CRM that doesn't natively integrate is missing the primary channel.
- Complex industry structures: Construction projects, dealer networks, insurance policies, and event vendor chains don't map onto generic pipeline stages.
The three signs you've outgrown your CRM
- More than 30% of your team accesses CRM data via screenshots shared in WhatsApp groups
- You still maintain a parallel Excel sheet for anything critical — site progress, client portfolios, policy renewals
- You've stopped logging calls because "it takes too long" and nobody checks the CRM anyway
🔍 Quick test: Ask your top salesperson: "What's the status of your three most important active deals?" If they open Excel or WhatsApp to answer, your CRM isn't working.
What to look for in a replacement
- Industry-specific modules — not generic pipelines you're supposed to "customise"
- Flat pricing — where adding users costs nothing
- Indian compliance built-in — GST, Tally sync, PAN/Aadhaar KYC as standard features
- Implementation in weeks, not months — a 6-month implementation is a red flag, not a sign of thoroughness
The bottom line
If your CRM is making you feel like you're fighting the software instead of running your business — you're probably right. The problem isn't you. It's that the software wasn't built for you.
Purpose-built, India-first CRMs are here. They're going live in under two weeks at flat prices that don't punish you for growing your team.
See BunchCRM built for your industry
30-minute live demo. We'll show you exactly how BunchCRM handles your workflows — not a generic presentation.