Sales and marketing often operate in silos. Marketing generates leads. Sales closes deals.

But without coordination, leads get lost. Follow-ups lag. Messaging feels disjointed.

CRM helps fix that. It brings both sides onto the same page.

The Problem: Lack of Alignment

Signs your sales and marketing aren’t aligned:

  • Sales says, “These leads aren’t qualified.”
  • Marketing says, “We don’t know what happens to our leads.”
  • Customers hear different messages from each team

Sound familiar?

How CRM Helps

CRM creates visibility and shared ownership.

  • Marketing logs lead sources, campaign data, interests
  • Sales sees this context when making contact
  • Everyone sees where the lead is in the journey

It also stores feedback from sales — helping marketing improve campaigns.

Shared Metrics

CRM tracks:

  • Lead source performance
  • Conversion rates by campaign
  • Time to contact
  • Deal value by source

Both teams can see what works — and what doesn’t.

Examples

SME Example:

A software company noticed webinar leads converted poorly. CRM showed sales didn’t follow up for a week.

Solution:

  • Marketing adjusted lead scoring
  • CRM triggered instant follow-up emails

Result: conversions doubled.

University Example:

Marketing captured student leads from fairs. CRM helped admissions:

  • See interest area and region
  • Track event attendance

Now messaging is targeted — and enrolment improved.

Best Practices

  • Define what a “qualified lead” looks like together
  • Use CRM fields that both teams update
  • Hold regular reviews to adjust workflows

Tip: Create shared dashboards so progress is visible to all.

Summary

CRM connects data, people, and process.

It makes marketing more effective — and sales more efficient.

With the right setup, your teams collaborate, not compete.

And the customer experience gets better at every stage.

Privacy Preference Center