Discover why your CRM might be killing your digital strategy and how TDZ Pro delivers a smarter, custom solution that drives real growth.
The silent killer of most digital campaigns? A bad CRM setup.
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Discover why your CRM might be killing your digital strategy and how TDZ Pro delivers a smarter, custom solution that drives real growth.
The silent killer of most digital campaigns? A bad CRM setup.
Your Team Paid for Salesforce But Still Uses Spreadsheets — Here's Why
You know that moment when you open a team meeting and someone pulls up... an Excel sheet? And you're sitting there thinking — didn't we literally pay six figures for Salesforce last year?
Yeah. You're not alone.
This happens more than anyone in the software world wants to admit. A company buys Salesforce, the implementation goes "fine," and three months later the sales team is back to copy-pasting data into a Google Sheet on a Friday afternoon. The money's spent. The problem's still there.
So what actually goes wrong?
The tool got set up. The team didn't.
Salesforce is powerful. But powerful doesn't mean intuitive. If your team didn't get proper training — not a two-hour walkthrough, but real, hands-on learning — they'll default to what they already know. And what they already know is spreadsheets.
It was built for someone else's business.
A lot of implementations follow a template. Your industry gets copy-pasted settings that don't quite fit how your team actually sells. So the CRM feels awkward. And when something feels awkward, people quietly stop using it.
Nobody owns it after go-live.
This one hurts. The consultant leaves. The project closes. And then... who do you call when something breaks or needs updating? If there's no clear internal owner, the system slowly becomes a place where data goes to die.
The data going in is already messy.
Garbage in, garbage out — as the saying goes. If your contacts are duplicated, your deal stages make no sense, or your pipeline doesn't match reality, your team loses trust in the numbers. And once they stop trusting the CRM, they stop using it.
It wasn't connected to anything.
Salesforce on its own is just a database. The magic happens when it talks to your email, your billing system, your support desk. Without those connections, reps are still switching between five tabs and manually updating records. Of course they go back to spreadsheets — it's faster.
Here's the thing — this isn't a Salesforce problem. It's a setup problem. The platform can absolutely work. But it needs the right foundation, the right fit for your team, and someone who sticks around long enough to make sure it actually gets used.
That's a very fixable situation.
If any of this sounds familiar, the team at amroar.com has helped a lot of businesses get their CRM actually working — not just technically live, but genuinely adopted.