What’s The Difference Between CRM and ERP?

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ERP and CRM are 2 more terms that often get attached to some very vague concepts.

If you’ve tried to look up information on this topic, you might’ve found a flood of very benefit-focused sales material that intentionally stays away the specifics. This can make it difficult for a non-technical person to clearly understand these concepts.

Increase Sales Reduce Costs

In the simplest terms, ERP and CRM are very similar, but suited to different purposes. They are both applications that allow employees to share and coordinate information throughout the organization… while also giving executives access to reports and forecasts based on the data collected within these systems.

The way I see it, companies can only grow their profits in 2 ways:
• Increase sales
• Reduce costs

These can be thought of as 2 opposing forces, requiring 2 completely different strategies. For this reason, it would make sense for organizations to manage these 2 forces separately:

  • Customers and sales can be managed via a Customer Relationship Management system (CRM)
  • Employees and productivity can be managed via an Enterprise Resource Planning system (ERP)

Customer Relationship Management (CRM)

Most newer or growing businesses are simple enough that they don’t need an enterprise-wide set of integrated systems to manage their workflow. For them, the REAL challenge is getting those first customers and proving the business model.

However, since customer acquisition is a substantial cost center early on, there is definitely value to be gained in having a single system that combines Marketing, Sales, Contact Management and Customer Support.
When you combine these areas of the business, you keep a high-level view on the progress of your marketing activities and locate areas for improvement.

A good CRM should also help you forecast revenue by tracking the progress of your pipeline.
Many modern CRM systems even provide marketing and sales automaton functions, such as automated email.

Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP)

Once a company has achieved critical mass, they reach a point where cutting waste becomes a more effective revenue-generation method than increasing sales. (It’s easier to cut costs by 5% than to increase sales by 5%)
Another challenge presented by growth is lack of organization which can lead to expensive errors and poor customer satisfaction.

This is usually the point when a company will start looking into an ERP system.

ERP software has been around for quite a while. But they’ve mostly been the domain of larger, established companies. Earlier systems were strictly focused on operational areas of the company such as Finance, HR, Manufacturing and Order Management.

  • ERP systems help to standardize business processes, ensuring that information remains structured and useful. This is critical when you have 5 different departments – each with 10 employees – all generating business data.
  • Using ERP, employees across the organization can find, store and share information from a centralized repository. This ensures more efficient processes and workflow with fewer errors, while eliminating the need to transfer, re-enter or duplicate data.
  • For executives and management, ERP systems can give clear insight into the state of the organization, and assist them in locating opportunities for efficiency and productivity improvements. This is where the REAL value of ERP can deliver, by helping drive corporate strategy.

Although ERP – in the traditional sense – has usually been thought of in the context of internal operational processes, modern systems have also crossed over into other areas such as those traditionally covered by CRM system. Some ERP components are even designed to integrate with external entities such as suppliers and banks.

Hopefully, this overview has been helpful in showing the difference between ERP and CRM. In future posts, I’ll try to dig down a bit further and give a bit more insight into these concepts.

7 Responses to “What’s The Difference Between CRM and ERP?”

  1. Sihwa Hyun

    Jul 21st, 2011

    Thanks for this information. It is really useful and easy to understand. One question from me is that you started to use this term ‘CMS’ in the middle of the post. Do you mean CRM or Is CMS a different from CRM? If so, could you tell me what CMS is? Thanks

  2. admin

    Jul 21st, 2011

    Good Call. Boy do I feel dumb. :(

    A CMS is a “content management system”. The most popular examples would be WordPress or Joomla.

  3. vibin

    Oct 13th, 2011

    hi.. does sap is better than crm & erp ? i know that sap is a combination of erp but not sure about crm. which is better for large organization & small scale industries ? which one do you prefer ? and what is the ultimate behind this ?

  4. Penelope

    Nov 14th, 2011

    @vibin: SAP is also a CRM; in fact SAP has a huge CRM business.
    @admin: Truly an incredible article! Very beautifully defined the fundamental difference of both ERP Software and CRM Software. Definitely, both have its own importance in the organization.
    And I must say I agree when you mention: “good CRM should also help you forecast revenue by tracking the progress of your pipeline.” This is since my CRM (from http://stayinfront.com/) is enhanced with great CRM Analytics that help me to forecast revenues and make my business and sales force activity more organized.
    Thanks!

  5. Sanjay

    Jan 25th, 2012

    Great article. Would help if you gave a few examples of ERP /CRM products/packages that are available as off-the-shelf/customizable products and the vendors dealing with these products. Would bring out the difference even better.

  6. ravi

    Jan 28th, 2012

    can u tell me exact difference between CRM and ERPin one or two lines?

  7. salman

    Feb 19th, 2012

    CMS here does not stand for content mangement system,it stands for contact management system.In the start when CRM was not still there,they use the CMS to store the information about their customers like name,email adress,postal adress,phone number etc. The CRM is the modern and more complex form of that with alot more other functionalities.
    and by the way the article is very nice.thanks for that.

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