You’ve done the research. Sat through the demos. Read all the reviews. This CRM looks like the one; finally, a tool that’s going to fix your sales process.
It’s easy to believe there’s a silver bullet CRM out there. One that will plug straight into your business and start delivering results instantly. That your sales teams — especially those who are handed a new CRM without consultation — will embrace the new platform with ease and all your reporting, communication and collaboration issues will be resolved.
But the truth is, there’s no such thing as a perfect “out of the box” CRM. Every business is different with different sales cycles, products and services, customer journey, team structure etc. Which means, your CRM needs to be tailored to fit accordingly, not forced to conform. And trying to DIY it—or treating it as a one-time setup—almost always leads to the same problems: low adoption, broken processes and wasted time.
In this article, we unpack the hidden costs of a DIY CRM approach, why ongoing support matters more than you think, and what continuous optimisation and improvement actually looks like when done well.
What Gets Missed in a DIY Setup
First things first: what slips through the cracks when businesses try to implement a CRM without expert help? Below are some of the most common oversights we see — and the ripple effects they cause.
- Lack of alignment with business processes: Your CRM ends up reflecting the software’s default structure—not how your team actually works. Sales reps are forced to work around the system, instead of it working for them.
- Over-customisation or under-utilisation: It’s easy to fall into the trap of adding every possible field or feature—or skipping important ones altogether. Without experience, you don’t know what you don’t know. Core tools like automation, pipeline filters, or integrations often go untouched.
- Poor data hygiene: No clear rules or processes for data entry leads to duplicates, missing information, and broken trust in your reports. Garbage in, garbage out.
- Missed strategic opportunities: A CRM can be more than just a digital Rolodex (blast from the past…). When configured correctly, it can drive sales strategy, automate workflows, and unlock meaningful customer insights.
- Disconnected from customer journey: CRMs should map to how your customers move through your business. If the system isn’t aligned with the customer journey, gaps emerge—and opportunities are lost.
🚀 For more on this, see our earlier post: Your Tech Stack Is Not Your Strategy
The Hidden Costs
Just like the flat-pack wardrobe you decided to build yourself to save money — only to realise halfway through, you’re missing screws, the instructions don’t make sense, and it ended up taking twice as long and costing more — attempting a CRM rollout on your own often has hidden costs. Let’s dive into what they are.
- Time drain: Hours lost troubleshooting, cross-checking, or manually updating records because the system wasn’t designed for your business.
- Inaccurate forecasting: When your data is flawed, your pipeline becomes unreliable. Strategic decisions are made on shaky ground.
- Lost deals: Without the right automations or reminders, follow-ups are missed, contacts are neglected, and deals quietly slip through the cracks.
- False confidence: Thinking “the system is set up” leads to complacency. Meanwhile, performance drags and inefficiencies pile up.
- Team resistance (the big one!): If reps don’t understand the system or see its value, they’ll revert to old habits. And a CRM that isn’t used is worse than none at all. A new CRM needs to be more than "just another IT project" — it’s a cultural shift.
🚀 You might also like: Why Your Sales Team Hates Your CRM (And How to Fix It)
Why Support (and Tweaking) Matters
Despite what you might have heard, CRMs aren’t “set and forget.” It’s easy to assume once your CRM is in place, the hard work is done. But just like your business isn’t static — neither should your CRM be.
As your business evolves (new products or services, changed processes, additional team members or the introduction of new tools) your CRM setup needs to evolve with it. And as technology itself advances, new features and integrations become available that can streamline your work even further. Without regular updates and refinement, even the best CRM can become outdated or inefficient.
With the right support, your CRM becomes a dynamic engine that adapts to:
- Changing sales processes
- New services or pricing models
- A growing team with evolving roles and responsibilities
- New tools, such as quoting platforms or marketing integrations
Ongoing optimisation ensures your CRM stays aligned with your business goals, keeps performance on track, and continues to deliver value over time.
What Ongoing Support Actually Looks Like
Post-implementation support isn't just about fixing things — it's about getting ahead of them.
Imagine having a team of CRM experts who not only keep your system running smoothly, but also build genuine relationships with your sales team. They notice the small things — a process that’s not quite working, a report that’s being ignored, a new rep who’s unsure how to update a deal. They ask questions, gather feedback, and spot inefficiencies before they become issues.
Sometimes that means adjusting a pipeline stage or tweaking an automation. Other times, it means running a quick refresher session to rebuild confidence in the system. Whatever the fix, it’s grounded in a deep understanding of your team and how they work.
“The fine-tuning and adjustments allow us to optimise our system as we learn about new features or when we add steps to our internal processes.” — Keith Bridgart, Novatti
It’s this level of insight and ongoing iteration that sets a well-supported CRM apart from a DIY setup.
What ongoing support can look like:
- Monthly or quarterly check-ins or strategy calls — regular alignment with your goals
- Adjustments to pipelines, automations, reports, and user roles — to reflect how your team actually works
- Onboarding and training for new team members — so no one falls behind
- Proactive system reviews — to catch inefficiencies early and clean up cluttered or outdated data
- Annual refresher sessions — to update your team on new features, reinforce best practices, and ensure your system is still fit for purpose
- Suggestions grounded in industry best practice — so you’re always one step ahead
The best part? You don’t need to be the expert. Your team focuses on selling while someone else takes care of the system.
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Final Thoughts
You wouldn’t hire a top-performing sales rep and never give them training or feedback; your CRM deserves the same investment.
The upfront savings of a DIY setup often pale in comparison to the time, energy, and revenue lost trying to fix what was never designed properly. What starts as a cost-saving exercise can quickly turn into a hidden drain. Your team ends up spending hours troubleshooting issues, manually patching gaps or working around limitations that shouldn’t exist in the first place. Instead of focusing on lead gen, sales or strategy, they end up tied up with admin tasks, inconsistent data and a system that feels more like a burden than a tool.
Before you blame your CRM or consider switching platforms, ask yourself: was it ever really set up to succeed? And is it being maintained like the business-critical tool it should be?
If not, now is the perfect time to fix it.
EOFY OFFER: Sign a Pipedrive or monday.com implementation proposal with Motii before June 30 and receive 3 months of Post-Implementation Support FREE (valued at $1140).
✅ Free email support
✅ 2 x support hours monthly (with hour rollover)
✅ Priority support queue
✅ Independent data backup (for Pipedrive)
📅 Don’t wait. Book your free consultation with Motii and set your CRM up for real success.
Fred Schnell
Managing Director at Motii
A former Associate Director at Morgan Shaw Advisory, his expertise in customer experience, marketing and business development aligns perfectly with Motii's mission to empower sales teams to optimise their use of technology and shine through automations and simplified workflows.