A CRM doesn’t need to be complicated to be useful.
At its core, a CRM exists to help you remember people, track conversations, and follow up at the right time. When used well, it quietly supports your work in the background. When overbuilt, it tends to become… a very impressive place no one wants to log into.
So let’s bring it back.
A CRM helps you answer a few simple questions:
That’s it.
If your CRM can answer those three things clearly, it’s doing its job.
Most CRMs — regardless of platform — are built around the same core elements:
You don’t need dozens of fields or complex automation to get value from these. Clear, consistent information beats clever setup every time.
A simple rhythm works best:
The goal isn’t perfection. It’s consistency.
This is usually where things drift:
A CRM works best when it reflects how you already work — not how you think you might work someday.
There’s plenty of time for advanced features later.
For solopreneurs, freelancers, and small teams, Notion can be a natural place to start.
If your notes, projects, and documentation already live there, keeping CRM information in the same workspace helps everything stay connected. And for teams using Notion AI, having customer and project information together means AI can work with real business context — not isolated records.
It also makes customization straightforward, since the system can adapt as your needs change.
To make this easier, I built CRMW — a simple CRM template that lives in Notion.
CRMW is designed to support the basics:
It’s intentionally simple, easy to customize, and designed to support good CRM habits from the start.
CRMW is currently available:
If you’d like to see a practical example of everything described above, you can explore CRMW here:
A CRM doesn’t need to be impressive to be effective.
Start with the basics. Keep it usable. Let it grow with you.
That approach tends to age well.