Why are we paying for a CRM that our sales team barely uses?
Sales teams don’t use CRMs when they add admin without improving win rates. Adoption increases when the CRM mirrors the real sales process, removes friction, and helps reps close deals faster.
The problem isn’t your CRM, it’s how it’s been designed.
Most CEOs assume CRM adoption is a training problem. It isn’t. It’s a strategy problem.
When sales teams avoid a CRM, it’s usually because:
If your CRM feels like reporting software rather than a sales tool, adoption will always fail.
At a strategic level, your CRM should:
If it’s not doing these things, it’s not a CRM problem, it’s a design problem.
Low CRM adoption creates:
This isn’t an operational issue, it’s a revenue risk.
A great example of this in practice is Dishd.
Their challenge wasn’t a lack of data, it was how and when to collect it.
They needed to capture a large amount of customer information, but:
Instead of collecting everything at once, we redesigned the sales journey.
We introduced a progressive profiling approach inside HubSpot:
Most importantly:
Instead of the CRM being a burden, it became a tool that actively helped close deals.
You can view the full case study here:
https://www.thegrowtharchitect.co.uk/dishd-case-study
HubSpot is particularly strong for this type of strategy because it allows you to:
Capture only the data needed at each step of the journey.
Align your CRM to how your team actually sells.
Push collected data into contracts, proposals, and workflows.
Automatically log emails, calls, and interactions.
Stop asking:
Why aren’t they using it?
Start asking:
Because they create extra work without helping close deals. Adoption increases when CRMs reduce friction and improve outcomes.
Redesign your pipeline, remove unnecessary fields, and automate data capture so reps see immediate value.
It’s collecting customer data gradually throughout the sales process instead of all at once, improving both data quality and user experience.
HubSpot enables automation, flexible pipelines, and stage-based data capture, making it easier for sales teams to use and trust the system.
CRM adoption is not about enforcement, it’s about experience.
When your CRM is designed around how your team sells, and actively helps them close deals, adoption stops being a problem and becomes a natural outcome of a well-built revenue strategy.