Find your next customers in r/CRM
r/CRM is where sales ops teams, founders, and RevOps practitioners compare, configure, and complain about customer relationship management software.
Who buys here and why
Sales managers, RevOps leads, and small business owners actively shopping for a CRM or trying to get more out of the one they have. Budget authority varies from solo founders choosing their first tool to operations directors managing a $50k+ annual software contract. Most are mid-evaluation: they have tried one or two options and are now looking for social proof before committing.
Threads here frequently name the specific CRM being replaced and the exact pain point driving the switch, which is as close to a qualified lead as you can get from a public forum. People ask concrete questions about pricing tiers, migration complexity, and integration depth, all of which signal they are close to a purchase decision.
Buyer-intent signals to watch
See buyer-intent posts in r/CRM right now
Enter a keyword and we score every post 0-100 for purchase intent. Free, no signup.
How to participate in r/CRM without spamming
r/CRM tolerates product mentions in comment threads when they directly answer the question asked. Top-level posts that read as ads are removed quickly. The safest approach is to reply to comparison or migration threads with a factual breakdown of how your product handles the specific scenario described.
Related subreddits
Frequently asked questions
Who actually posts in r/CRM?
A mix of first-time CRM buyers, admins troubleshooting configuration issues, and founders evaluating their first tool. The buyer-to-browser ratio is higher than most software subreddits.
Which CRM vendors come up most often as alternatives people are fleeing?
Salesforce and HubSpot dominate the complaints, mostly around pricing at scale. That creates a recurring opening for tools positioned as simpler or cheaper.
Can I share my product if someone asks for recommendations?
Yes, with clear disclosure that you built or work for it. Factual answers beat marketing copy here; the community flags anything that reads like a press release.
Is it worth monitoring r/CRM even though it is relatively small?
The subscriber count understates its value. A 40k-member subreddit focused entirely on CRM buying decisions yields more qualified signals per post than a million-member general business community.
Turn r/CRM posts into a lead pipeline
PluckLead monitors r/CRM around the clock and delivers purchase-intent posts straight to your inbox.