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Set Up a Simple CRM Without Paying for Salesforce

You're tracking leads on sticky notes and in your head. You forgot to follow up with that promising customer last week. You need a system, but Salesforce costs more than your rent. Here's how to set up a real CRM for free.

⚠ Beta ⭐⭐☆☆ Afternoon Project Professional Services Home Services Retail
⭐⭐ Afternoon Project
1–2 hours
Free – $15/month
3–5 hours per week
Any business that needs to track leads and customer follow-ups
February 2026

What You'll Need

ToolWhat It DoesCostLink
HubSpot CRM Free CRM — tracks contacts, deals, and follow-up tasks Free Sign up →

The Walkthrough

Step 1: Sign Up for HubSpot CRM

What to do: Go to HubSpot CRM and create a free account. The free tier is genuinely free forever — not a trial. It includes contacts, deals, tasks, email tracking, and basic reporting.

Why you’re doing it: HubSpot replaces your sticky notes, spreadsheets, and memory with a system that actually works.

What to expect: Signup takes 10 minutes. You’ll set up your company profile and import your first contacts.

Common mistakes: Getting overwhelmed by features. Ignore everything except Contacts and Deals to start.


Step 2: Import Your Existing Contacts

What to do: Export contacts from wherever they currently live — your phone, a spreadsheet, Gmail. Import them into HubSpot. At minimum, include name, email, phone, and how they found you.

Why you’re doing it: Your CRM is only useful if your contacts are in it. Even 50 contacts is a great start.

What to expect: HubSpot handles CSV imports and can connect directly to Gmail and Outlook to auto-import contacts.


Step 3: Set Up Your Deal Pipeline

What to do: In HubSpot, go to Sales → Deals. Set up your pipeline stages. For most service businesses: Lead → Contacted → Quote Sent → Won/Lost. Customize the names to match your actual sales process.

Why you’re doing it: The pipeline shows you exactly where every potential customer stands. No more wondering “did I follow up with that person?”

What to expect: 10 minutes to configure. Drag and drop deals between stages as they progress.


Step 4: Create Follow-Up Tasks

What to do: For every new lead, create a follow-up task with a due date. “Call back in 2 days.” “Send proposal by Friday.” HubSpot reminds you when tasks are due.

Why you’re doing it: Follow-up is where most businesses lose deals. A system that reminds you means you never drop the ball.

What to expect: Creating a task takes 10 seconds. HubSpot shows your task list every time you log in.


Step 5: Build the Daily Habit

What to do: Start each workday by opening HubSpot and checking two things: your task list (what follow-ups are due today) and your pipeline (where does each deal stand). This takes 5 minutes.

Why you’re doing it: A CRM only works if you use it. Five minutes every morning prevents deals from falling through the cracks.


Confidence Level

This workflow is Beta — Based on Best Available Knowledge. HubSpot’s free CRM is well-documented and widely used by small businesses. Alternatives include Zoho CRM (more features on free tier), Streak (CRM built into Gmail), and Folk (newer, simpler interface).

What to Do If It Doesn’t Work

Related Workflows

→ Create Proposals And Quotes → Write Emails That Get Opened

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