For most South African small businesses, HubSpot Free is the best place to start — it's genuinely free for unlimited contacts and has the cleanest interface. Once you outgrow it, Zoho One is the best value for SA SMEs at scale. Salesforce is overkill for most SMEs. Monday Sales CRM is excellent if you're already using Monday for project management. Pipedrive is best for sales-heavy teams that need pipeline focus.
"Which CRM should I use?" is one of those questions where bad advice is everywhere. Most CRM "comparisons" are written by affiliate marketers who get paid by whichever platform you sign up to. So here's an honest review of the five CRMs SA small businesses actually use, with real pricing in Rand and pragmatic recommendations.
First, an important note: the "best CRM" is the one your team will actually use. A perfect CRM that nobody updates is worse than a basic one that everyone uses daily. Simplicity beats features 95% of the time.
The Five Options Compared
| CRM | Starting Price | Best For | Learning Curve |
|---|---|---|---|
| HubSpot | Free → R350/user/month | Most SA SMEs starting out | Easy |
| Zoho One | R900/user/month (full suite) | SMEs at scale, value-focused | Medium |
| Salesforce | R450-R5,000+/user/month | Larger teams, complex sales | Hard |
| Monday Sales CRM | R200-R450/user/month | Project-management-heavy teams | Easy |
| Pipedrive | R250-R900/user/month | Sales-focused, pipeline-driven | Easy |
(Prices in ZAR are approximate based on current USD/ZAR exchange rates; check provider websites for current pricing.)
1. HubSpot — The Best Place to Start
Pricing: Free tier (unlimited contacts, basic features) → Starter at ~R350/user/month → Professional at ~R1,500/user/month → Enterprise R3,000+/user/month.
Why most SA SMEs should start here: HubSpot's free tier is genuinely useful — not a 14-day trial dressed up as "free." You get contact management, deal pipelines, email integration, basic automation, and meeting scheduling for unlimited contacts at zero cost. This is enough for most SA businesses doing under R5M in annual revenue.
The interface is the cleanest in the industry. Free tier is generous and useful. Built-in marketing tools (email, forms, landing pages) integrate seamlessly. Strong reporting. Excellent mobile app. Documentation and tutorials are world-class.
Costs scale aggressively as you upgrade. Marketing Hub Professional jumps from free to ~R15,000/month. The "free" tier nudges you constantly toward paid features. Some advanced reporting is locked behind enterprise pricing.
Best for: Most SA service businesses, B2B companies, and consultancies. Particularly strong if you also want to do marketing automation.
2. Zoho One — The Value Champion
Pricing: Zoho CRM standalone from ~R200/user/month. Zoho One (40+ apps including CRM, marketing, accounting, HR) at ~R900/user/month all-in.
Why it's underrated in SA: Zoho One is genuinely the best value in business software. For ~R900/user/month, you get a CRM, email marketing, accounting (alternative to Xero/Sage), HR, project management, helpdesk, and 30+ other apps that all integrate. For a 5-person SA business, this replaces R3,000-R8,000/month of separate subscriptions.
Best total cost of ownership for SA SMEs at scale. Comprehensive feature set. Strong automation capabilities. Active development. Reasonable mobile apps.
The interface is functional but not as polished as HubSpot. The sheer breadth of apps is overwhelming initially. Some features feel "almost there" but not quite as refined as specialist tools. Customer support is responsive but slower than HubSpot's.
Best for: SA businesses with 5+ employees who want to consolidate their stack. Companies prioritising cost efficiency over best-in-class single-purpose tools.
3. Salesforce — Powerful But Usually Overkill
Pricing: Starts at ~R450/user/month (Starter) but realistically R1,500-R5,000+/user/month for useful editions. Implementation typically requires R30,000-R100,000+ in setup costs.
The reality check: Salesforce is the gold standard for enterprise CRM. It's also massively overkill for businesses with under 50 employees. The implementation complexity, cost, and learning curve make it a poor fit for most SA SMEs.
Most powerful customisation of any CRM. Massive ecosystem of integrations and apps (AppExchange). Strong for complex multi-stage sales cycles. Industry-leading reporting and analytics. Highly scalable.
Expensive at every level. Steep learning curve — most SA businesses need an external consultant to implement properly. Per-user pricing adds up fast. Many features you're paying for, you'll never use. Mobile experience is okay but not great.
Best for: SA businesses with 50+ employees, complex multi-stakeholder sales cycles, or specific industry requirements (financial services, pharma) where Salesforce's depth is necessary.
4. Monday Sales CRM — Best for Project-Driven Teams
Pricing: ~R200-R450/user/month depending on plan.
The unique angle: Monday is fundamentally a project management tool that added CRM functionality. If your business is already running on Monday for projects, adding the Sales CRM creates a unified workspace where deals flow into projects flow into client management.
Beautiful, modern interface. Highly visual — kanban boards, timeline views, Gantt charts. Easy to customise without developers. Good integration with Monday's project management features. Strong automation.
If you're not already using Monday for projects, the CRM alone is less compelling than HubSpot. Reporting is weaker than dedicated CRMs. Email integration exists but is less elegant than HubSpot's. Pricing scales per user.
Best for: Service businesses where projects and sales are tightly linked — agencies, consultancies, training companies running cohort-based programmes.
5. Pipedrive — The Sales-Focused Specialist
Pricing: ~R250-R900/user/month depending on plan.
The angle: Pipedrive is designed by salespeople for salespeople. Everything is built around the visual sales pipeline. If your team's primary job is moving deals from "lead" to "won", Pipedrive is the most focused tool for that job.
Cleanest sales pipeline interface in the industry. Easy adoption — your sales team will actually use it. Strong activity tracking. Reasonable pricing. Good mobile app.
Limited marketing features compared to HubSpot. Reporting is decent but not as flexible as Zoho or Salesforce. Customisation is more limited. No free tier (only 14-day trial).
Best for: Sales-led businesses where the bottleneck is moving deals through the pipeline. Recruitment agencies, real estate, B2B sales teams.
The Honest Recommendation Framework
Start with HubSpot Free if:
- You're using spreadsheets or no CRM at all
- You have under 5 employees
- You have no clear CRM requirements yet
- You want to test before committing
Move to HubSpot Starter (~R350/user) if:
- HubSpot Free is working but you want better email tracking and automation
- You have 3-15 employees
- You're managing 50+ active deals
Consider Zoho One if:
- You have 5+ employees
- You're paying for multiple separate tools (email marketing + CRM + project management)
- You want comprehensive functionality at lower cost
- You don't mind a slightly less polished interface
Consider Pipedrive if:
- You're a sales-heavy organisation
- Pipeline visibility is your main concern
- You want maximum sales rep adoption
Consider Monday Sales CRM if:
- You're already on Monday for projects
- Your sales and delivery are tightly coupled
Only consider Salesforce if:
- You have 50+ employees
- Your sales cycle is genuinely complex (multi-month, multi-stakeholder)
- You have budget for proper implementation (R50k+)
- You have specific industry requirements that other tools don't meet
The Bigger Question: It's Not About the CRM
Here's the uncomfortable truth: most CRM problems aren't CRM problems. They're process problems wearing a CRM disguise.
Businesses that switch CRMs hoping for better outcomes usually find themselves with the same problems on a different platform. The leads still don't get followed up. The pipeline still isn't accurate. The reports still don't drive decisions.
Before choosing a CRM, get clear on:
- What sales process are you actually following?
- Who is responsible for what at each stage?
- What information do you need at each stage?
- How will leads flow in (forms, manual entry, integrations)?
- What follow-up cadence are you committing to?
Answer those questions first. Then the CRM choice becomes obvious — pick whichever supports the process you've defined.
Need help building the lead handling system, not just choosing the CRM?
The Simplifico audit looks at your full lead flow — capture, follow-up, and nurturing — and identifies the actual bottlenecks.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the best CRM for small businesses in South Africa?
For most SA SMEs, HubSpot Free is the best starting point — it's genuinely free, has unlimited contacts, and the cleanest interface. As you scale, Zoho One offers the best total value for businesses needing CRM plus other tools. Salesforce is overkill for most SMEs.
Is HubSpot really free?
Yes, HubSpot's free tier is genuinely free for unlimited contacts. You get contact management, deal pipelines, basic email integration, and forms. Paid features (advanced automation, reporting, marketing tools) are upsells but the core CRM is functional and useful at zero cost.
How much does Salesforce cost in South Africa?
Salesforce starts at ~R450/user/month for Starter Edition but most SA implementations end up costing R1,500-R5,000/user/month for useful editions, plus R30,000-R100,000+ in implementation costs. Total cost for a 10-person team can easily exceed R200,000 in year one.
Can I switch CRMs later?
Yes, but it's painful. Data export/import works between most CRMs but you lose history, custom fields, and integrations. Better to choose one you can grow with than to plan for a switch. HubSpot Free → HubSpot Starter → HubSpot Professional is a smooth path that avoids the switch entirely.
Do I need a CRM at all?
If you have more than 20 active leads at any time, yes. Spreadsheets work for 5-15 leads but break down beyond that. The real signal that you need a CRM is when leads start falling through the cracks — opportunities you forgot to follow up on. That's lost revenue.