EspoCRM is a free and open-source Customer Relationship Management (CRM) software. It’s used to evaluate and manage all the company relationships with other companies, people, projects and so on. It is a web application that allows users to see, enter and evaluate all your company relationships regardless of the type. People, companies, projects or opportunities — all in an easy and intuitive interface.
You can subscribe to EspoCrm, an AWS Marketplace product and launch an instance from the product’s AMI using the Amazon EC2 launch wizard.
Step 1: SSH into your instance with username ubuntu and key pair to start the application.
Username : ubuntu
ssh -i ssh_key.pem ubuntu@instance-IP
Step 2: Navigate to the http://instance-ip/. Welcome to Espo CRM.
Click on Start to proceed with the installation.
Step 3: Check on the Accept the License Agreement and click on Next button
Step 4: Enter the configuration and click on the Next button
Host Name : localhost
Database Name : espocrm
Database Username : admin
Database Password : Miri@123
Step 5: Click on next button for final installation process.
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It doesn’t really matter what web framework to choose for developing a CRM system: ASP.NET, Spring, AngularJS, Express, Symfony, Django or Ruby on Rails. All of them have enough capabilities to make your solution work stable, process data quickly and provide scalability opportunity if necessary. If you would like your CRM application to display geographical data and maps, we recommend you to go with Djangoframework. It hosts GeoDjango module that connects to PostGIS, which is PostgreSQL’s spatial objects module. Moreover, GDALfor spatial data and PIL for images are rich enough to cover all the needs of geo data displaying. Since JavaScript is becoming more powerful, we highly recommend to consider using MEAN (Mongo, Express, Angular, Node) stack for programming a CRM app. By using Angular’s Twitter bootstrap plugin, you can create good-looking UI. Node with its multiple modules can manage server part at every step from authentication up to encryption.
The most popular modules are Sales, Marketing, and Service, however, these can be modified or go under other names, for example: Client Management, Order Management, Invoice Management, Events and Tasks Management, System Dashboard, etc.
On-premise CRM is run on computers within the premises of an organization. In this case all the data and information is stored inside the premises of the company, too. Cloud-based CRM software implies that the software and all relevant data, is accessible through the Internet and is displayed in a web browser. According to Gartner, by 2018, large organizations in mature markets will shorten the CRM replacement cycle by two years by moving to Software-as-a-Service model. Nowadays, everything is going into a cloud, and we would recommend not to stand against this. Heroku and Amazon Web Services are proving to have really good system administration and hosting capabilities. Heroku is a bit pricey, but once you subscribe, you can forget about server maintenance at all. Amazon AWS, namely S3 service, will ensure that all your data can be accessible worldwide and with download lightning speed, no matter how many people are calling your CRM server at the same time. Not every company needs to have both applications. However, the combination allows large companies to mix the vital data from each system and get a comprehensive business outlook.
Normally, analytics section in CRM is represented by reports and dashboards helping you to collect and visualise your customer data, engagement levels, sales reps productivity, won/lost opportunities ratio, to name a few. Integration with external analytical services such as Google Analytics, or Talend is also available.
To keep your data safe and sound just follow these basics: Let the specialist conduct security health check before CRM deployment to find vulnerabilities and prevent possible hacker attacks. Define access levels within your organization: set up the basic access to all the records for everyone in the system and impose restrictions on access to specific records, functionality, and workflows depending on the roles and human resource hierarchy. Keep track of user logins based on IP, API, or browser. Set up password defaults to make CRM users create a complex password and change it every 3-6 months. Regularly audit the system against the security regulations.
Depending on the type of CRM, there are several options available: Custom modules (sections) and fields. You can create a new section in CRM or remove default unnecessary ones and pick the fields to feature the module. Custom fields. You can create fields of any type (textbox, email, checkbox…) Custom UI/UX design. You can add or reorder the sections and fields on each layout, set up the navigation, add quicklinks. Custom workflow. You can map your processes across the CRM ecosystem, set alerts, data compliance checks, verifications, etc.
Sales automation to improve productivity.
Email account management.
Social networks integration.
Customer support.
Inventory management.
Process workflow management.