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필사 모드: Personal CRM Tools 2026 — Folk / Clay (AI Series B) / Dex / Monica OSS / Sortd / Streak / Attio / HubSpot / Salesforce / Pipedrive / Sansan Deep-Dive Guide

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Prologue — In 2026, "my network" became an asset

"Do I need a CRM?" — back in 2020 this was only a question for sales orgs. In 2026, solo founders, freelancers, influencers, VCs, individual sellers — anyone who deals with people seriously asks it at least once. The ROI between "addresses in a Notion page" and "a real CRM" is finally clear.

There are three reasons.

First, **AI-first contact enrichment** became feasible. Clay leads the charge. Throw in one email and LinkedIn, the company website, news, funding data — everything fills itself in. The era of hand-curated contact lists is over.

Second, **the social GTM motion** went mainstream. Sales no longer starts with a cold call but with a LinkedIn DM, a newsletter, or a Twitter relationship. Once the channels multiply, contact management becomes hard and a CRM becomes necessary.

Third, **the line between personal CRM and business CRM has dissolved.** Modern CRMs like Folk and Attio work both for solo users and for teams. Relationship CRMs like Dex and Monica also handle personal relationships. Salesforce is still the enterprise canon, but the layer beneath has fragmented into many strong options.

This guide compares 17 major tools on one page in May 2026. Who should pick what, and how the local context of Korea and Japan changes the answer.

1. The map of personal CRMs in 2026 — four categories

Let's set the landscape first. Tools roughly split into four buckets.

| Category | Definition | Representative tools |

| --- | --- | --- |

| Indie / relationship CRM | Lightly manages personal and professional relationships | Dex, Monica, Cloze, Clay (personal mode) |

| Modern SaaS CRM | Beautiful UX, fits small teams | Folk, Attio, Pipedrive, HubSpot CRM (free) |

| Enterprise / classic | Big sales orgs, heavy workflow | Salesforce Sales Cloud, Microsoft Dynamics, Oracle CX |

| Self / OSS | Build it yourself or self-host | Notion as CRM, Airtable as CRM, Monica OSS |

The buckets are not walls. Folk works for solo users but scales to 8-person teams. HubSpot CRM Free works for one user or a hundred. **What matters is whether the problem this tool excels at is your problem.**

Four questions narrow it down.

1. **Solo or team?** Solo means lighter tools; team means permissions and role management.

2. **Sales or relationship maintenance?** Sales needs pipelines and deals; relationship needs reminders and last-touched data.

3. **Is email the primary channel?** Gmail-heavy users lean toward Streak, Sortd, Mixmax. External CRMs add sync friction.

4. **Do you need enrichment?** B2B outbound needs Clay, Apollo, ZoomInfo. Personal relationships do not.

Answer those four and you typically narrow 17 tools down to 3 or 4. Then it's trial time.

2. Folk — the 2024 Series B newcomer

Folk is a Paris-based startup that raised a Series B in 2024. "A CRM with Notion's elegance" is a fair description. Base pricing is around $20/month per seat with a free trial.

**Strengths**:

- The UX is genuinely beautiful. Page-builder-like flexibility for contact views.

- Folk X (the Chrome extension) — one-click import of contacts from LinkedIn, Twitter, and Gmail.

- AI features — email drafting, contact summaries, automatic enrichment.

- Intuitive pipelines — Trello-like boards with customizable deal stages.

- Two-way sync with Gmail and Outlook.

**Weaknesses**:

- Falls short for large sales orgs (lightweight permissions and reporting).

- Not absolutely cheap (a seed-stage solo founder may feel the pinch).

- Depth of enrichment trails Clay.

**Good fit for**:

- Sales / BD owners in 1-10-person teams.

- VCs and founders managing portfolio companies and LPs.

- Consultants tracking client lifecycle.

Folk sits squarely in the middle-market gap of "Salesforce is too heavy, spreadsheets are too sparse."

3. Clay (Kareem Amin) — Series B 2024, conqueror of AI-first enrichment

Clay raised a Series B in 2024, and founder Kareem Amin made AI-first data enrichment the new standard. Strictly speaking, Clay is not a CRM — it's **a data layer that sits on top of CRMs**.

**The problem Clay solves**:

Given a list of 100 company domains, automatically fill in headcount, funding, tech stack, recent news, key people. A week of manual work becomes 30 minutes.

**How it works**:

1. Source integration: 50+ data providers (Apollo, ZoomInfo, LinkedIn, Crunchbase, Clearbit, BuiltWith, and more) wired in with one line each.

2. AI agents: GPT, Claude, and Gemini run per column. "Summarize this company's value prop in one line" applied to 10,000 rows at once.

3. Waterfall enrichment: if the first provider misses, fall back to the second, then the third. Cost is minimized.

4. Outbound integration: push results to HubSpot, Salesforce, Apollo, Outreach, Lemlist.

**Pricing**: from $149/month. Enterprise is negotiated. Billing is **credit-based** (enrichment-call units), not per seat.

**Why it dominates**:

Between 2024 and 2025 the B2B outbound workflow was rebuilt around Clay. "Apollo to extract the list, Clay to enrich, Lemlist or Outreach to send" became the canonical sequence. Apollo strengthened its enrichment in direct response.

**Weaknesses**:

- Steep learning curve. For non-technical users it feels like Notion databases met no-code automation.

- Pricing is heavy for a small solo seller.

4. Dex — the canonical lightweight relationship CRM

Dex defined the "personal CRM" category. It is not for sales — it is for **relationship maintenance**.

**Design philosophy**:

For each contact, record last contact date, next-touch timing, how you met (context), and notes. The system surfaces reminders like "you haven't reached out to X in three months — want to check in?"

**Features**:

- Sync with Gmail, Calendar, LinkedIn, Twitter — automatic last-touched tracking.

- Notes, reminders, goals (networking goals).

- A well-built mobile app.

- Pricing: around $12/month Premium with a free tier.

**Good fit for**:

- Founders, VCs, writers, consultants — people managing "wide and weak" networks.

- People whose goal is to turn relationships into an asset rather than close a sale.

**Weaknesses**:

- Weak team collaboration — fundamentally a single-user product.

- No sales pipeline or deal management.

Dex's position: "a tool that helps you not forget the graph of friends, colleagues, and opportunities." **It is not a sales tool.**

5. Monica — the open-source personal CRM

Monica is an open-source (AGPL) personal CRM built on PHP/Laravel — a hugely popular GitHub project.

**Philosophy**:

"A digital second brain that remembers your family's birthdays, your kids' and dogs' names, the last thing you talked about." Specialized for **personal-relationship management**, not business.

**Features**:

- Contacts, activities, notes, reminders.

- Family tree, pets, gifts, loans.

- Journal, food preferences, conversation log.

- Self-hosted (Docker install in 5 minutes) or hosted Premium.

**Pricing**:

- Self-hosted: free, server cost only.

- Cloud: around $90/year Premium.

**Good fit for**:

- Privacy-conscious users (self-hosting available).

- People who genuinely want to "remember people" — family, friends, relatives — not run a business.

- Developers comfortable with the OSS / self-host culture.

**Weaknesses**:

- No business features — no deals, no pipelines.

- UI is rougher than modern SaaS (OSS reality).

- Self-host operational burden.

Monica shares Dex's category but leans further into **private relationships**. Being OSS, the data lives with you.

6. Sortd / Streak — two flavors of Gmail-friendly

If Gmail is your main channel, Sortd and Streak are direct candidates. Both live inside Gmail but feel different.

Streak — Gmail-native CRM

Streak plugs into Gmail's sidebar and delivers CRM features. The pipeline becomes part of your inbox.

**Highlights**:

- Runs 100% inside Gmail (Chrome extension).

- Pipelines as "boxes" tailored per use case (sales, hiring, customer support).

- Email tracking (open notifications), mail merge, snippets.

- Free tier (personal), paid from $15/month.

- Mac and mobile apps available.

**Good fit for**:

- Whoever starts every sales motion from Gmail.

- People who cannot tolerate the friction of moving data into a separate CRM.

- Solo to small teams.

Sortd — Gmail as Trello

Sortd makes Gmail feel like a Kanban board. Built for people whose **email is the task list**.

**Highlights**:

- Board view added inside Gmail.

- Drag-and-drop emails into tasks.

- Lite CRM (deal and contact tracking).

- Free tier, paid from $10/month.

Sortd vs Streak: Streak is **CRM-centric**, Sortd is **task-management-centric**. Pick Streak if you need a sales pipeline; pick Sortd if email equals tasks.

7. Attio — the new standard for modern CRM

Attio grew quickly between 2023 and 2024 and earned a reputation as "a modern CRM that could replace Salesforce." The UX is very modern, and Notion-database-like flexibility is applied to a CRM.

**Strengths**:

- Highly flexible data model — contacts, companies, deals, and custom objects defined freely.

- Automatic enrichment — type a domain and company data fills in.

- AI features — email summaries, deal insights, automated follow-up suggestions.

- Gmail and Outlook sync, Calendar integration, Slack alerts.

- Pricing: Free, Plus $29/month, Pro $59/month, Enterprise negotiated.

**Good fit for**:

- Series A to Series C startups (10-100 people).

- Teams who feel Salesforce is heavy and HubSpot is too marketing-centric.

- Sales ops teams that want to design their own data model.

**Weaknesses**:

- Learning curve — the freedom means you must decide your setup.

- Enterprise features (advanced reporting, granular permissions) do not yet match Salesforce.

Attio's position resembles "the intersection of Notion and Salesforce." Flexible data with intact CRM-native workflows (pipelines, email, deals).

8. Less Annoying CRM / Cloze — solo CRM options

Less Annoying CRM (LACRM)

A CRM whose name is honest. **Simplicity** is its weapon.

- $15/month, all features included, no upsells.

- Calendar, contacts, notes, email logging in one screen.

- Nothing like Salesforce's complexity.

- Good fit for: solo sellers, small insurance agents, real-estate brokers, consultants.

LACRM is for people who want a CRM but cannot stand Salesforce. A very loyal user base in the US SMB segment.

Cloze

Cloze is a CRM where **AI automatically scores relationships**. It tracks "how often you reach out to this person and when you last did" by itself.

- Integrates email, calls, SMS, and social signals.

- Automatic reminders ("haven't talked to X in two weeks — say hi?").

- Pro $19/month, Business $29/month and up.

- Good fit for: real estate, financial advisors, BD — roles where "relationship frequency" matters.

Cloze sits between Dex (more relationship-oriented) and Folk (more automation-oriented).

9. Notion / Airtable as CRM — the appeal and the trap of building it yourself

Many solo users and small teams skip CRMs entirely and roll their own contact database in Notion or Airtable. Both have tradeoffs.

Notion as CRM

**Pros**:

- Free (personal is free, teams are very affordable).

- Naturally connects to other Notion pages (notes, docs, wiki).

- Many database views — gallery, board, calendar, table.

**Cons**:

- Weak email sync — must fill the gap with separate automation (Zapier, Make).

- Notifications and reminders cannot match a dedicated CRM tool.

- Search and filtering slow down on large datasets.

Airtable as CRM

**Pros**:

- The strengths of a real database — relational data, automations, varied views.

- Strong API — easy to wire to other systems.

- Lots of templates.

**Cons**:

- Surprisingly expensive — Pro is $20/month per user.

- Not CRM-native UI, so "deal cards" feel awkward.

- Permissions get complex compared to Notion at team scale.

**Verdict**: Notion or Airtable as CRM is fine **for very small teams under 20 people** in their startup phase. Beyond that, consider moving to a dedicated CRM (Folk, Attio, HubSpot). The trap of self-building is that **maintenance becomes your real job**.

10. HubSpot Free vs Salesforce vs Pipedrive — the classic triad

HubSpot CRM (Free tier)

HubSpot's free CRM remains the overwhelming entry point for SMB sales in 2026.

- Unlimited contacts, companies, deals, and users — free.

- Integrates with Marketing Hub, Sales Hub, Service Hub (paid upgrades).

- Email tracking, meeting scheduling, live chat included.

- Weaknesses: free tier has caps, paid pricing scales aggressively.

**Good fit for**: pre-Series A startups, marketing-driven SMBs, content-led GTM companies.

Salesforce Sales Cloud

The enterprise sales standard. The tool that has defined the market since 1999.

- Extremely powerful workflows, automation, reporting.

- AppExchange offers 1000+ integrations.

- AI (Einstein, Agentforce) built in.

- Pricing: Sales Cloud Essentials $25/month, Enterprise $165/month, Unlimited $330/month per seat.

**Weaknesses**: very steep learning curve, heavy setup, expensive.

**Good fit for**: sales orgs of 100+ people, enterprise sales, complex sales processes.

Pipedrive

Specialized in visualizing the sales pipeline. Intuitive UI and easy setup.

- The Kanban pipeline view is its strength.

- Activity tracking, email integration, automation available.

- Pricing: Essential $14/month, Advanced $34/month, Professional $49/month per seat.

- Good fit for: 5-50-person sales orgs at "deal-driven" companies.

How the three stack up:

| Tool | Weight | Price | Where it fits |

| --- | --- | --- | --- |

| HubSpot Free | Light | Free (capped) | Starting out, marketing-driven |

| Pipedrive | Medium | $14-49/month | Sales-pipeline-centric |

| Salesforce | Heavy | $25-330/month | Enterprise, complex workflows |

11. Capsule / Zoho CRM / Insightly — other SMB options

Capsule CRM

UK-based SMB CRM. "Simplicity is its charm."

- Pricing: Starter $18/month, Growth $36/month, Advanced $54/month.

- Popular in UK and Europe (GDPR-friendly).

- Email integration, task management, pipelines.

Zoho CRM

The CRM from India's Zoho. Tight integration with Zoho One (a bundle of 45 business apps) is the differentiator.

- Standard $14/month, Professional $23/month, Enterprise $40/month per seat.

- AI (Zia), automation, customization.

- Huge global user base.

Insightly

Project-management integration is the angle. Sales deals and project lifecycle in one place.

- Plus $29/month, Professional $49/month, Enterprise $99/month.

- Good fit for: service companies where sales and project delivery are intertwined (consulting, agencies).

These three occupy "the SMB niches that Salesforce, HubSpot, and Pipedrive do not fit." Lower visibility in Korea but a solid global user base.

12. Outbound — Apollo.io / Lemlist / Outreach

A CRM is where you **store** contacts; outbound tools are where you **find and reach** them. The standard 2026 sequence: **Apollo to Clay to Lemlist or Outreach to CRM**.

Apollo.io

The standard for B2B lead data. 270M contacts and 70M company records.

- Email, phone, and LinkedIn data.

- Built-in sequences (cold outreach automation).

- Pricing: Free, Basic $59/month, Professional $99/month, Organization negotiated.

- Strengthened enrichment heavily after Clay's rise.

Lemlist

Email-outreach sequence tool. Personalized templates are its strength.

- Image and landing-page personalization (auto-generated images that include the recipient's name).

- A / B testing, deliverability protection.

- Pricing: Email Starter $39/month, Email Pro $69/month and up.

Outreach.io

The enterprise sales-engagement standard. Deep integration with Salesforce and HubSpot.

- Sequences, dialer, meeting scheduling.

- AI Kaia (conversational intelligence).

- Pricing: $100+ per seat (enterprise negotiated).

ZoomInfo

Strictly a data provider. Along with Apollo, the largest B2B data source. Covered in a separate dedicated post.

**Example sequence**:

1. Apollo extracts 1000 leads matching the ICP.

2. Clay enriches each lead with funding, tech stack, and news.

3. Lemlist sends personalized sequences.

4. Replied deals get pushed into HubSpot or Salesforce.

This sequence became standard in 2025 and is becoming more automated in 2026.

13. Email tracking — Mixmax / Yesware

Most CRMs have email-tracking built in, but dedicated tools go deeper.

Mixmax

Gmail-native sales productivity tool.

- Email tracking (opens and clicks).

- Sequences (small-scale automation).

- Calendar slot share, live send, templates.

- Pricing: SMB $29/month, Growth $49/month, Enterprise $69/month.

Yesware

Supports both Gmail and Outlook. Email tracking, templates, campaigns.

- Pricing: Pro $19/month, Premium $45/month, Enterprise $85/month.

- Salesforce and HubSpot integration.

**Mixmax vs Yesware**: Mixmax is more tightly bound to Gmail with a more modern UX. Yesware handles Outlook well and has solid enterprise integration.

Because most modern CRMs (Folk, Attio, HubSpot, Salesforce) ship email tracking by default, **standalone tracking is becoming niche**.

14. AI contact enrichment — Clay's surge and what's next

Since 2024, the biggest shift in the CRM market is the **mainstreaming of AI enrichment**. Throw in a domain or email and company, person, and contextual data fill themselves in.

**Market landscape (May 2026)**:

| Tool | Position | Strength |

| --- | --- | --- |

| Clay | Enrichment layer | 50+ source waterfall, AI agent columns |

| Apollo | Data + sequence | Contact-DB scale, integrated sequences |

| Clearbit (acquired by HubSpot) | Enrichment | HubSpot integration |

| ZoomInfo | Data + engage | Enterprise data depth |

| Lusha | Light enrichment | Friendly pricing, solo sellers |

| Hunter.io | Email finder | Domain to email lookup |

**Why Clay surged**:

1. **Waterfall**: when the first source misses, fall through to the next. Maximizes fill rate while minimizing cost.

2. **AI-agent columns**: run GPT or Claude per column. Run "summarize this company's value prop in one line" across thousands of rows in one shot.

3. **Workflow integration**: easy push into HubSpot, Salesforce, Apollo, Outreach, Lemlist.

**Next trends**:

- Modern CRMs like Folk and Attio are pushing to **embed** enrichment.

- HubSpot integrated enrichment quickly after acquiring Clearbit.

- Apollo strengthened its own enrichment (catching up to Clay).

- New tools: Surfe, Cognism, FullEnrich and other niche players are growing.

**Warning**: enrichment **data accuracy** is still source-dependent. Filling undefined fields with an AI agent risks hallucination. For mission-critical fields (contact, email), stick with verified sources.

15. Korea — KakaoTalk sync, Toss, Adsbi, the self-built-CRM culture

The Korean context differs from the global one. Two reasons: **KakaoTalk is the dominant messenger** and **B2C marketing-automation culture is different**.

KakaoTalk sync

Most global CRMs (Folk, Attio, Salesforce) lack KakaoTalk sync. Korean sales teams using global CRMs end up with **KakaoTalk conversations drifting outside the CRM**. The workarounds:

- Manage Kakao Business Messages with separate tools (Bizm, MakeBot, etc.).

- Channel Talk (channel.io) acts as live chat plus lightweight CRM in Korea.

- Channel Talk itself is one of the candidates for "Korea's HubSpot."

Toss / Adsbi / in-house CRMs

Korean fintechs often build their own CRMs.

- **Toss**: very strong in-house CRM and data platform. External CRMs are used only by some teams.

- **Adsbi**: ads-and-CRM bundled SaaS popular in Korean e-commerce.

- **Shop-by**, **Cafe24**, and other e-commerce platforms ship native CRM features.

Korean context — verdict

- **B2B SaaS solo / small team**: Folk and Attio are the global standard; Korean UI is sparse.

- **B2C marketing automation**: Channel Talk, Plating, and other Korean-built solutions are strong.

- **Enterprise**: Samsung, LG, Hyundai run SAP, Oracle, Salesforce paired with bespoke systems.

- **Personal (private networks)**: Dex and Monica have weak Korean support but function.

Korean startups with a global GTM use Folk, Attio, HubSpot. Domestic-focused companies often pair Channel Talk with in-house systems.

16. Japan — Sansan, freee, Money Forward, and the B2B ecosystem

The Japanese context is uniquely its own. **Business-card culture** is still strong, and B2B sales often starts with a business-card exchange.

Sansan — the B2B business-card CRM standard

Sansan is the standard for B2B sales in Japan. Scan a business card, and OCR plus human review produce highly accurate contact data shared across the company.

- A Japanese listed company. Very high market share.

- Business-card OCR (in-house staff review keeps accuracy very high).

- Company-wide sharing — searchable answers to "who knows Mr. Kim, the manager at Company X?"

- Integrates with Salesforce and kintone.

**Why is Sansan strong only in Japan**:

Business-card exchanges are the start of sales, and the quantity and quality of business-card data correlates directly with sales power — a feature of Japanese business culture. Outside Japan, LinkedIn plays that role.

freee / Money Forward

The two Japanese accounting-SaaS leaders. Not CRMs in themselves, but their **CRM modules** or bundles are commonly used by SMBs.

- freee is investing in CRM features (especially integration with freee 人事労務).

- Money Forward also offers a CRM (Money Forward クラウド CRM).

kintone

Cybozu's no-code business-apps platform. One of the standards for in-house CRM builds at Japanese enterprises.

- Sits in a "Notion plus Airtable plus Power Apps" position.

- Very popular among Japanese SMBs.

- Used to build CRMs, projects, time tracking, and more.

Japanese context — verdict

- **B2B enterprise**: Sansan plus Salesforce or kintone is the standard.

- **SMB**: freee or Money Forward integration plus self-built.

- **Globally expanding Japanese startups**: HubSpot, Attio, and Folk adoption is rising.

Japan has walked a different evolutionary path on **digitizing business cards**, and Sansan sits at the peak of it.

17. Who should pick what — recommendations by persona

1) Solo founder / indie hacker

- **Main CRM**: Folk or Attio Free.

- **Relationship CRM**: Dex (networking-centric).

- **Email channel**: Gmail plus Mixmax or Streak.

- Start when: contacts cross 50.

2) VC / angel investor

- **Main CRM**: Folk or Affinity (VC-specialized, outside the scope of this post).

- **Relationship CRM**: Dex (LP and founder relationships).

- **Enrichment**: Clay (portfolio-company analysis).

- Start when: immediately after closing the first fund.

3) B2B sales team (5-50 people)

- **Main CRM**: HubSpot Free to HubSpot Pro, or Pipedrive, or Attio.

- **Outbound**: Apollo plus Clay plus Lemlist or Outreach.

- **Email tracking**: Mixmax or whatever the CRM ships.

- Start when: there is even one full-time salesperson.

4) Enterprise sales org (100+ people)

- **Main CRM**: Salesforce Sales Cloud.

- **Outbound**: Outreach or Salesloft.

- **Enrichment**: ZoomInfo plus Clay (a mix).

- Adopt when: the sales org crosses 50.

5) Consultant / freelancer

- **Main CRM**: Less Annoying CRM or Folk.

- **Relationship**: Dex.

- **Email tracking**: Mixmax or Yesware.

6) Personal relationships (family, friends)

- **Main CRM**: Monica (self-hostable) or Dex.

- The key: do not use business tools.

7) Korean B2B startup

- **Global GTM**: Attio or Folk plus Apollo plus Clay.

- **Domestic-focused**: Channel Talk plus in-house systems.

- **Hybrid**: HubSpot plus Channel Talk integration.

8) Japanese B2B sales

- **Standard**: Sansan plus Salesforce or kintone.

- **Globally expanding**: HubSpot or Attio plus Sansan in parallel.

A decision tree

Solo user?

├─ Yes → Sales purpose?

│ ├─ Yes → Folk, Pipedrive, HubSpot Free

│ └─ No (relationships) → Dex, Monica

└─ No (team) → Size?

├─ < 10 → Folk, Attio, HubSpot Free

├─ 10-100 → Attio, HubSpot Pro, Pipedrive

└─ 100+ → Salesforce, HubSpot Enterprise

Epilogue — Where CRM is headed in 2026

Three big currents in the CRM market as of May 2026.

**First, AI enrichment became standard.** Every tool follows the trail Clay blazed. Folk, Attio, and HubSpot strengthen their own enrichment, while Apollo competes head-on with Clay.

**Second, the line between "personal CRM" and "business CRM" keeps blurring.** Folk fits a solo user and a 100-person team alike. Dex covers both private and business relationships.

**Third, the local context (Korea and Japan) remains decisive.** How to integrate local tools like KakaoTalk and Sansan with global CRMs is the central decision for Korean and Japanese sales orgs.

CRM is not about "picking a tool" but about **designing a workflow**. Where contacts enter, where they live, how follow-up happens — sketch the flow first and then pick the tool. The tool does not decide the workflow.

Finally, "not using a CRM at all" can be the right answer. If you have fewer than 50 contacts and your inbox already handles everything, there is no need for a dedicated tool. **Adopt a tool only after the problem is clear.**

References

- Folk — folk.app

- Clay — clay.com

- Dex — getdex.com

- Monica — monicahq.com (and github.com/monicahq/monica for OSS)

- Streak — streak.com

- Sortd — sortd.com

- Attio — attio.com

- Less Annoying CRM — lessannoyingcrm.com

- Cloze — cloze.com

- HubSpot CRM — hubspot.com/products/crm

- Salesforce Sales Cloud — salesforce.com/products/sales-cloud

- Pipedrive — pipedrive.com

- Capsule CRM — capsulecrm.com

- Zoho CRM — zoho.com/crm

- Insightly — insightly.com

- Apollo.io — apollo.io

- Lemlist — lemlist.com

- Outreach — outreach.io

- Mixmax — mixmax.com

- Yesware — yesware.com

- Notion — notion.so

- Airtable — airtable.com

- Sansan — sansan.com

- freee — freee.co.jp

- Money Forward — moneyforward.com

- kintone — kintone.com

- Channel Talk — channel.io

- ZoomInfo — zoominfo.com

- Clay Series B 2024 announcement — clay.com (Kareem Amin profile via Crunchbase)

- Folk Series B 2024 — TechCrunch and Crunchbase coverage

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"Do I need a CRM?" — back in 2020 this was only a question for sales orgs. In 2026, solo founders, f...

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