What Is Relationship Management? And Why Do Businesses Use It?

Written by Coursera Staff • Updated on

Customer relationship management (CRM) uses systems like Salesforce and HubSpot to improve sales and customer satisfaction. This guide covers CRM strategies, tools, and real-world examples, plus steps to build and manage effective CRM practices.

[Featured Image] A relationship manager speaks with a customer.

Key takeaways

Customer relationship management (CRM) is the system a company uses to organize, analyze, and optimize its interactions with customers.

  • You can use CRM to optimize business operations, including sales, service, data analysis, and forecasting.

  • CRM enables observing customer behavior and segmenting accordingly, increasing customer satisfaction, retaining customers, driving and automating sales, and meeting customers’ needs more effectively.

  • You can help ensure your customer relationship management approach is solid by focusing on effective stakeholder management and implementing strategies such as setting CRM goals, examining current practices, identifying areas for improvement, and selecting appropriate CRM tools.

Discover what CRM is, examples of and strategies for effective CRM, and details about what a CRM manager does. If you’re ready to learn the foundational skills from a leading CRM software provider, consider enrolling in the Salesforce Sales Operations Professional Certificate program. In as little as three months, you’ll have the opportunity to build skills in areas such as sales support, order entry, lead generation, customer relationship management, and more.

What is customer relationship management (CRM)? 

Relationship management, also called customer relationship management (CRM), refers to a business’s process of managing and optimizing interactions with its customers: past, present, and future. You can manage relationships with customers in your direct interactions with them and through CRM software like Salesforce or HubSpot

Relationship management encompasses several aspects of business operations, including:

  • Service-related activities, such as helping customers use products and answering their questions

  • Data analysis to study large amounts of customer data from different channels

A solid approach to relationship management creates the ability to:

  • Observe customers as they mature through the buyer’s journey 

  • Segment customers according to their behaviors and spending habits

  • Create a customer-centric culture in your organization 

  • Value customers for the relationships you can build with them

  • Meet customers’ needs more effectively 

  • Increase customer satisfaction 

  • Retain customers

  • Drive sales

  • Automate sales (when using CRM software)

Relationship management relies heavily on effective stakeholder management. If you're interested in strengthening your skills in this area, consider enrolling in Google's Stakeholder Management Specialization. In weeks, you could learn to define roles, complete RACI analyses, create communication plans, and organize project documentation. By the end, you’ll earn a shareable certificate for your resume.

Where did CRM originate from?

• Originated in the 1970s with customer satisfaction data stored in mainframe systems and spreadsheets.

• The concept evolved in the 1990s with software systems that scaled and automated sales processes.

• James Farley’s “Farley File” for President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s meeting prep is considered an early precursor to modern CRM.

Examples of effective CRM

As you learn more about relationship management and consider CRM tools, you might find it helpful to look at some examples of companies with effective CRM practices:

Wells Fargo

  • Responsible for managing over $2.2 trillion in assets [1]

  • Uses a CRM platform to manage services, banking, mortgages, investing, credit cards, etc.

  • Automates workflows and optimizes platforms, thus reducing the number of hours employees spend on unproductive tasks

Bespoke Collection 

  • Four wine brands known for unique and elegant customer experiences

  • Uses a CRM platform to personalize email messages after customers make a purchase

  • Spends time understanding the customers’ behaviors and buying habits

  • Increases customer retention, referrals, and order value

Activision 

  • Video game brand behind popular games

  • Offers engaging post-purchase customer experiences.

  • Monitors social media conversations about their products and follows up with potential customers.

  • Has decreased annual customer service operating expenses by 25 percent [2]  

According to Statista, revenue in the CRM software segment is projected to reach over $158.55 billion by 2030 [3]. 

What does a CRM manager do? 

A relationship manager manages the process of building relationships with customers and clients. 

Their duties might include:  

  • Meeting with prospective clients to present new products

  • Identifying ways to enhance the company’s communication strategy

  • Communicating with other teams within the company to improve customer experience

  • Offering existing clients advice and assistance with products

  • Keeping customers and clients engaged

  • Resolving customer complaints and issues

  • Keeping the sales team informed of new opportunities

  • Analyzing competitors’ CRM strategies to identify ways to outperform them

  • Helping the company maintain a positive reputation

 

  • Overseeing the use of CRM software to manage customer information, track communications, and segment customers

To pursue employment as a relationship manager, you may need a bachelor’s degree in business, management, marketing, or a related field. Experience in customer service or sales is a plus, as you may be working directly with customers and clients as a relationship manager. 

As of May 2026, Glassdoor has more than 870 relationship manager job listings, spanning industries such as finance, retail, government, and more [4]. 

Strategies to create an effective customer relationship management system

A key element of customer relationship management is to step out of a sales-first, transactional way of doing business and into a relational approach. Whether you are seeking employment as a relationship manager or want to take a more customer-centric approach to your own business, you can use several strategies to cultivate meaningful relationships with customers.

1. Identify CRM goals. 

Starting with understanding your goals (or those of an employer) can make it easier to design an effective CRM strategy, including the tactics, tasks, and technologies needed to meet those goals. CRM goal examples include retaining more customers, shortening the sales cycle, increasing sales, and decreasing the cost of acquiring customers.

2. Examine current CRM practices. 

This step can offer insights into which strategies are working well and which ones need improvement. Find out how the company:

  • Stores, organizes, and analyzes customer data

  • Communicates with customers, from before to after a purchase

  • Schedules and assigns tasks among team members 

  • Automates tasks

3. Identify opportunities to improve CRM. 

Once you get an idea of how the company currently operates its CRM, the next step is to look for areas within the CRM system that you can improve. For example, you may find communication breakdowns after customers make a purchase, leaving them feeling unsupported or disengaged with the brand. Or, you may find that customer data isn’t being leveraged. 

Improvement measures might include:

  • Gathering more detailed feedback from customers to discover better ways to serve them

  • Segmenting customers with more precision

  • Monitoring social media mentions of the brand 

  • Automating more tasks

 

4. Create a CRM strategy and select CRM tools. 

Based on the goals and opportunities for improvement, create a CRM strategy that includes all the tactics, tasks, and technologies you’ll need to implement. Use the following as a starter list:

  • A breakdown of the sales pipeline 

  • How you’ll personalize customers’ experience at every stage of their journey

  • The metrics you’ll be tracking, such as conversion rates and the number of email opens 

  • New customer data that you’ll be collecting and how you’ll be labeling it

  • The CRM tools you’ll be using 

  • The specific tasks that team members will be assigned

Your go-to guide for improving customer service 

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Article sources

1

Wells Fargo. “Life at Wells Fargo, https://www.wellsfargojobs.com/en/life-at-wells-fargo/about-us/.” Accessed May 15, 2026.

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