BRAINYARDNEWS
ABOUT THE AUTHOR


David F. Carr
David F. Carr
David F. Carr is Editor of The BrainYard, the community for social business on InformationWeek.com, covering social media and the...
Read Full Bio >>
See More From This Columnist >>
SHARE



Batchbook Gives SMBs Social Business Control Panel

David F. Carr | July 11, 2011
 
   
Batchbook Gives SMBs Social Business Control Panel For small business focused on toilet training cats, BatchBook provided simple, streamlined, social contact and opportunity manager.

For small business focused on toilet training cats, BatchBook provided simple, streamlined, social contact and opportunity manager.

Want to help Rebecca Rescate in her noble mission of toilet training the world's cats? She will be happy to add your contact information to Batchbook, a social CRM product for small business that she adopted when her company began to grow so fast that she worried about dropping sales leads.

CitiKitty sells a sort of training potty seat for cats, along with instructions for cat owners who would like to say goodbye to the litter box. BatchBlue Software's Batchbook is a contact manager and sales lead manager that emphasizes connections with social media, and with other Web 2.0 products for small businesses such as Freshbooks for accounting and MailChimp for email marketing. Rescate said it fit her need to get organized, without being too complicated.

"As a small business, I need something extremely simple," Rescate said in an interview. She had used Salesforce.com's service while working for a previous employer, but found that even the entry-level version was overkill for her needs and too difficult to use, she said. Really, all she wanted was a simple way of tracking contacts such as pet stores and distributors interested in carrying her product, and a system of reminders to follow up on opportunities.

14 Leading Social CRM Applications
Slideshow: 14 Leading Social CRM Applications
(click image for larger view and for slideshow)

BatchBlue CEO and co-founder Pam O'Hara said her company started with the idea that what small businesses needed the most was good contact management. "When you're starting a business, the most important thing is your network," O'Hara said.

Since it was founded in 2007, BatchBlue has added more social features to Batchbook so you can connect with contacts through social networks and monitor feeds from their profiles. Some of the social media integration features resemble those offered by Nimble, although Nimble has bigger enterprise ambitions. BatchBlue is instead focused on becoming part of a best of breed ecosystem of products for small businesses and was one of the founders of an organization for technical and marketing cooperation called The Small Business Web.

Even if the ease of use virtues of Batchbook catch the attention of enterprises that would like those same features, O'Hara said she can't cater to them because "it would change our product, and it won't be the product for small business anymore." Some of her largest customers have 40 or 50 employees, and a few of those have used the product's application programming interface to elaborate on its account management features, she said. But ultimately, she said, "It's a complement to me if you outgrow me. If you get to the point where you need to move to one of those enterprise systems, I'll take that as a complement that we helped you get there, but I am not going there with you."

Rescate won't be outgrowing Batchbook for a while yet. Her CitiKitty idea is essentially to get the cat used to the idea by initially mounting a litter box contraption with a hole in the center over the toilet seat. By phasing in litter box trays with larger and larger holes, the device gets the cat used to the idea of hopping up onto the toilet seat until they can do it with no special equipment at all.

COMMENTS

STAYUPDATED

Sign up to the BrainYard email newsletter

*Required field

Privacy Statement

BRAINYARDRESEARCH
The State of Community Management
The State of Community Management documents a comprehensive set of lessons learned to help define this emerging role and give you the tools to be successful in your social initiatives.
Enterprise 2.0: What, Why and How?
This paper is an introduction to Enterprise 2.0 ‐ why it is one of the most crucial concepts to understand in business today and how you can begin to take advantage of E2 in your organization.
Guide to Understanding Social CRM
This paper presents the foundational components of Social CRM and lays the groundwork required for your company to build and maintain long and valuable customer relationships.
VIDEOGALLERY
Startup DataSift's Big Data Platform
DataSift CEO Rob Bailey talks about the growth in big data, and his company's platform to ingest, manage and provide that data from social networks. He also provides a quick demonstration of the product.
Salesforce.com's Social Enterprise Approach Pushes
Salesforce.com co-Founder Parker Harris discusses why the company has moved past its Cloud 2 mantra, with acquisitions like Heroku and Radian6 enabling even tighter customer relationships for the enterprise.
March Madness And Social Networking
March Madness and pro sports hold many lessons for social network marketing. In this exclusive interview Eric Lundquist interviews sports broadcaster Butch Stearns on what social network marketing can learn from how sports teams social network
SLIDESHOWS
7 Examples: Put Gamification To Work
An increasing number and variety of business applications are integrating game mechanics, or gamification, to improve user engagement, engage new...
Get Social: 11 Management Systems That Can Help
Social media management systems can help your organization manage and measure increasingly sophisticated social strategies.
6 Social Sites Sitting On The Cutting Edge
Your company's Facebook and Twitter presence are established, but don't rest there. Consider these other social sites--some familiar, some less...