
CRM for Linux? 27
diwolf writes "I've looked high and low, but haven't found a real Customer Relationship Manager for Linux. I used to use ACT! for Windows (bad word, blah, blah, blah), and loved it. But, I can't find anything similar on Linux. Does this mean I have to dust off my progamming skills and write my own? Or, is there an ACT! clone that's GPL'ed and just waiting for my download?"
A
ZDNet article from over a year ago also makes this point stating
that Linux "still falls short when it comes to supporting workloads
required by applications like ERP (enterprise resource planning),
business intelligence, CRM (customer relationship management) and
supply chain planning". Now it's a year later, and SourceForge has racked
up an
impressive array of CRM related projects. For those with experience
with some of these Linux CRM solutions, how well do they stack up to
other well known offerings in this arena?
BaaN? (Score:2)
GoldMine Everywhere (Score:1)
Re:GoldMine Everywhere (Score:1)
Too much choice? (Score:1)
Disclaimer: I am not particularly savvy when it comes to CRM or stuff like that.
However, by looking at the sourceforge list, it looks as if there is an overlap of different projects trying to achieve exactly the same thing. Am I right in thinking this? I guess that a good package, which is easy to customise (maybe using python or scheme, and maybe using point-and-click approaches for some tasks) would be really useful.
Begging your pardon, you're a bit confused (Score:3, Interesting)
ACT, however, is a Contact Management Application.
Basically it is a "PIM-on-steroids" for the seriously heavy user - the salesman who's contact list is his life blood and who needs the best possible tool to handle it, something that goes beyond a PIM.
Re:Begging your pardon, you're a bit confused (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Begging your pardon, you're a bit confused (Score:2)
I was really trying to point out the extraordinary disparity between what diwolf is saying "anyone got an ACT clone for Linux?" (which you can answer with the traditional cry of Google/Freshmeat is your friend) and how Cliff was interprting it "does Linux still fall short when it comes to supporting workloads required by applications like ERP , business intelligence, CRM , and supply chain planning" which is a more interesting point for a slashdot discussion, but not the question that was being asked.
These are two very different questions.
simple really (Score:1)
I was able to get a working system working in under 2 weeks and made it pretty and ready for production use with one additional week (but that's because I love PHP).
ERP on Linux...I use QAD's MFG/Pro (Score:2, Interesting)
SourceForge and CRM's (Score:1)
With CRM's, I believe that the devils in the details. I need to be able to keep track of my customers and know what we spoke about 6 months ago, and plan for follow-ups - without having to retype their name and phone # each and every time I schedule a callback or an appointment. Most CRM's on Sourceforge missed the boat and became Groupware.
There isn't, and for a while there won't be. (Score:3, Insightful)
Problem is, big businesses are going to want to use Oracle on Solaris, and since they do, people like Siebel, SAP and Oracle (with their own CRM offerings) are always going to tune (and tie) their systems to Oracle on Sun (almost always.)
So, for the moment, the only way you're going to see enterprise level CRM software on Linux is through a browser front end.
It really sucks, since all that's needed is a fairly thin client to get Siebel working on Linux. Come to think of it, that part of it couldn't be that hard to port... but it still leaves you tied server-wise.
Re:There isn't, and for a while there won't be. (Score:1)
SAP has CRM. SAP runs on Linux. (Score:1)
I'm not 100% but the cadillac of CRM, Siebel also runs on linux.
CRM? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:CRM? (Score:2)
Web based CRM (Score:1)
I wrote a simple Web based contact manager program
using MySQL and Perl. sense-warner-200.oz.net/perl/contacts.pl
Now I have been thinking about writing something
CRMish. Just ordered the CRM handbook from bookpool. Have never seen a real CRM system. Not so sure what they do, hence the book order.
Can anyone in Seattle show me a real CRM System?
Lotus Domino (Score:1)
Compiere (Score:2)
Compiere.
http://www.compiere.org
Mozilla License. Enterprise-class ERP/CRM (okay, the CRM is a little lacking, but the ERP is awesome).