We compared Microsoft Dynamics CRM and Salesforce Sales Cloud across several parameters based on our users' reviews. After reading the collected data, you can find our conclusion below:
Features: Microsoft Dynamics CRM is considered robust and reliable. Users praised its ability to measure and track sales and seamless integration with Microsoft Office 365 and Azure. Salesforce Sales Cloud users have lauded the solution’s open API and ability to track sales opportunities.
Room for Improvement: Microsoft Dynamics CRM requires improvement in terms of mobile experience, interface design, and performance. Salesforce Sales Cloud could improve its integration with third-party systems and reporting.
Service and Support: Reviews of Microsoft support were mixed, with some users expressing frustration at long response times and challenges contacting the support team. Salesforce’s customer service is considered excellent, and users praised its prompt and knowledgeable team.
Ease of Deployment: Some Microsoft Dynamics users found the setup uncomplicated, while others struggled with it. Salesforce Sales Cloud's initial setup can be complex and time-consuming, potentially lasting for months or even years. However, users can speed up the process with external tools.
Pricing: The cost of Microsoft Dynamics depends on factors like licenses and customization. While Dynamics is generally considered expensive, some users find the pricing fair or slightly cheaper compared to competitors. Salesforce Sales Cloud is considered pricey. Salesforce Sales Cloud has additional costs for implementation and add-ons.
ROI: Microsoft Dynamics CRM provides a significant ROI due to its upgraded features and integrations. Salesforce Sales Cloud has shown a positive return on investment by enabling automation, improving productivity, and saving time.
Comparison Results: Users like Microsoft Dynamics CRM for its native integration with popular Microsoft products, but some users have said that setting up Microsoft Dynamics can be complex and time-consuming. Others have suggested lowering the price and improving the interface. Salesforce Sales Cloud is a user-friendly platform praised for its extensive feature set and customization options. At the same time, customers have complained that Salesforce’s licensing costs are too high and reporting capabilities are limited.
"The product is user-friendly."
"Microsoft Dynamics CRM has a very nice UI, and is very easy to use. It's easy to install, has a lot of features, and provides good technical support."
"It ensures that there's continuity, and you don't have to start asking the customer about what happened. From CRM, you can easily see all the interactions and events in the record and take it from there."
"The most valuable feature of Microsoft Dynamics CRM is its ease of use."
"The initial setup is very easy."
"It is good for sales and service maintenance. It has various integration tools."
"One of the most useful features is we can configure Microsoft Dynamics CRM in the way that we need. This is configurable."
"The most valuable feature is the reporting tab."
"Contact records are most valuable."
"It has custom fields and custom reports which can align to our business objectives and marketing focus."
"On the high level, it's all about managing the clients, managing the opportunities around those clients, managing the tasks, calls, activities, all those things."
"The most valuable features are the reporting and the custom codes."
"The most valuable features are custom objects, custom workflows, triggering, and integration with other SaaS solutions."
"I can see activity per customer. I can find out quickly and easily who was the last person I talked to, when it was, and what we were talking about."
"I would recommend Sales Cloud for anyone who has a sales team that needs to be optimized and for any size of enterprise."
"Salesforce is such a widespread software in terms of what it can do and its scope. Theoretically, you can run a whole company off of it. There are many valuable features, such as reporting and analytics. You can customize almost the whole environment is what appeals to so many companies the most."
"Sometimes Microsoft's support can be difficult to contact, and it can take a while to get a response to a ticket."
"The overall price of Microsoft Dynamics CRM could improve."
"Microsoft Dynamics CRM could improve the built-in reports. The ones that are included are pretty generic unless you subscribe to Microsoft BI, which is an extra fee. They should offer the reports without having to purchase a separate subscription for Microsoft BI. However, the reports in Microsoft BI are fantastic."
"The installation was difficult. I'm not the person that implements the solution. However, to have the solution function in the correct way, the process can be difficult."
"Microsoft Dynamics CRM could improve by being more user-friendly and having a better design. I have used Service Desk and it is not user-friendly but this solution is worse. The graphical interface is not intuitive, you need someone to guide you or you will have difficulties navigating around to find the file you need. The data we are normally dealing with is boring enough and the interface could be more attractive and more exciting. The tabs and arrangement could be done better to be more user-friendly. Microsoft Excel, PowerPoint, and Word are fine and Microsoft should extend their user-friendliness and intuitiveness to Microsoft Dynamics."
"My company's biggest challenge with Microsoft Dynamics CRM is wanting to market solely to leads without having to create a contact and link the contact to the lead. From a marketing standpoint, there's room for improvement in the lead process of Microsoft Dynamics CRM."
"A built-in automation engine to automate parts of workflows would be beneficial. That's the feature I'd be most happy to see expanded. It's currently tagged as simple automation, but I'd love some predictive capability."
"It lacks to provide a more detailed profile of the customer, which would have been better and more useful."
"The solution's design could be improved."
"Applications that can help with migrating data over from the sandbox to production would make it easier because sometimes change sets can be bulky and they're not always as effective. This can be frustrating when you make a lot of changes and try to put those changes into production."
"The deployment of data from the development environment to production is also a weaker point because their solution is not powerful."
"When importing from other apps, it gets messy."
"One aspect I find challenging with Salesforce Sales Cloud is its forecasting feature. While it's useful for analyzing sales data and predicting future revenue, I've encountered instances where the outcomes weren't as perfect as expected."
"There are also certain restrictions on the reports in terms of the number of records. Ideally, that should be removed."
"The setup of Salesforce Sales Cloud is complex. You need specialists in that area to be able to have a good setup. Once it's set up properly, running it is seamless. That's the most beautiful thing about Salesforce Sales Cloud."
"Salesforce is a powerful tool and you need specialists to create or to develop new functionalities. It is a difficult platform to learn to manage and you need years to know the whole product."
Microsoft Dynamics CRM is ranked 2nd in CRM with 68 reviews while Salesforce Sales Cloud is ranked 3rd in CRM with 94 reviews. Microsoft Dynamics CRM is rated 7.6, while Salesforce Sales Cloud is rated 8.4. The top reviewer of Microsoft Dynamics CRM writes "Intuitive APIs, customizable design, but dashboards could improve". On the other hand, the top reviewer of Salesforce Sales Cloud writes "Vast, configurable, and offers great ROI". Microsoft Dynamics CRM is most compared with SAP CRM, ServiceNow, Siebel CRM, monday.com and Oracle CX Sales, whereas Salesforce Sales Cloud is most compared with SAP CRM, Oracle E-Business Suite, SAP ERP, IQVIA Orchestrated Customer Engagement and Vlocity. See our Microsoft Dynamics CRM vs. Salesforce Sales Cloud report.
See our list of best CRM vendors and best Sales Force Automation vendors.
We monitor all CRM reviews to prevent fraudulent reviews and keep review quality high. We do not post reviews by company employees or direct competitors. We validate each review for authenticity via cross-reference with LinkedIn, and personal follow-up with the reviewer when necessary.
Well, the best CRM is really the one that matches the requirements of your business, because what works for one organization does not necessarily works for another. However, there are some common features that makes one system more attractive over the other. From my point of view, both of them are worth trying, but if you’d like to try some outstanding alternative, I suggest you to take a look at bpm’online sales www.bpmonline.com - it’s a cloud CRM that includes out-of-the-box processes that serve as best practices for lead management, opportunity management, quote management, order and invoice management and so forth. Your sales team will definitely appreciate the pre-build processes that enable companies to jump start using the system from day one.
We work with both platforms, we can do almost all applications with either platform.
Features - Comparable
Usability - Comparable
Performance & Availability - Comparable
Cost Model - Microsoft is Less Expensive
Compatibility with different mobile devices - Microsoft needs third party tool for full functionality
Integration with other back end ERP - Comparable
It depends upon what you want to achieve. As well I am certified Siebel Core consultant and have worked wih SFDC and MS Dynamics, still all the three caters various features unique in their own way. Having said that if the client is in favour of MS Dynamics then
Features - it is stil evolving and requires considerable changes
Cost - it is defintely comparable with SFDC but not with Siebel as the cost is high in Siebel.
Usability - it is not complex and lots of drag and drop
Features available
Performance - This depends on what the client needs are.
Integration - requires more change and it has it's own challenges
I hope this helps for now. Please feel fee to reach me if you need any further questions or clarifications
I am not familiar with MS Dynamics, and have never used it. However, just from a look at the website, this package seems more the equivalent of a Marketo or Eloqua kind of application. At Liquidware Labs, we use Marketo, Salesforce, extended with RainKing.
Not sure if my background would be helpful for this issue, but if this individual would like to speak with me directly about the goal for marketing with CRM packages, then I would be happy to discuss.
Thanks.
Grace
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A few anecdotes to consider:
*The few MS Dynamics customers I know report that it has a lot of bugs, quirks and really cumbersome to customize
*In one quote/evaluation I've seen, MS Dynamics had a final quote that was one third of a similar Salesforce quote (that is, same number of users, type of licenses, etc)
Microsoft Dynamics CRM -
*Pricing based on your needs
*99.9% Service Level Agreement (SLA)
*Microsoft had a pre-developed reporting engine within SQL Server called SQL Server Reporting Services (SSRS)
*MS Dynamics CRM Online is a true Microsoft Outlook application, not just a plugin
Salesforce.com -
*Enterprise Edition - $125/user/month , Salesforce Mobile Classic - $50/user/month
*No Service Level Agreement (SLA)
*Salesforce is repealing Outlook features; for example, users can’t manage opportunities and leads anymore
*Salesforce doesn’t have a concept of a fluid user interface for Leads –> Contacts –> Opportunities