It's Been
20 Years

It's Been
20 Years

It's Been
20 Years

20 years ago, CRM platforms were pioneers in moving to the cloud. Costs dropped. Setup times shrunk. Upgrades were automated. Software entered into a new era — it now came "as a service".

These tools were initially designed and marketed for sales teams.
Gradually, they evolved into platforms and became the backbone of entire organizations.

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Customer

Contact

Lou Gerstner

+1 (900)-145-2789

590 Madison AveNew York, NY 10022, USA.

Opportunity

Lou Gerstner expresses interest in our new internet solution. Prior to the call, Denise should promptly send him the new prospectus.

Finance watched costs climb. Software Engineers hit walls trying to tweak the software. Data Engineers had to shuffle data from point A to point B. Sales teams had to deal with bloated interfaces. Somehow, companies have lost control over a key component of their operations.

It's time for a restart

Software must return to its rightful owner: the business.

✦ TWENTY ✦ REASONS ✦ TO LOVE

Open-Source

Discard the old 'build vs buy' dilemma — here's a better deal: We build the software. We can eventually host it. But you own it. You can fork the project, contribute to its development, or simply join a community that will empower you to make it your own.

Data-Centric

The days when the role of CRM platforms was to shift manual data entries to a database are over. Now, the data is already there.

CRM 2.0 should be built around your data, allowing you to access and visualize any existing sources, not forcing you to retrofit your data into predefined objects on a remote cloud.

Design-Driven

We set out to create something that we ourselves would always enjoy using. The main application draws inspiration from Notion, a tool known for its user-friendly interface and customization capabilities. And we consider that the developer journey is a crucial part of the user experience, not a secondary consideration.

Hundreds of developers have already contributed to the project. Let’s build this together.

20 years ago, CRM platforms were pioneers in moving to the cloud. Costs dropped. Setup times shrunk. Upgrades were automated. Software entered into a new era — it now came "as a service".

These tools were initially designed and marketed for sales teams. Gradually, they evolved into platforms and became the backbone of entire organizations.

File

Edit

Settings

File

Edit

Settings

Customer

Contact

Lou Gerstner

+1 (900)-145-2789

590 Madison AveNew York, NY 10022, USA.

Opportunity

Lou Gerstner expresses interest in our new internet solution. Prior to the call, Denise should promptly send him the new prospectus.

Finance watched costs climb. Software Engineers hit walls trying to tweak the software. Data Engineers had to shuffle data from point A to point B. Sales teams had to deal with bloated interfaces. Somehow, companies have lost control over a key component of their operations.

It's time for a restart

Software must return to its rightful owner: the business.

✦ TWENTY ✦ REASONS ✦ TO LOVE

Open-Source

Discard the old 'build vs buy' dilemma — here's a better deal: We build the software. We can eventually host it. But you own it. You can fork the project, contribute to its development, or simply join a community that will empower you to make it your own.

Data-Centric

The days when the role of CRM platforms was to shift manual data entries to a database are over. Now, the data is already there.

CRM 2.0 should be built around your data, allowing you to access and visualize any existing sources, not forcing you to retrofit your data into predefined objects on a remote cloud.

Design-Driven

We set out to create something that we ourselves would always enjoy using. The main application draws inspiration from Notion, a tool known for its user-friendly interface and customization capabilities. And we consider that the developer journey is a crucial part of the user experience, not a secondary consideration.

Hundreds of developers have already contributed to the project. Let’s build this together.

20 years ago, CRM platforms were pioneers in moving to the cloud. Costs dropped. Setup times shrunk. Upgrades were automated. Software entered into a new era — it now came "as a service".

These tools were initially designed and marketed for sales teams. Gradually, they evolved into platforms and became the backbone of entire organizations.

File

Edit

Settings

File

Edit

Settings

Customer

Contact

Lou Gerstner

+1 (900)-145-2789

590 Madison AveNew York, NY 10022, USA.

Opportunity

Lou Gerstner expresses interest in our new internet solution. Prior to the call, Denise should promptly send him the new prospectus.

Finance watched costs climb. Software Engineers hit walls trying to tweak the software. Data Engineers had to shuffle data from point A to point B. Sales teams had to deal with bloated interfaces. Somehow, companies have lost control over a key component of their operations.

It's time for a restart

Software must return to its rightful owner: the business.

✦ TWENTY ✦ REASONS ✦ TO LOVE

Open-Source

Discard the old 'build vs buy' dilemma — here's a better deal: We build the software. We can eventually host it. But you own it. You can fork the project, contribute to its development, or simply join a community that will empower you to make it your own.

Data-Centric

The days when the role of CRM platforms was to shift manual data entries to a database are over. Now, the data is already there.

CRM 2.0 should be built around your data, allowing you to access and visualize any existing sources, not forcing you to retrofit your data into predefined objects on a remote cloud.

Design-Driven

We set out to create something that we ourselves would always enjoy using. The main application draws inspiration from Notion, a tool known for its user-friendly interface and customization capabilities. And we consider that the developer journey is a crucial part of the user experience, not a secondary consideration.

Hundreds of developers have already contributed to the project. Let’s build this together.