inventory_2 Consumer Goods · CRM Strategy

CRM Strategy for Consumer Goods Brands

One View of the Customer - Whether That Customer Is a Broker, a Buyer, or a Consumer.

For SMB and mid-market consumer brands, "CRM" means three different things at once: managing broker and distributor relationships, managing retail buyer relationships, and managing the DTC and Amazon consumer base. Most brands have a different system (or no system) for each. We build a unified CRM strategy that handles all three without paying enterprise CPG-suite prices.

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Why CPG CRM Is Uniquely Hard

CPG sales motions don't fit the SaaS-default CRM design. The "customer" is layered: there's the buyer who decides on an SKU, the chain that lists it, the broker who covers the call, the distributor who fulfills it, and the consumer who picks it up. Each has different data, different cadence, and different revenue impact. Common pain pattern:

The fix is a CRM strategy that respects the layered customer reality of CPG and connects the trade side, the retailer side, and the consumer side without forcing one into a tool built for the other.

What CRM Strategy Looks Like for a Consumer Brand

Trade Customer Management

Buyer, broker, distributor, and chain accounts in one CRM. Activity, pipeline, JBP status, and sample tracking visible to leadership without chasing emails.

Line Review & Promo Pipeline

Manage line reviews, listing decisions, and promo plans as pipeline stages. The same discipline a SaaS sales team brings to deals, applied to CPG account growth.

Broker & Distributor Performance

Score broker and distributor partners on activity, distribution gains, and POS lift. Stop having the same "who's working hardest" debate every QBR.

Consumer Lifecycle (DTC + Amazon)

DTC and marketplace consumer data unified - email, SMS, reviews, support tickets - so consumer intelligence informs both DTC marketing and retail innovation.

Foodservice / B2B Account Management

For brands with foodservice or B2B channels, account management built for operators, K-12, hospitality, and group purchasing dynamics.

Reporting Leadership Trusts

Pipeline, distribution, velocity, and consumer KPIs in a single weekly view. The conversation moves from "what's true" to "what do we do."

How We Build CPG CRM Strategy

  1. 1

    Channel & Customer Mapping

    Map your trade, retail, foodservice, DTC, and marketplace channels. Identify where customer relationships are managed, where the data sits, and where the gaps are.

  2. 2

    CRM Architecture Design

    Decide what lives in the core CRM (HubSpot, Salesforce, Zoho, or others), what stays in the marketing platform (Klaviyo, Attentive, Mailchimp), and how Amazon, Shopify, and EDI feed both.

  3. 3

    Sales Process Redesign

    Pipeline stages built for line reviews and JBPs, not SaaS demos. Activity standards reps can actually meet. Reporting that matches how the leadership team makes decisions.

  4. 4

    Adoption

    Reps adopt when the CRM gives them something back: faster JBP prep, broker scoreboards, sample tracking that doesn't make them re-key data. We design the wins in.

  5. 5

    Sustain

    Leadership cadence, weekly review rituals, broker / distributor scorecards, onboarding for new reps. The system holds because the operating model around it holds.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Do we need a CPG-specific CRM like Repsly or BluePlanner? expand_more
Sometimes - especially for retail execution and field rep coverage. But the underlying account CRM is usually still better served by HubSpot, Salesforce, or Zoho with the right architecture. We design the combination, not a single-tool answer.
Our DTC team uses Klaviyo. Does it need to feed the CRM? expand_more
Two-way is best. Consumer behavior in Klaviyo informs trade pitches ("here's the consumer data we'll bring to your customer"). Trade and retail wins inform consumer messaging. Brands that connect the two outperform brands that don't.
We're under $30M. Is this overkill? expand_more
At sub-$30M the CRM strategy is leaner - typically a single-instance HubSpot or Zoho with the right pipeline and broker scoreboard, integrated with Shopify and Amazon. Full multi-system architecture makes more sense at $30M+ and especially as you cross retail tier transitions.
How do we get reps off spreadsheets? expand_more
Reps stay in spreadsheets because the CRM is harder to use than the spreadsheet. We rebuild the CRM workflow until it's faster and more useful for the rep, then enforce. Force-mandating without the workflow fix is how spreadsheet shadow-systems are born.

One View of the Customer. From Buyer to Broker to Consumer.

Schedule a discovery call. We'll review your channel mix, your CRM, and your consumer-data setup and tell you what to build first.

Schedule a Discovery Call