Reviews Online Contact Management Software

Share your contacts online. Stop using desktop contact managers and consider switching to web based contact management applications. We review the best sales contact management software and give you our comparison.



Share your contacts online. Stop using desktop contact managers and consider switching to web based contact management applications. We review the best solutions and give you our comparisons.

Pick our Brain: Tired of browsing through all of these contact managers and trying to find the best match for your business? Outsource the legwork to us – $20 for 20 minutes gives you access to our expert advice based on hundreds of hours of reviewing these tools. Don’t wait and get in touch today.

sales contact management systems reviews and comparison

Using desktop tools to manage your contacts, particularly if you share them to any extent with others, is no longer efficient.

Whether you’re currently using Act, Maximizer, Goldmine or going overboard with Salesforce.com, you need to know there are alternatives that are worth your attention. Some are free, some are expensive, some offer basic contact management functionality, others provide exciting, unique features and benefits. All are evolving…rapidly.

Below is a list of some of online contact management systems, with a summary and review of what they provide and why you should consider them. If you know of, or are creating, other online contact managers who should be on this list, let us know.

Check back often, we’ll update this contact manager review list frequently.

UPDATE: We received a quite a few emails from readers requesting for this information in a side-by-side table. We thought that was an awesome idea. So here it is – an overview of contact management systems.

UPDATE 09/15/2008: We now have Batchbook, BigContacts, Oprius, Highrise, Relenta and PipelineDeals done. More updated following soon.



Review Online Contact Managers

BatchBook – a sales contact manager from Batchblue Software

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The bottom line up front: We really like BatchBook. It’s an excellent web based contact manager that needs just a few tweaks to vault to the top of our list. There are four key differentiators:

Custom fields can be established for a single contact record or for all your records. Simple data-entry fields, yes/no, multiple choice, formatted phone numbers, email addresses, or dates. Very important feature for anyone who likes to customize. In our opinion, this feature will soon become a must for any serious online contact manager.

Contact and company records can be “affiliated”. Beyond simply tying a contact to a company, you can affiliate two contacts to each other, and the affiliation can be peer-to-peer, or supervisor-to-employee. There’s a hierarchy you can apply.

Create contacts and companies on the fly by starting a new communication record. Once you’ve created that phone call/chat/note entry, you can then go back in and edit the contact, adding any relevant info.

Good old-fashioned mailing labels. BatchBook is the only system we’ve found where you can filter your online contacts, then create an email mailing list, or even print mailing labels for them.

Four things that we didn’t like: 1) you can’t attach your todos to contacts; 2) adding communication notes when looking up a contact record takes too much clicking around — edit-in-place would be really nice here (you have to either go to the communications tab, or click the person’s name twice, then click “log new communication”); 3) running standard or filtered, print-ready reports isn’t as intuitive as we’d like; and 4) you can’t demo the contact-sharing features built-in (the free version only allows one person to use BatchBook).

But we’re optimistic. Behind the scenes the BatchBlue team is working on the todo functionality (including syncing them with calendaring systems). We also have word that they’re making the Custom Fields feature more intuitive.

Pricing starts at free (1 user, 200 contacts, 1GB of file storage), with tiered pricing that runs up to a max of $99.95 monthly (unlimited users, unlimited storage, unlimited contacts).

Aside from our few gripes, we really like BatchBook. It’s well worth your deeper consideration.

UPDATE: We’ve edited the BatchBook entry above. You can add communication notes while looking at a contact’s record, and reports are available.

ACT for Web Contact Management Software

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If we were to summarize ACT for Web in one sentence, we’d say it’s a robust and feature-rich contact management application – but with a pricing model that makes it ridiculously expensive to use for individuals and small to medium-sized teams.

Don’t get us wrong, we really did like the ACT for Web product. But Sage continues to sell ACT like a “buy it, install it and use it” product and, in contrast with the many alternatives on this page, not as a “subscription service”. 3rd parties host ACT for Web for you – but charge $35-$40 per user per month, which – again in comparison with the available alternatives – is simply too hard to digest.

Now, if you have an existing database with years worth of ACT contact data, you may not have that much room to maneuver – but if you’re starting with a relatively clean sheet, we think there is better online contact management software available.

You can find more details on ACT for Web here – but our reviews result in a 3.5 rating. Good product, great features for a contact manager -but a pricing and delivery model that we feel really misses the mark.

Relenta Email-Centered Contact Management Software

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With an update to our review of online contact managers, we introduce Relenta. But this is a whole new world. Just to get you setup and running, Relenta requires a pretty web- and techno-savvy person. But if you can get that squared away within your company, or through your computer-neighbor down the street, you’ll become addicted to the features Relenta offers.

Relenta is really an email management and marketing system, all wrapped inside a solid online contact management program. It can free you from using Outlook or any other email client, consolidates all your incoming and outgoing email by tying each to a contact in your database, and includes killer email/newsletter marketing features. You can also share emails, contacts and contact-based notes across a team.

It is a powerhouse: it’s feature-packed and offers far more than typical contact management. But it’s also not for the faint of heart. It takes quite a bit of time to fully appreciate the concept, to get setup and to get used to operating.

But if you’re in this for the long haul, and you want more than a glorified address book, set aside some time and give Relenta a try. Relenta offers plans for $20 or $25 per month per user.

WebAsyst Online Contact Management System

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If you’re looking for a simple way to manage and access contacts online and nothing other than that, WebAsyst Contacts could be an option to pursue.

Compared to some of the other tools we reviewed here, WebAsyst Contacts offers very basic online contact management functionality. The system lets you add or import contacts, it provides a customizable website widget so contacts can be captured online. Contacts can be shared online through a system of personal or group access controls.

WebAsyst Contacts can be used as a standalone application or can be extended through a number of other modules (i.e. Files, Projects, Issue Tracker and Mail) from the same developer. Use their starter plan via the web for free (with subsequent plans from $30 to $200 a month) – or purchase the software and run on your own web server.

In the midst of a tsunami of feature-rich and online contact managers and simple CRM sales tools that we discuss below, WebAsyst left us somewhat unimpressed. Its simplicity and focus on contacts only, however, may just be what you need. Take a look and give them a spin.

Highrise Online Contact Manager

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We’re torn on this one. What the other online contact managers have in features and fields, Highrise makes up for in simplicity. It won’t report to you on your sales pipeline. It won’t let you enter your contact’s spouse’s information. It won’t let you add anniversaries or birthdays. It won’t even let you maintain a calendar.

Yet the interface, which, when you think about it, completely controls how regularly you use a software product or website, is so extremely intuitive, Highrise is easy to fall in love with.

And its simplicity is merely an interface thing. There’s some pretty nifty features as well. With Highrise, you can share contacts online across a team or company (other Highrise users). Tag contacts with keywords. Share with other users on your Highrise account every dated note, or selected ones, tied to those contacts and/or companies. Add tasks tied to individual contacts or companies. Upload files tied to contacts. Create short- or long-term “cases” that group related notes together. Customize permissions granted to other users on your Highrise account by grouping users however you like.

But again, it’s the ease with which you’ll get up-to-speed that will make Highrise easy to love.

So what’s not to like?

Highrise is fairly expensive, when you consider that their basic plan (6 team members and 5,000 contacts) will cost you $24 per month. If you don’t share your contacts, they offer a Solo plan which includes 20,000 contacts for $29. Included in both plans are so-called “cases” – a way to keep related people, companies, notes, files etc on one single page. It’s a nice touch that could make life easier, especially when you have a lot of contacts!

Outlook and current Act! (V9 only) contacts can be imported via CSV and Highrise supports importing vcards. There’s no support for Gmail or Yahoo address books, unlike what we’ve seen with other online contact management tools we review on this page. Exporting your contact data is easy – but tasks and notes are currently not supported.

So all in all, with Highrise you’ve got an extremely easy to use, albeit expensive, product from a company that knows what it’s doing in the online application world. And while I’ve never seen them lower a price, you may see some of the features get adjusted and enhanced a bit as Highrise’s user base grows and feedback streams in to them.

Oprius Contact Manager

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This is, flat-out, a full-blown Act replacement. It offers complete contact management including extensive contact details, custom fields, contact import and export, groups, a calendar and task list, general notes and history, and the ability to link any task or appointment to a contact. You can even categorize (aside from the groups function) your contacts by customizable “lead source,” if desired.

In addition, Oprius offers the ability to send single and mass, customized emails to your database if your contacts give you explicit permission to do so. It’s all wrapped in a pretty clean interface that helps you find or filter contacts, calendar items or tasks very quickly and easily. Existing contacts can be imported easily from Outlook, Palm, Yahoo, GMail and from a regular CSV file. Finally, all contacts and related data can be exported at any time – a killer feature of which many people forget the importance until it’s too late!

Many readers of SalesMarks.com are managers of small, local sales teams or companies, where the sales manager has influence or even responsbility to edit the company website. If this is you, you can an add a form (called a “lead capture widget”) to your site that adds contacts directly into your database when visitors fill it in (for example, to be added to your newsletter).

For only $14.99 a month, Oprius offers a very complete contact management solution. We particularly liked the “Call Manager” module which lets you organize your to-do calls by the earliest time you can call instead of when they’re due – a clever way to help you avoid procrastination and missing your deadlines – and which includes ready-made phone scripts by cold calling expert Wendy Weiss.

While we enjoyed Oprius, there were a few missing pices. The ability to sync with your mobile devices and the ability to share access to your contact database (short of giving someone your login and password) but this might be something to look forward to in future Oprius releases.

We were impressed. We recommend you giving them a try.

BigContacts Web Based Contact Manager

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Great, evolving online contact management program here that goes beyond the features of Oprius. But like Oprius at its core, BigContacts offers the Act-killing abilities to create and edit contact details, add notes, manage a calendar and tasks list, group your contacts, view your activity history, and more, all within a pretty intuitive interface.

But in addition, BigContacts offers the features of file and photo uploading, tracking sales contacts (and related “opportunities”) within a customizable sales process, assign tasks to other BigContacts users (i.e., other sales professionals or support personnel on your team), and, for an additional fee, send a card (birthday, anniversary, etc.). There are a few other subtle feature enhancements as well, related primarily to contact fields, how quickly you can edit contact fields, and so forth.

Since BigContacts includes opportunity or prospect management features, it also gives you access to a sales manager’s view of your pipeline.

Now, with these advanced features comes a price tag. BigContacts has several service plans to choose from, ranging from free (2 users and up to 100 contacts) and as high as $29.95 per month (2,000 users and up to 1,000 contacts per user) with their common Sales Team Plan going for $20. But again, great stuff here.

Funclient – Free online contact management program

Pick our Brain: Tired of browsing through all of these contact managers and trying to find the best match for your business? Outsource the legwork to us – $20 for 20 minutes gives you access to our expert advice based on hundreds of hours of reviewing these tools. Don’t wait and get in touch today.

Funclient gets a short summary here. The service is free and allows you to easily add contacts, notes tied to contacts, “communications” tied to contacts (a communication must be called a Comment, Phone Call, E-mail, Meeting, Letter or Document), and reminders tied to contacts (which are communications that are dated).

Additional features include the ability to tag contacts and upload files tied to contacts (25mb limit per upload).

Funclient is actually pretty straightforward and simple to use, though it presently offers no sharing of contacts with other Funclient users, no importing or exporting, and certainly none of the advanced features mentioned with the others. Overall, not a bad deal if you take into consideration that it’s free contact management software.

Pipelinedeals.com

[rate 4.5]

Yes, we’ve had a love affair with Pipelinedeals since it debuted. Pipelinedeals is ever-evolving, offering very simple, but very powerful prospect management features for individual sales professionals and teams. While it’s strictly not really an online contact manager, it does what it does extremely well.

Pipelinedeals is the best pure pipeline management tool I’ve found. What they are putting together is a highly focused tool that lets you add contacts, turn them into active “deals,” and track your progress on those leads, within your customizable sales process. Contacts and deals can be shared across a team, or not. It’s your choice – it’s a powerful opportunity to manage your contacts online.

As you read above, BigContacts offers the customizable sales process feature along with advanced contact mgmt software features too, but here’s the thing: many, many sales professionals and sales managers don’t want all those bells and whistles; they want a tool that’s extremely easy to use, yet powerful. Ask yourself this: how many of the multitude fields that Act allows for do you really use? Pipelinedeals, with streamlined pricing of $15 per user per month, targets your use of the system at updating where you stand with your prospect list and when you’ll close deals.

Sales managers love this system, particularly it’s easy to access reporting (with recently added filters to drill down into the pipeline). Managers can assign leads, re-assign them, add lead sources, and so on.

UPDATE: check our post on the new release of Pipelinedeals.com, which covers some of the missing features discussed here.

LeadsOnRails.com

[rate 4.5]

LeadsOnRails is a completely unique service unlike any of the others, but closely related and with a, dare we say it, attractive cool factor. It allows you to implement a manageable, accountable lead tracking system across your team. While the learning curve is steeper than with the other tools profiled above, it will change the way you think of your follow-up routine with leads.

Basically, LeadsOnRails has you enter new leads (importing is possible as long as your file is pre-formatted just the way they ask), add limited contact details, and assign the lead to one of any number of customizable “tracks” you establish. The track you put them on determines the steps you then take to sell the deal. The steps you take are also customizable and can be assigned to other users of the service that are on your sales, marketing, or support teams.

The track concept is obviously the power feature here. Instead of reporting what has been done (typical pipeline reports ask for this), LeadsOnRails tells you what this, plus what needs to be done and when. As you add custom steps to your tracks, you can also include when the step should be completed, for example, 3 days after the previous step. Talk about helping with accountability! No more, “What’s the next step? And when are you doing it?” from sales managers. It’s all there, on display for everyone on the team, and again includes who is responsible for completing the step. Pretty insightful.

There’s much more that could be shared about LeadsOnRails, such as its reporting features, email capabilities (with templates), and team concept, but you really should check it out. Really anxious about how they expand this product, but keep it relatively simple for the new user.

Etelos CRMforGoogle

[rate 3.5]

If you want complete and total customization of your contact management program, and you want a breathtaking multitude of advanced features, and you’re willing to incur a significant learning curve, Etelos is worth your evaluation.

Way too many features to list in a few paragraphs. It has everything the others have, with a huge assortment of additional capabilities: integration with your customized Google home page, integration with Google calendar, extremely fast contact search lookup, auto-save when updating contacts.

You can also create automated follow-up messages to prospects (somewhat similar to LeadsOnRails does) via email, full opportunity/pipeline management with revenue projections), and far more. Etelos’ team has created several demo videos you can watch online. You’ll feel like you need to take a deep breath after watching them — the feature-set is astounding.

Again, Etelos’ system is more than we initially intended to review here. The extent to which you can customize the system will be daunting for a small business owner or sales manager. Sales execs in a large enterprise can delegate this to someone more web-savvy. Excellent features, complex setup and customization. Hence, the 3.5 rating.

134 Responses to “Reviews Online Contact Management Software”

  1. Nancy Sellers wrote:

    I need to find a cheap, easy to use, contact management software program. I’ve look at the Act it seems expensive. I am a single user need to manage contacts, addresses, emails, notes, need to be able to send out a newletter via email to all contacts, to do, calendar, etc…. Can anyone make a suggestion other than the monthly charge systems?

  2. Craig Klein wrote:

    Nancy,

    My company, SalesNexus, is one of the “monthly charge systems” or subscription based, hosted service.

    From your question, I’ll assume that you’re not interested in a subscription based system due to the fact that you have to keep paying for it. If that’s incorrect, I’m sure many of the readers of SalesTeamTools.com would find it informative to hear your perspective.

    To the extent that the on-going cost is the problem for you, I think you would be wise to conside the “Total Cost of Ownership” of software you install and maintain on your own system.

    Buying the software license is just the tip of the iceberg…

    If the system is intended to be “mission critical” for your business, then it will warrant attention and investment that is far more costly that the license itself.

    In fact, our analysis of typical ACT installations shows that our hosted, monthly subscription service works out to be 65% less costly than running ACT yourself.

    For a small business with countless priorities to manage, a hosted solution that allows you to focus on marketing and selling rather than servers and software may be worth another look. Your stated requirements put you in the situation of being able to pick from a large universe of providers.

  3. Jan Visser wrote:

    Nancy, most tools we review here come on a monthly subscription. We reviewed two free tools (Funclient and Keepm) and Highrise (discussed above) offers a free plan which is actually pretty functional. In general and as with many things in life, I’d say you get what you pay for. If needs are modest, that can work. If you need more, we’ve received tools on this page that are certainly worth their monthly fee. Your call, really.

  4. Steven Theo wrote:

    I have been a long time subscriber to ACT (from Symantec to Sage) and want to explore other CMS options. My business is executive recruitment and I have about 24K contacts. I really don’t use a lot of the whistles and bells that ACT provides and really only need a solid note taking software with customized fields. Does anyone use a CMS in the recruitment world and if so, what software do you use and why? Thank you.

  5. Dave Lambert wrote:

    Steven – you might want to check out Big Biller for recruiting. I did their hosted demo and was impressed – was looking for an alternative to ACT!, my final decision was to buy Outlook 2007 With Contact Manager.

    My new PC is 64-bit and ACT! does not support it, the Outlook 207 WCM works fine.

  6. Dan wrote:

    @John Liebeskind – I had to synchronize 2 user’s Outlook Calendars and PIMShare was a decent tool that got the job done. It will sync Contacts and Tasks as well, but i didn’t use those features. It works a little strangely, sending emails back and forth to synchronize, but it deletes the emails quickly and automatically after processing them. You need to keep your inbox small otherwise Outlook will pause while it scans your inbox every minute few minutes for new incoming messages to process. It’s $40 a year per user, so 2 users is $80. There’s a free 30 day trial.

    http://www.pagethink.com/pimshare.asp

  7. Dan Trusty wrote:

    To all who may benefit. I was trying to sync up my Outlook contacts, calendar, tasks, etc between a PC a laptop. Many people struggle with this as it is a tuff thing to do. Not anymore. Talking to a friend a learned a little about .pst files and where to find it. Now I save my .pst file to a flash drive, set my Outlook to look for that file and not for the file in my PC. Now the only thing I have to do when I get back to the office is take my flash drive out of my laptop, and plug in to my PC before I start up Outlook. Everything is right there because it is actually the same file! It took a little experimenting to get this set up, but in the end works pretty nice. The most important thing is to make a backup copy of the file regularly in case the flash drive is lost. Hope this is helpful.

  8. Kathleen Howard wrote:

    After having test driven about two dozen online CRMs, I am so relieved to find this site.

    We have used Goldmine for many years but no longer want to deal with hardware issues and $165 per GM techs.

    We are in commercial real estate and pricing for our 5 person team is very important.

    That said, has anyone tried Boss CRM? At $20 per month per user, it is a bit pricey but the pages load quickly; there is unlimited storage; and it seems to have most of the bells and whistles. The idea of having “cases” is attractive to us, but not available here.

    Would love some feedback on it before taking the plunge and will also check out some other options mentioned in comments and reviews.

    Thanks for your wonderful site.

    KH

  9. John Stewart wrote:

    Online Contact Management Software means: companies in the B2B market.

    So many different needs, so many different solutions.

    Still the word “cheap’ is used in many cases.

    But what is cheap ?

    If you miss a deal because of a missing functionality, then cheap is expensive.

    These CRM’s are web based.

    Most of our companies have a website.

    At the same time most of your customers will visit your company website before or during the purchase process.

    Thus your contacts and leads are actually on your website.

    Wouldn’t it be interesting to know who is visiting your website?

    a) If a contact visits: probably time to contact him.

    b) Lead generation: visitors from new companies visiting are interesting to know: identify by company name. Next qualify these visitors as leads or not based upon what they did on your website.

    Thus combining contacts (& leads) and website visits can bring significant additional value as your CRM/Contact manager becomes a source of information instead of a contact data storage.

  10. Chuck wrote:

    I am glad to find this post. I also have a very small business, but have interest from people in other area to sell our product. To that end I started looking for a good, yet simple CRM. It seems that too often you wil find a solution that is “Almost” perfect.

    I actually train Salesforce and therefore know it’s power, but also know how few of the features are actually used in the field by salespeople. We are looking for a fairly simple solution and thought that I found the solution in Big Contacts. However, their limited custom reports creates a problem. For instance I cannot create a custom commission reports. In fact, I can not see where I can even include anything to do with opportunities in a custom report.

    So here is what we need, if anybody has any thought….

    1) Ability to track all customer interactions

    2) Relates “Sales” or “Purchases” to individual clients and pull reports based on those purchases.

    3) “Workflow Tasks” or “Action Plans”.. Where a template of activities can be assigned to an event (Sales, new client, etc.)

    4) I would love to be able to create custom commission reports.

    5) Built in e-mail client of some sort.

    6) Simple mobile synchronization or use.

    Thanks for any help.

  11. Owen wrote:

    @John Stewart

    John, you are totally correct in that many of your leads are coming to your website. Why spend all that money on SEO etc. if you can’t capitalize on it? It is for this reason that Oprius comes with a Lead Capture module. You can either create a website from scratch, or add a form to your existing site. Those leads go directly into your CRM, and in Oprius’ case can be automatically started on your defined sales pipeline via our Relationship Builder. This could send an automatic thank you email, then schedule a phone follow up reminder, or whatever works best for your business. And of course all those correspondences are tracked for that contact.

    Owen Mead-Robins – VP Operations

    Oprius

  12. It looks to me that Highrise only has a 30 free trial with a minimum subscription of $25/mo. That may be a recent change.

  13. Jan Visser wrote:

    David, you’re right. Thanks for pointing it out – I updated our review page.

  14. Ibn Khaldun wrote:

    This has been an extremely helpful article.

    I’m really torn between Highrise and Relenta (with Batchbook in the middle) – the only problem is that i want calendar functionality, and i really hate the fact that 37signals’ products don’t play nice with each other – why can’t they all be integrated?

    Highrise + Backpack + Basecamp is the dream for so many companies; why can’t these all be offered together in a seamless integration.

    Things like SugarCRM would be fantastic, but are ultimately too cost prohibitive – even for high end real estate agencies…

  15. Brandon wrote:

    Stop the presses! They still offer their free plan, you just have to look closely below the three plans they highlight. On their signup page it states: “You can also choose our free plan which allows you to manage 250 contacts with two users, but doesn’t include file sharing.”

  16. Randy wrote:

    What is the best service that I can backup directly to, or integrates with Outlook? Have you ever reviewed Prophet or CLP Suite?

  17. Nicole wrote:

    Check out http://www.octopuscity.com. They offer a very intuitive free contact management system that is also a social (business-oriented) network. You can sync with webmail accounts and Outlook and there’s also a bunch of other free business services like teleconferencing.

  18. Mark wrote:

    I tried CLP suite for about two months as a replacement for Goldmine. While I loved the product, I was just to used to having my email integrated with my contacts. CLP did this only manually – I found it frustrating to have mail spread across outlook and CLP.

    On the positive side, I like the user interface and snappy performance even over the web. The “configurator” (run it when you start using the system) asks all the right “setup” questions.

    I’m still looking and Relenta and Oprius look like my top choices now but I’m still looking for an iphone connection. I use iphone’s calendar often and would like changes on my iphone to upload to the crm tool and of course go the other way too… Relenta does not have a clean way of doing this and I find no reference to iphone on Oprius’ site.

    Another, minor thing, we print a lot of labels via our dymo label maker. In Goldmine, I can click a add-in button (written by Dymo) and the dymo label maker software launches with the selected contact ready to print on the label. Then I can format the label (if necessary) or use Dymo’s nifty “address check” feature.

    Which tools in the list above have figured out the PDA/smart phone connection?

    Thanks,

    Mark

  19. Adam Darowski wrote:

    Hi Mark… Adam from BatchBook here.

    We recently released an iPhone version of our small business contact manager, BatchBook. Currently, you can view your contacts and To-Dos in an iPhone-optimized interface. Soon, we’ll be adding the ability to add and edit from the iPhone version.

    We also have an ICAL feed for our To-Do List that can be synced to the iPhone calendar (I actually have two BatchBook accounts, Google Calendar, and some local geek calendars all feeding into my iPhone via iCal).

    I invite you to check us out. We love feedback, so please let us know what you’d like to see from the iPhone version.

    Thanks!

    Adam Darowski

    User Experience Designer

    BatchBlue Software

  20. Brandon Hull wrote:

    Mark,

    Thanks for jumping in on this. Both PipelineDeals and BatchBlue are focused on the iPhone at this point. I believe Blackberry support is on the radar for both of them as well.

    Hope this gives you a start…

    Brandon

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