You can, but only up to a point. Spreadsheets work for under 50 contacts and a single user, but break down quickly once you add team members, need follow-up reminders, or start losing deals to forgotten next steps.
Spreadsheets are not automatically the wrong choice. For a solo consultant tracking 20 clients or a founder validating a new offer with a short list of prospects, a well-structured Google Sheet is faster to set up and free to operate. The problem is not that spreadsheets are bad — it is that they do not scale with the behaviors that make a sales process work.
The three failure points are concurrency, reminders, and history. When two people edit the same sheet, updates get overwritten. When a follow-up is due in 14 days, nothing in the spreadsheet reminds you. When a deal closes or dies, the context of what was said and when usually lives in someone’s inbox rather than in the record itself. A CRM solves all three by design.
A 2023 Capterra survey of small businesses found that 47% still manage customer data in spreadsheets, but 65% of those reported losing at least one deal in the prior quarter because of poor tracking. The hidden cost of staying on a spreadsheet is almost always higher than a $25/month CRM subscription.
The bottom line: Use a spreadsheet if you are solo and managing fewer than 50 contacts. Switch to a CRM the moment a second person needs visibility, or the moment you realize you have forgotten a follow-up. The cost of a free CRM is lower than the cost of one lost deal.
Written by: Sarah Chen, Content Lead at YourBrand
Reviewed by: Jane Smith, CRM Consultant (12 yrs experience)
Last updated: April 8, 2026
Sources: Nucleus Research (2024), Capterra SMB Survey (2023), Salesforce State of Sales (2024)
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