Who Should Lead Customer Resource Management Projects?

Introduction

The leadership of a CRM implementation must reside at the executive level, specifically with a dedicated executive sponsor who possesses decision-making authority and organizational influence. This individual should be supported by a cross-functional team structure that brings together business and technical expertise throughout the implementation journey.

The Critical Role of Executive Sponsorship

Executive sponsorship stands as the number one driver of CRM project success. The executive sponsor serves as the project champion who establishes the vision, secures funding and resources, removes organizational barriers, and maintains strategic alignment with business objectives. This person typically holds a C-level position such as Chief Revenue Officer, Chief Sales Officer, Chief Marketing Officer, or Chief Operating Officer, depending on the organization’s structure and strategic priorities. The executive sponsor’s responsibilities extend far beyond initial approval. They must actively communicate the business case across the organization, build stakeholder support, make high-level decisions when conflicts arise, and lead benefits realization even after go-live. Research from the Project Management Institute indicates that successful executive sponsors work an average of 13 hours per week on each project and maintain detailed knowledge of how the initiative aligns with overall business strategy.

Why Executive Leadership Matters More Than Technical Expertise

CRM implementations fail at alarmingly high rates, with estimates ranging from 30% to 90% depending on the study. The primary causes of failure consistently point to leadership and organizational factors rather than technical issues. Meta Group’s 2000 research identified poor objective setting, lack of senior leadership, inadequate planning, implementation missteps, and lack of change management as the top failure factors. Two decades later, the 2023 research reveals nearly identical challenges, suggesting that organizations continue to struggle with the same fundamental leadership gaps. The most damaging scenario occurs when executives disengage before the mission is accomplished. Even after initial planning and approval, senior leaders must stay engaged through completion and beyond, as teams frequently encounter obstacles that require executive-level intervention. BMC Software’s experience illustrates this principle dramatically. Their first two CRM attempts achieved only 30-50% adoption because they lacked executive support and key stakeholder involvement. The third attempt, backed by C-suite commitment and a steering committee of IT and business owners, achieved 97% adoption. Despite spending over $10 million on this third effort alone, BMC expected returns of $70 million over the following two to three years.

The Day-to-Day Leader: Project Manager or CRM Administrator

While the executive sponsor operates at the strategic level, daily implementation activities require a dedicated project manager who serves as the “owner” of the CRM project from start to finish. This person defines project scope, monitors progress, keeps the team on task, and translates business requirements into system configurations. The project manager should ideally represent a 0.5 to 1.0 full-time equivalent experienced in project management methodologies rather than simply being a key business user who takes on additional responsibilities. For ongoing operations after implementation, many organizations benefit from appointing a CRM Administrator who reports to the executive sponsor. This role ensures data integrity, manages system enhancements, provides user support, and maintains alignment between the CRM and evolving business processes. The CRM Administrator often works closely with the COO or an experienced operator who understands all customer touchpoints and can align business processes across departments.

Sales, Marketing, and Operations

A persistent debate concerns whether Sales or Marketing should “own” the CRM. The evidence strongly suggests that both departments must take equal ownership for the system to succeed. Marketing needs visibility into sales activities, trends, and customer service concerns to be proactive rather than reactive. Sales needs visibility into activities, forecasts, quotas, and leads to close deals effectively. When both departments share ownership, they begin speaking the same language, metrics become meaningful across functions, and revenue grows. The emergence of Revenue Operations (RevOps) as a discipline offers a compelling solution to the ownership question. RevOps brings together capabilities from sales operations, marketing operations, and customer success, creating a function that naturally liaises between key CRM stakeholders while possessing technical capabilities to optimize system usage and drive cross-functional adoption. Organizations with a Chief Revenue Officer benefit from having a leader whose mandate explicitly encompasses the entire revenue generation process rather than a single department’s priorities.

Essential Team Structure for Implementation

Beyond the executive sponsor and project manager, successful CRM implementations require clearly defined roles across multiple layers. The core implementation team typically includes:

  • Subject Matter Experts representing sales, marketing, service, and operations provide the voice of end-users and help translate business needs into system requirements. Organizations should identify a small group of 4-6 business users to act as SMEs who champion decisions and coordinate feedback from the larger user community, avoiding the decision paralysis that occurs when 20-50 users participate in meetings.
  • Technical specialists handle system configuration, data migration, integrations with external systems, and deployment activities. This role requires knowledge of current technical practices, data structures, and system administration capabilities.
  • Quality assurance engineers test functionality before go-live to ensure the system works as intended and users won’t face bugs or crashes.
  • IT support personnel provide environment management, infrastructure support, and long-term system health maintenance.
  • Training specialists build documentation and deliver training to ensure teams are confident using the system.
  • Change management leads prepare the organization for transformation and help people adapt rather than merely adopt new technology.
  • Implementation partners or consultants provide technical expertise in setting up the CRM solution, can work with executives to solidify KPIs, and offer technical support and training after launch. Organizations should seek consultants certified by the CRM vendor for the latest release, as they understand the software thoroughly and can translate business requirements into configurations far more effectively than non-certified consultants.

The Business Owner’s Non-Negotiable Responsibility

Business owners or senior executives cannot delegate their leadership responsibility to vendors, IT departments, or project managers.

Research indicates that 46% of business leaders understand they should take responsibility themselves while also leveraging a person who is a good leader, understands team pain points, and can serve as CRM administrator. The shocking reality is that many business owners complain to vendors about incomplete implementations while never spending time to get trained themselves. CRM projects must be driven by those on the frontline with customers rather than by IT departments. While IT needs to be fully engaged and have ownership of technical prerequisites such as database reuse, infrastructure needs, administration, SLAs, licenses, and data integration, IT-based priorities focus on flawless processes whereas sales-based priorities focus on meaningful results. As one industry expert noted, IT prioritization without business leadership is like a perfectly maintained car that arrives in the wrong town.

Leadership Commitment Beyond Go-Live

The need for CRM leadership does not stop after implementation. The executive sponsor or designated “CEO for CRM” must continue driving adoption, process alignment, and long-term results. Post-implementation responsibilities include focusing on constant improvement by planning additional development phases with no more than five improvements at a time, collaborating with sales management to establish KPIs and enforce role-specific expectations, holding regular meetings to discuss adoption challenges and successes, monitoring data integrity and standards, working daily with primary dashboards to identify trends and opportunities, and communicating success stories while ensuring users receive coaching on both the “how” and “why” of CRM usage. Organizations that treat CRM as a project with a defined end date rather than as an ongoing business transformation tool experience continued low adoption and failed value realization.

The persistent engagement of leadership creates strategic alignment, enables continuous improvement, supports early problem intervention, strengthens cultural integration, and provides better customer insights.

Creating the Conditions for Success

Leadership influence on CRM success can be measured quantitatively. Leaders who prioritize user training see 70% higher adoption rates, and those who involve stakeholders early secure 75% more support for their CRM efforts. Furthermore, when leadership demonstrates regular usage of the system, processes are designed with user experience as a priority, and there is unified understanding among sales, marketing, and service teams about the CRM’s importance, usage rates soar. The organizational culture set by leadership determines whether the CRM becomes integrated into daily routines or remains an additional administrative burden that teams resist. Executive sponsors must lead by example through regular system use and attendance at training sessions. They must also address compensation structures that create perverse incentives preventing cross-department collaboration. When evaluation, compensation, and promotion remain based primarily on individual accomplishments despite calls for collaboration, CRM initiatives struggle regardless of the technology’s capabilities.

The Verdict on Leadership

CRM implementation should be led by a senior executive who serves as executive sponsor and champion, supported by an experienced project manager who handles daily execution, a cross-functional team of subject matter experts and technical specialists, and a post-implementation administrator who ensures ongoing system health and adoption. The executive sponsor must come from the business side with deep customer-facing experience rather than from IT, though IT must be fully engaged as a strategic partner. This leadership structure must persist beyond initial deployment, with the executive sponsor or designated CRM leader remaining actively engaged to drive continuous improvement, monitor adoption, maintain data quality, and ensure the system evolves with changing business needs. Organizations that underinvest in leadership engagement while overinvesting in technology features consistently experience the disappointing adoption rates and failure statistics that have persisted across two decades of CRM implementations.

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