PCMag editors select and review products independently. If you buy through affiliate links, we may earn commissions, which help support our testing.

Insightly CRM

 & Oliver Rist Contributing Editor
 & Rob Marvin Former Associate Features Editor
 & Dianna Gunn Contributor
Our Experts
LOOK INSIDE PC LABS HOW WE TEST
65 EXPERTS
43 YEARS
41,500+ REVIEWS
Insightly CRM - Insightly CRM (Credit: Insightly)
4.0 Excellent

The Bottom Line

Insightly helps businesses at all levels quickly learn customer relationship management and provides a full suite of capable tools.
Best DealCompare Quotes and Save

Buy It Now

Compare Quotes and Save
Visit Site

Pros & Cons

    • Intuitive interface
    • Fast setup and onboarding
    • Excellent workflow automation tools
    • Extensive integrations, with the option to build custom ones at premium levels
    • Expensive
    • Underwhelming AI capabilities

Insightly CRM Specs

24-Hour Support
Analytics
Builds Forms to Collect Data
Creates Pipelines for Leads
Custom Dashboards
Dedicated Mobile Apps
Document Library
Email Routing
In-App Email
In-App Scheduling
Integrated Email Marketing
Live Chat
Multi-Currency Support
Phone Support
Pipeline Designer
Pipeline Management
REST API
Role-Based Access Control
Task Management
User Forums
Virtual Dashboard Builder

Insightly provides software for automating marketing, customer relationship management (CRM), and customer service tasks. We focus on its CRM product in this review, which offers all of the tools you need to follow leads through the sales pipeline and, at advanced levels, create detailed quotes and track projects. Its snappy setup process and intuitive user experience are highlights, but every tier is considerably more expensive than comparable ones from top competitors. Zoho CRM remains our Editors' Choice winner thanks to its greater flexibility, lower starting costs, and more advanced AI tools.

Pricing: On the High End

Insightly offers three CRM plans, starting with the Plus tier ($29 per user per month, billed annually). This level includes Insightly’s core lead and contact management tools, along with advanced reports and preconfigured business dashboards. You also get customizable sales processes, opportunity management features, project management capabilities, and automated workflow tools. The Plus plan limits you to 10GB of file storage, 2,500 email sends per day, 100,000 records, and two configurable profile and page layouts. This is the appropriate tier for small businesses.

(Credit: Insightly/PCMag)

Larger businesses should opt for the Professional tier ($49 per user per month, billed annually). It adds up to 100 real-time insight cards, custom page layouts, and lead assignment and routing features, along with low-code tools for connecting business software for which pre-built integrations aren't available. The plan supports 100GB of cloud storage, 5,000 daily email sends, 250,000 records, and an unlimited number of custom profile and page layouts.

The listed Enterprise plan ($99 per user per month, billed annually) adds tools for product management, pricebook management, and quote creation. It also includes comprehensive audit logging, which helps you keep track of business activities. Account limits increase to 250GB of cloud storage, 10,000 daily email sends, and 500,000 records. Keep in mind that this is one example of an enterprise plan; you need to contact the company to get exact pricing for the tools your business needs.

Insightly's prices are high across the board. The Plus tier costs significantly more than other small business solutions, such as Bigin by Zoho (starts at $7 per user per month, billed annually) and Freshsales (starts at $9 per user per month, billed annually). The Professional level is also expensive compared with what Apptivo ($15 per user per month, billed annually) and Zoho CRM ($14 per user per month, billed annually) charge for equivalent features. The Enterprise plan is less expensive than Creatio's base tier (requires a starting investment of $840 per month for new users). Again, however, you can get similar functionality from higher-end Apptivo ($40 per user per month) and Zoho CRM ($52 per user per month) plans.

Interface and Ease of Use: Fast and Straightforward

Setting up an Insightly account takes just a few clicks and an email address. The site then sends you an email with a setup link. From there, you simply create your password. Once you sign in, Insightly asks you to enter your organization name, the number of employees you have, and your phone number. You also get an opportunity to add team members by entering their names and email addresses.

(Credit: Insightly/PCMag)

My only complaint here is that you can’t customize each user’s permissions when you invite them. You have to navigate to the drop-down menu under your profile icon, and then click System Settings > User Settings to modify their permissions, along with their personal and login details. This could be more intuitive, especially since a separate User Settings option in the same drop-down menu leads to options for your own account.

Getting started with Insightly is otherwise more intuitive than with tools like Apptivo. Everything has a clear label, buttons for tasks like importing contacts are easy to find, and most areas offer multiple views you can easily switch between. Once you configure the basics, Insightly takes you to an Opportunities Dashboard, where you can view essential statistics, such as your total sales and the state of your sales funnel. This page gives you quick visualizations and is easy for even CRM software beginners to navigate.

If you subscribe to the Professional or Enterprise tier, you can customize what appears on the dashboard for specific teams and even individual employees. You can also create fully separate dashboards for certain employee types, teams, or individuals. This helps ensure that everyone can quickly answer the data they need most.

If you run into trouble, a detailed knowledge base with tutorials for all common Insightly CRM tasks is available. To access it, click the small customer service link at the bottom of the CRM. I wish this were more prominent, but the tutorials are quite comprehensive.

Insightly offers 24/7 email support for all plans. Phone support is available only between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. PT for subscribers to the first two plans. Enterprise subscribers can negotiate premier support as part of their plans, but this still means phone support only between 6 a.m. and 6 p.m. PT. If you pay for the Plus or Professional plans, you can pay extra for this support. Competing services do much better here. Apptivo provides 24/5 phone support for all plans, while Zoho offers a premium option with 24/7 phone support.

Leads and Contacts: Profiles Could Use More Detail

Insightly uses a pipeline structure of Leads > Contacts > Opportunities > Projects. You collect leads through email or first contact. Then, you can manually enter those into Insightly. If the first contact occurs through an email address you sync with Insightly, the app automatically adds those details. Alternatively, you can import existing leads via a CSV file or an integration with Mailchimp

I imported some sample leads from a CSV file. The process works much like that for other CRM software I've tested. Insightly successfully mapped most of my information to the correct fields and uploaded the data in a couple of minutes. Additionally, the app gave me the option to trigger automated workflows for these users. I appreciate this option—one I haven’t seen in other CRM tools—since it lets you instantly move leads into your sales pipeline.

(Credit: Insightly/PCMag)

Once you add your leads, Insightly displays them in a table with key information like their name, contact information, and current status (like open or closed). If you prefer a Kanban view over the default table format, you can easily switch to it.

Clicking on a lead opens a card with more detailed information about them, including a visual representation of the pipeline they’re in. This is similar to the lead card in other CRMs like Apptivo, though it doesn’t offer as much room for detail as enterprise-level CRMs like Creatio or Sugar Sell. You can create custom fields to add more information, but the number of custom fields you get might depend on your plan.

(Credit: Insightly/PCMag)

The Contacts area is for people with whom you have interacted multiple times and feel confident pursuing a deal. Its functionality is similar to that of the Leads area, with a few key differences, such as the ability to import contacts from a wider range of sources, including Gmail and Outlook.

Selecting a contact reveals a contact card; these have more detail than the lead cards, including information like the contact’s local time and weather. The layout is also different, with the sales pipeline in a sidebar rather than at the top. This level of detail is close to what's possible with contact cards in other tools like Zoho CRM. Moreover, you can create custom fields to fill in details, though a total of 50 custom fields is all you get with the base plan.

(Credit: Insightly/PCMag)

You can either convert leads to contacts manually or create automated workflows that handle the conversion once specific actions occur. Similarly, you can manually assign team members and tasks to leads once they become contacts or set up related workflows.

Opportunities and Projects: Consistent Features

Opportunities (or deals in other CRMs) are the sales you’re actively working on closing. Like Leads and Contacts, Insightly displays Opportunities in a table by default. No kanban view is available for this data, unfortunately, but you can filter the list to show specific opportunity types (such as those that are open or closed).

(Credit: Insightly/PCMag)

Selecting an opportunity opens a card with the pipeline progress at the top and key details below it. You can fully customize the default layout, as well as create unique layouts for individual or specific types of opportunities. Insightly lets you add buttons for sending data to integrated software, connected organizations, and related interactions to these cards.

If you subscribe to the Enterprise tier, you can optimize the journey from opportunity to customer by creating products and organizing them into Pricebooks. You can use these Pricebooks—or individual items from within the Pricebooks—to create detailed Quotes and close deals faster.

Once an opportunity is closed, you can convert it into a Project. The Projects section's layout is similar to that of the Opportunities section, with both a table for all projects and detailed cards for individual projects. Projects have a specialized pipeline (from Plan to Completion), and you can move them through as you complete each stage. As with Opportunities, you can develop unique pipelines for individual projects or specific types.

Automated Workflows: Flexible Options

Insightly offers comprehensive tools for creating automated workflows in the System Settings area. You can add an unlimited number of Criteria (triggers) and Actions (resulting processes) to each workflow. You can also set workflows to occur once when someone creates a record or multiple times as necessary throughout the customer journey. For example, you can create a workflow that automatically asks leads to schedule a meeting once they are in your system.

(Credit: Insightly/PCMag)

This automation tool isn’t as user-friendly as Pipedrive's visual builder or as complex as Creatio's equivalent. Most people on your team should be able to set up basic workflows, and you can leave more complicated ones to advanced users.

Insightly also lets you create Activity Sets, groups of tasks that it automatically assigns to Opportunities or Projects upon creation. For example, you might create an Activity Set that includes sending an email and scheduling a virtual meeting.

If you pay for the Enterprise tier, you can further automate processes with Lead Assignments. These automatically assign leads to certain employees based on things like when you gathered the lead, what campaign they came from, and their demographics. This can be helpful for ensuring that every lead ends up in the sales pipeline.

Email Tools: Some Limitations

Insightly offers tools for sending both individual and bulk emails. These email marketing tools integrate directly into your existing Gmail or Outlook app. As such, you can quickly grab templates from Insightly for specific email types, move notes from your emails into the CRM, and view contact or opportunity data while sending an email. These tools are great for maximizing consistency across your business processes, and one of the major selling points of Insightly. Sugar Sell is one of the few other CRMs I've tested that offers similar email functionality.

(Credit: Insightly/PCMag)

Within Insightly, you can view emails and create email templates. The email template creator is HTML-based, which is common for CRM tools, but not as user-friendly as the visual designers in Pipedrive or third-party email marketing services. This is inconvenient for bulk emailing, though it shouldn't be much of an issue for individual emails. A bigger problem is that you can't send emails from within Insightly—choosing to send an email opens your Gmail or Outlook app. For all those reasons, you likely still need a dedicated email marketing tool.

Insightly provides basic AI tools for email, including an AI summarizer that can compile important information from long email strings in a couple of minutes. You can use the Insightly AI to create new emails, too, but these emails are very simple and similar to what you get from generative AI tools in Zoho CRM. If you want to create unique messages that help you close deals, you need to significantly modify the AI-generated content or write the emails yourself.

Reporting and Analytics: Granular Tools

Insightly has two layers of analytics: Dashboards and Reports. Dashboards provide easy-to-digest visual representations of key data like your total sales and win rate. Insightly automatically creates dashboards for contacts, leads, and opportunities. It also gives you the option to build custom dashboards for things like projects. You can customize each dashboard, changing the types of information it displays and the types of visualizations it uses.

(Credit: Insightly/PCMag)

Reports are more advanced data analysis tools that compile information about a highly specific aspect of your business or CRM activity. For example, you can create a Contact Activity report to help you evaluate recent interactions with contacts. You can then schedule it to run once a month and for Insightly to automatically send it to the head of your sales department so they can keep an eye on how your processes are working. This setup is fairly involved, just like reports in Creatio. Therefore, you should leave this to team members with advanced knowledge of data analysis.

Additional Features and Integrations

Insightly's CRM product offers full integrations with all other Insightly and Unbounce tools, making it easy for you to automate marketing tasks, build effective landing pages, and manage customer support tasks all in one place. You can access these integrations by purchasing an Insightly All-In-One plan (starting at $349 per user per month, billed annually).

It's also possible to integrate the CRM with many popular business tools, like the aforementioned Gmail and Outlook. Other examples include QuickBooks Online for accounting and PandaDoc for contract acquisition.

If you have the Professional or Enterprise plan, you get access to AppConnect, a tool for building custom integrations with minimal code. This makes it possible to connect practically any other software.

Insightly doesn’t offer the deep AI-based insights into customer behavior you might expect from a CRM that costs as much as it does. More affordable CRMs like Zoho CRM are much more advanced in this way.

Final Thoughts

Insightly CRM - Insightly CRM (Credit: Insightly)

Insightly CRM

4.0 Excellent

Insightly helps businesses at all levels quickly learn customer relationship management and provides a full suite of capable tools.

Get It Now
Best DealCompare Quotes and Save

Buy It Now

Compare Quotes and Save
Visit Site

About Our Experts

Oliver Rist

Oliver Rist

Contributing Editor

My Experience

I've covered business technology for more than 25 years, and in that time I've reviewed hundreds of products and services and written a similar number of trend and analysis stories. My first job in journalism was with PC Magazine in the 1990s, but I've also written for other enterprise technology publications, including Computer ShopperInformationWeek, InfoWorld, and InternetWeek.

Between stints as a journalist, I've worked as an IT consultant, software development manager, and marketing executive for several companies, including Microsoft, where I was a senior technical product manager for Windows Server. My focus is on business tech reviews at PCMag, but you can also find me co-hosting This Week in Enterprise Tech on the TWiT.tv network.

My Areas of Expertise

The Technology I Use

My daily workhorse baby is a sleek Dell XPS 13 9310 ultraportable running Windows 11, a recent purchase that still gives me goosebumps when I look at it. When I'm at my desk, I connect it to two honking HP U28 4K displays using Dell's fancy WD19 docking station. When I'm doing personal work or something that's graphics intensive, those 4K displays get shared with my desktop machine, an iBuyPower Pro Gaming PC that uses Windows 10. And when I'm testing a network product, I use a slightly older Dell Precision Mobile Workstation that dual boots between Windows 10 and Ubuntu.

Being a business tech reviewer, my home network is a little more involved than most. It's based on a business-class Verizon FiOS internet connection, but between that and the rest of the network sits a Ubiquiti UniFi Security Gateway (USG). My wired connections, including my wife's and my PCs, our smart TVs, and printers run off two UniFi Switch 8 boxes, while the Wi-Fi gets handled using three UniFi AP AC Pro access points. Data protection is a combination of my 32TB Western Digital My Cloud Pro P4100 home NAS, a 2TB Dropbox business account, and BackBlaze's backup software.

The network is managed with UniFi's Cloud Key and Controller software, because I'm a sucker for colorful dashboards and heat maps. I sometimes back that up using a Wireshark instance I've got running on the Ubuntu machine. For work, I'm a Microsoft Office guy. I live in Outlook and use OneNote for practically everything aside from final draft writing. My days at Microsoft also made me Excel and PowerPoint proficient. The latter is where I do most of the work-related graphics chores, though for personal projects I like Adobe Photoshop and Wonderdraft.

My Wi-Fi network handles all our tablets and phones, as well as all the home automation devices in our ADT Pulse home security system. That said, I've backed that up with a couple of Wyze Cams. My phone is a Samsung Galaxy S10, and my tablet library includes three Apple iPads, an Amazon Fire HD 10, and a Samsung Galaxy Book 13.

In the misty days of yore, my first PC was a Radio Shack TRS-80 Model 4, and my first mobile phone was a Nokia 8210.

Read full bio

Rob Marvin

Rob Marvin

Former Associate Features Editor

Rob Marvin writes features, news, and trend stories on all manner of emerging technologies. Beats include: startups, business and venture capital, blockchain and cryptocurrencies, AI, augmented and virtual reality, IoT and automation, legal cannabis tech, social media, streaming, security, mobile commerce, M&A, and entertainment. Rob was previously Assistant Editor and Associate Editor in PCMag's Business section. Prior to that, he served as an editor at SD Times. He graduated from Syracuse University's S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications. You can also find his business and tech coverage on Entrepreneur and Fox Business. Rob is also an unabashed nerd who does occasional entertainment writing for Geek.com on movies, TV, and culture. Once a year you can find him on a couch with friends marathoning The Lord of the Rings trilogy--extended editions.

Read full bio

Dianna Gunn

Dianna Gunn

Contributor

My Experience

I've been building websites and marketing campaigns for small businesses since 2010. I also run two businesses of my own: Hired Gunn Writing & Consulting and the Weeknight Writers group. I'm obsessed with testing new tools to improve and expand these businesses, and I've written about those I've tried for sites like CNET, CodeinWP/WPShout, and WinningWP.

The Technology I Use

I use Firefox for my software reviews and testing but stick with Google Chrome for my work on the Weeknight Writers Group. I build all of my websites with WordPress. I'm still seeking the perfect CRM, though I'm leaning toward Apptivo. My email marketing solution is MailerLite. When I host virtual events, I use Zoom with a Logitech StreamCam and a Logitech H390 Wired Headset.

Read full bio