Best CRM for Australian B2B Teams (2026): Why I Keep Coming Back to Pipedrive
I’ve worked across manufacturing, technical services, and B2B sales in both Australia and Israel. I’ve set up CRMs for small teams who had nothing, and for mid-sized businesses running Priority ERP with 20 reps and no pipeline visibility. After all of it, one tool keeps showing up as the right answer for most Australian B2B teams: Pipedrive.
Why Australian B2B Teams Are Different
Most CRM content online is written for the US market – SaaS companies, SDR teams, high-volume outbound. That’s not most Australian B2B. Here’s what I actually see in Australian small-to-mid B2B:
- 2-20 person teams where the same person is doing BDM, account management, and sometimes operations
- Long sales cycles (weeks to months) on relatively low deal volumes
- Industries like trades, construction, manufacturing, professional services, industrial supply
- A strong preference for tools that don’t require a training programme to use
- Microsoft 365 as the core stack (Outlook, Teams, Excel) – not Google Workspace
This is the context in which I evaluate CRMs. Not “which tool scales to 500 reps” but “which tool will a five-person B2B team in Sydney or Melbourne actually open every morning.”
What Makes Pipedrive Work in This Context
Pipedrive was designed by salespeople, for salespeople. That design philosophy shows up in three ways that matter for Australian B2B teams:
1. The pipeline view is the product
Unlike HubSpot, where the pipeline is one feature among hundreds, Pipedrive opens directly to your pipeline. Every deal, every stage, every next action – visible at a glance. For a team managing 30-80 active deals at any time, this is not a small thing. It’s the difference between a CRM you check daily and one you avoid.
2. Activity-driven selling matches the Australian B2B pace
Pipedrive forces you to log a next activity on every deal. No next activity scheduled = the deal goes grey. This is perfect for the long-cycle, low-volume Australian B2B pattern where deals can sit for weeks without a touchpoint. It acts as a built-in discipline system without needing management enforcement.
3. It plays well with Microsoft 365
Pipedrive syncs with Outlook natively. Emails sent from Outlook get logged. Calendar events appear in the deal timeline. For teams that live in Outlook and are nervous about changing their workflow, this reduces the CRM adoption barrier significantly.
Pipedrive Pricing in Australian Context
Pipedrive’s pricing is in USD, which matters when the AUD is sitting around 0.62-0.65 to the dollar. Here’s the honest breakdown for 2026:
| Plan | USD/user/mo | ~AUD/user/mo | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Essential | $14 | ~$22 | Solo reps, getting started |
| Advanced | $29 | ~$45 | Most small teams ? start here |
| Professional | $59 | ~$92 | Teams with reporting needs |
| Power / Enterprise | $69+ | ~$107+ | Larger teams, advanced automation |
For a 5-person B2B team on the Advanced plan, you’re looking at roughly $225 AUD/month. That’s less than a half-day of a BDM’s time – and if it means your team stops losing deals to missed follow-ups, it pays for itself quickly.
When Pipedrive Is NOT the Right Choice
I want to be straight with you, because I think CRM advice that just pushes one tool is useless.
Don’t use Pipedrive if:
- You need a free CRM to start. HubSpot’s free plan is genuinely good for small teams. Pipedrive doesn’t have a free tier.
- Marketing automation is core to your growth. Pipedrive has basic email sequences but can’t replace a proper marketing platform. HubSpot or ActiveCampaign would be better here.
- You’re running an e-commerce or B2C operation. Pipedrive is built for deal-based sales. It gets awkward fast for high-volume transactional sales.
- Your team refuses to change anything. No CRM fixes a culture that won’t log activities. If adoption is going to be a battle, solve that problem first.
What a Good Pipedrive Setup Looks Like
This is what I set up for most small Australian B2B teams when they come to me with a messy pipeline or no CRM at all:
- One pipeline, maximum 6 stages. Most teams overthink this. Prospecting ? Qualified ? Proposal ? Negotiation ? Won/Lost. That’s it.
- Mandatory custom fields for deal context. What did they buy before? Who’s the decision maker? What’s the actual budget signal? This lives on the deal, not in your head.
- Activity templates for each stage. When a deal moves to Proposal, the next activity is auto-suggested. Removes the cognitive load of “what do I do next.”
- Email sync with Outlook. Every client email gets logged automatically. No more “did I send that?” conversations.
- Weekly pipeline review ritual. 20 minutes, every Monday. Anything with no next activity gets attention or gets disqualified.
If you want me to walk through this setup for your business specifically, send me your situation and I’ll give you a written recommendation.
The Bottom Line
If you’re running a 2-20 person B2B team in Australia, doing deal-based sales with relatively long cycles and limited admin support, Pipedrive is the CRM I’d put in front of you first. Not because it’s perfect – but because it has the highest chance of actually being used.
A CRM that gets used beats a better CRM that doesn’t. Every time.
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Best for small B2B pipeline visibility and follow-up discipline.

