A simple alternative to CRM software
Most solo professionals who look for a CRM don't actually need one. They need something much simpler: a client notebook.
The CRM trap for solo professionals
The search for a client management tool usually starts with "CRM". The results are tools built for sales teams: HubSpot, Pipedrive, Salesforce. Even the "simple" options come with pipelines, deal stages, and onboarding flows that assume a sales context.
Many solo professionals try one of these tools, spend time setting it up, and stop using it within a few weeks. The tool isn't wrong — it's just designed for a different problem.
What solo professionals actually need
The real need is almost always simpler:
- Remember who each client is and how you know them
- Know the current status of the relationship
- Find notes from your last conversation quickly
- Not lose context between projects or over time
That's not a CRM. That's a notebook with a search function.
Why a client notebook is often better
A simple client notebook wins on a few dimensions that matter for solo work:
- Speed — open, write, close. No pipelines to update.
- Privacy — notes stay on your device, not a third-party server.
- Durability — no subscription means no risk of losing access to your data.
- Focus — fewer features means fewer decisions and less cognitive load.
When you should still use a CRM
A CRM is the right tool if:
- You manage a sales pipeline with multiple stages
- You work with a team that needs shared client data
- You rely on automated email sequences
- You track leads, conversion rates, or revenue metrics
If none of those describe your work, a CRM is likely adding overhead without adding value.
What Client Log offers instead
Client Log is a private, offline client notebook designed for solo professionals:
- One entry per client — name and status
- A chronological notes timeline per client
- Simple statuses: Active, Waiting, Prospect, Archived
- No account, no cloud, no tracking
- One-time purchase — no subscription
- Export at any time (JSON free, HTML/ZIP Pro)
Who it works for
Client Log fits a range of solo practices:
- Freelancers and consultants who want to remember project context without a CRM
- Coaches who track session notes and client progress privately
- Therapists who want a local-first notebook outside of cloud practice management tools
- Artists managing collectors, galleries, and commission conversations
- Photographers tracking shoots, client preferences, and deliveries
Built for people who work alone with roughly 5 to 50 active clients.
In short
If you've looked at CRMs and found them too complex, too expensive, or just not designed for how you work — a private client notebook might be the right alternative.
Related: Why Client Log is not a CRM · Why offline client notes work better · Why a no-cloud client app makes sense