CRM decision guide
Generic CRM vs mortgage CRM: what loan officers should compare
Generic CRMs can be flexible, but mortgage workflows have specific needs: borrower records, LOS context, partner follow-up, compliance review, database recapture, and loan-stage communication. This guide helps MLOs choose based on workflow fit rather than software category labels.
When a generic CRM can work
A generic CRM can work for a loan officer who has simple pipeline needs, strong admin support, and a clear plan for mortgage-specific fields, automations, reporting, and communication rules. It becomes harder when the team expects mortgage workflows to exist without custom configuration.
The comparison that matters
| Requirement | Generic CRM question | Mortgage CRM question |
|---|---|---|
| Borrower context | Can we model loan-stage data without custom work? | Does borrower context already shape tasks, campaigns, and alerts? |
| Lead response | Can speed-to-lead and channel rules be configured cleanly? | Are mortgage lead routing and stale-lead recovery built into the workflow? |
| Database recapture | Can we segment past borrowers without spreadsheet work? | Can we connect recapture workflows to tools like the recapture calculator? |
| AI | Does AI understand our CRM records and mortgage workflow context? | How are AI limits, permissions, and human review explained in MAIA Data Use? |
| Procurement | Can we answer security, data, and vendor review questions? | Can buyers use security questionnaire and trust pages? |
Fast fit rules
Solo LO
Keep setup weight low
If you are solo, start with the CRM Fit Finder and avoid systems that need heavy admin work before they help.
Small team
Route and report consistently
Teams need lead source visibility, task ownership, referral partner follow-up, and migration planning.
Enterprise
Review controls early
Procurement questions should point to Trust Center and current security review materials.
Map this to your mortgage workflow
Use the article as a decision aid, then review the actual CRM setup, data, campaigns, and team process in a BNTouch walkthrough.