CRM review
Folk
A modern CRM built for relationship-led work rather than sales pipelines. Pulls contacts from Gmail, LinkedIn, and Calendar into one workspace that feels designed rather than enterprise-bolted.
At a glance
- Pricing
- Free for 100 contacts. Standard $19/mo per user, Pro $39/mo, billed annually
- Category
- CRM
- Last reviewed
- Best for
- Service businesses and consultants whose growth depends on relationships rather than a paid acquisition funnel.
Disclosure: Some links on this page are affiliate links. I may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend tools I've used and would happily suggest to a friend.
Benchmarks
How Folk actually scores.
Five axes that matter for a one-person business. Each score is editorial, 1–10, higher is better. A tool that maxes every axis doesn't exist; the shape of the chart is the signal.
- Price
- Value for a one-person budget
- Solo fit
- Built with solo operators in mind
- Learning curve
- How fast a beginner gets useful work done
- Lock-in
- How easy it is to leave (high = easy)
- Support
- Quality and responsiveness of help
Scores are set by the editor after hands-on use and revised as the tool evolves. They're not paid for and don't change based on affiliate partnerships.
The case for
- Designed for the way solos actually work with contacts; no salesforce-y pipeline obsession
- Chrome extension pulls in LinkedIn profiles in one click, with enrichment data
- Email sequences and merge tags work without bolting on another tool
- Multiple workspaces let you separate clients, prospects, network, and partners without one giant mess
The case against
- Free tier is small. Most solos with any real network will outgrow 100 contacts in a month
- Smaller than HubSpot or Pipedrive, so some niche integrations are missing
- Pro tier ($39/mo) needed to get the features that justify the switch from a spreadsheet
Why solos need a modern CRM
Salesforce, HubSpot, and Pipedrive are built for sales teams running pipelines. The product surface assumes you have a manager, a forecast, and a quarter to hit. For a one-person business that sells through relationships rather than a funnel, those tools feel like wearing a suit to a backyard barbecue. You end up using maybe 8 percent of the surface area and feeling vaguely guilty about the rest.
Folk is built for the other case. The unit of work is the contact, not the deal. The interface assumes you are managing a network of people, some of whom turn into clients and some of whom turn into referrers, partners, or friends. For a relationship-led solo business, this framing is correct in a way the legacy CRMs are not.
What it does well
The Chrome extension is the gateway drug. One click on a LinkedIn profile pulls the person into Folk with the title, company, and any enrichment data Folk has. Browsing your own LinkedIn or a prospect's becomes a kind of CRM hygiene that does not feel like CRM hygiene.
Email sequences inside Folk work. You can write a three-email outreach, set the cadence, and Folk sends them from your real Gmail address with personalisation tokens. This is the feature most solos otherwise need a separate tool for, like Lemlist or Instantly. Having it inside the CRM is meaningfully better than the bolted-together version.
The workspace model is the other quiet strength. You can have a workspace for clients, another for active prospects, another for your wider network, and a fourth for partners or affiliates. Each can have its own fields, its own views, its own pipelines if you want them. The mess that a single-workspace CRM accumulates over years does not happen.
Where it falls short
The free tier is too small to be useful for anyone with a real network. 100 contacts gets eaten on the first import. The Standard tier at $19/mo is where Folk starts to feel like a real CRM, but the email sequence features are mostly Pro at $39/mo.
The integration depth is thinner than the legacy CRMs. If you need a niche connector (Salesloft, Outreach, a specific ATS), Folk probably does not have it. For the standard solo stack (Gmail, Calendar, LinkedIn, Notion, Stripe), the integrations are solid.
When to skip it
If you have fewer than 50 contacts you actually maintain and your work is one client at a time, a spreadsheet is fine. If you run a real sales pipeline with multiple deal stages and complex forecasting, HubSpot or Pipedrive will fit better. Folk's sweet spot is the middle: hundreds of relationships, a handful of active clients, and the need to remember who introduced you to whom three years ago.
Verdict
The best fit for a relationship-driven solo business. Worth the Standard tier when your network crosses 100 contacts; upgrade to Pro when you actually start sending email sequences.
Bottom line
Ready to try Folk?
Service businesses and consultants whose growth depends on relationships rather than a paid acquisition funnel.
Disclosure: Some links on this page are affiliate links. I may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend tools I've used and would happily suggest to a friend.
Compare Folk with the alternatives
Side-by-side reviews of the other CRM tools we've covered.
Living document
What did we miss about Folk?
Every review evolves. Spot something wrong, missing, or out of date — drop a note. The most useful ones land in our monthly "Reader corrections" post, with credit if you're up for it.
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