Privyr turns any web or social inquiry into a phone-ready lead in seconds. No manual entry, no desktop required – built for the car, not the office.
ENTRY ANGLES
Mobile-native B2B tools designed from ground up for phone use rather than adapted interfaces · Trimmed feature sets optimized for essential mobile workflows · B2B product categories with poor mobile experiences ripe for mobile-first alternatives
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Mobile-first product design and UX, Feature prioritization and simplification for mobile contexts
Most CRMs are designed for people who sit at desks. Privyr was designed for everyone else.
Setup is quick: connect it to a social media page or a website contact form (there's a WordPress plugin, among others), and every incoming inquiry instantly becomes a lead in the CRM – with a push notification to your phone.
Reacting to a new lead takes seconds. The simplest path is tapping "Quick Reply" and picking from a set of message templates you've written. The template auto-fills the client's name and other details from the inquiry form. You can also write a reply from scratch or edit the prefilled text.
The app has a dedicated section for storing promo materials – photos, brochures – so they can be attached to outgoing messages in a tap. Messages go out via email, SMS, WhatsApp, or a messenger – depending on how the contact prefers to communicate and your own preference.
Lead distribution is flexible: you can set up multiple recipients and define a routing policy – either all recipients get every lead, or leads are distributed round-robin to ensure balanced load across the sales team.
Each lead card supports notes, tags (customer type, group), and manual activity entries – though outgoing messages are logged automatically. One tap from the card lets you call, email, or message the client directly.
After logging a contact, you can immediately set the next follow-up: in X days, on a specific date, or "someday." A dedicated screen keeps your task list current – including overdue follow-ups and today's calls.
The overall design borrows heavily from email clients. The contact list with tags looks like an inbox with folders. New leads look like unread messages. There's even a "+" button – it creates a new contact, not a new email. A search bar sits at the top for fast lookups.
For all its simplicity – or perhaps because of it – the service is used by 35,000 businesses across 70 countries.
Pricing: $18–22/month (depending on monthly vs. annual billing).
The current $6M round is the first substantial raise; there were only pre-seed funds for development and a small accelerator check before this.
Privyr started in Singapore, where its initial market was Southeast Asia – a region where mobile commerce is so advanced that many small businesses and solo operators never bothered with a website. Their entire business runs through WhatsApp or local messaging apps.
But that pattern is going global.
Think about how many independent sellers move product entirely through Instagram DMs or messaging apps, with no website. How many newsletter and content publishers have an audience that never visits their site – because the audience lives in the feed. How much professional communication has shifted from email to messaging apps.
For most people, the phone became the primary internet device years ago.
We all know this intellectually. And yet when most of us sit down to design a new service, we picture a desktop browser. Then we spend weeks trying to squeeze a mobile version out of a product conceived for a large screen, cramming in all the features we were proud of.
Privyr shows what a genuinely mobile-first approach looks like. It's not just a UI adaptation – it's a deliberate decision to cut the full product down to its essential core, removing everything that 80% of mobile users will never touch.
Take a CRM and ruthlessly trim it. What remains is an elegant, minimal product that does one thing extremely well: instant response to an incoming lead.
People serious about sales already know the data: response time is one of the strongest predictors of conversion. Measured in minutes, not hours. Miss that window and you've almost certainly lost the client – they've already replied to the next seller in their search results, or your delayed message gets filed as spam because they've forgotten who you are.
To respond in minutes, you need to handle the client interaction from a phone you already have in your hand. Everything else is secondary.
Anyone who's tried to do real work using a mobile version of a standard B2B product knows the frustration: it's either awkward to use, or the features you actually need aren't there.
Mobile versions of most B2B products are nowhere close to the experience of good B2C mobile apps. Apparently a lot of B2B developers still assume their users are primarily sitting at desks.
If that's true – and for now it largely is – it's actually great news. It means there's a real opportunity to build mobile-native alternatives to popular B2B tools, designed from the ground up for phone use. Not just adapted interfaces, but trimmed feature sets: cut what's not essential, optimize what is.
Privyr is a concrete example of how that works with CRM.
Which other B2B categories are ripe for the same treatment? Which products do you find genuinely painful to use on your phone? What would it look like to rebuild them entirely around mobile interaction?