Independent jewelry designers and small custom studios have a specific CRM problem that generic tools don't solve. A goldsmith taking custom commissions needs to track a client's stone, the design sketch, the progress photos, the price quote, the deposit, the production milestones, and the handover — all in one place, often over months. Generic CRMs are built for sales pipelines with defined stages; custom jewelry work has organic stages that don't fit a template.
This article covers the main CRM and studio-management options for independent jewelry businesses, what each one is good for, and where each one falls short. It also covers Jewelry Studio Manager, our own app, with an honest view of who it fits and who it doesn't.
Before comparing tools, it is worth being specific about the job-to-be-done. A jewelry CRM for independent designers and custom studios has to handle:
Long-running projects. A custom engagement ring can take three to six months from first consultation to delivery. A standard CRM "deal" stage model breaks down because there are dozens of micro-milestones.
Design artefacts. Sketches, CAD renders, progress photos, client reference images. Each client accumulates a file history you will reference years later for repairs or remakes.
Mixed business models. Many studios do custom commission work, ready-to-wear sales, and repairs in the same business. The CRM needs to handle all three without forcing them into a commission-only template.
Client-facing portal (optional but increasingly expected). Clients want to see progress on their commission without emailing you every week. A portal where they can check updates and approve milestones saves significant back-and-forth.
Valuation and appraisal history. For insurance and resale, the history of what you sold and its appraised value is client-facing data that needs to be retrievable years later.
Shopify integration. If your online presence lives on Shopify, the CRM needs to pull customer and order data automatically, not require manual double-entry.
The default answer for any small business. Free tier exists; paid tiers scale up fast.
What it gets right. Mature, well-supported, integrates with almost everything. Email tracking is excellent. Reporting is strong once configured.
Where it falls short for jewelry. It was built for SaaS sales pipelines and has been bolted onto e-commerce. Everything is structured around a linear pipeline with defined stages. Custom jewelry work is not linear — a client says "actually let's go with sapphire instead of emerald" and your "Stone Selection" stage restarts. The portal is client-facing but generic, not jewelry-specific. No support for design artefacts. No appraisal/valuation tracking. Shopify integration exists but requires paid tiers and fiddly mapping. Practically, most independent designers find themselves running a spreadsheet alongside HubSpot because HubSpot doesn't fit the shape of the work.
A handful of boutique tools (GoAntiquing, ArtisansSoft, and a few niche names) target crafts studios, antique dealers, and artists. Some jewelry designers use them.
What they get right. They understand creative work. They usually have good support for photographs, provenance, and long-running projects. Pricing tends to be reasonable.
Where they fall short. Most are built for a primarily-offline studio with occasional e-commerce tacked on. If your business is meaningfully Shopify-based, the integration is either weak or absent. Customer data lives in the studio tool separately from Shopify, which creates two databases to keep in sync. They also tend to be desktop-first, which is frustrating for designers working from a phone at a bench.
Many solo jewelers run on a duct-taped combination. Airtable for the client list, Notion for project notes, Dropbox for design files, Google Sheets for financials.
What it gets right. Maximum flexibility. Costs almost nothing. You can shape it to exactly how you work.
Where it falls short. Nothing talks to anything else. You spend ten minutes a day keeping four tools in sync. There is no client portal unless you build one. Looking up "what did I sell this customer three years ago" requires searching three different databases. As the business grows, the maintenance cost scales linearly.
DIY is fine for the first year. By year three, most designers have either hired help or migrated to a purpose-built tool because the search time alone was costing them a day a week.
Our own tool, built specifically for this job. Full disclosure: we make it, so take this section with appropriate scepticism.
What it gets right (honestly). Built around the specific shape of custom commission work. Projects have organic milestones rather than rigid stages. Every client record holds their design sketches, CAD files, progress photos, quotes, deposits, and delivered appraisals in one place. The client portal is jewelry-specific — clients see their commission progress, approve milestones, and download their valuation certificates when ready. Shopify integration is native: customer records pull in automatically from your Shopify store so you have one database for everything.
Where it falls short. If you don't run on Shopify, most of the integration value disappears. If you are a pure ready-to-wear retail jeweler with no custom commission work, a lot of the project-tracking features are overkill. If you are running a multi-location large chain (more than three shops, more than twenty staff), JSM will work but something like Jewelshops or Blueglove might fit that shape better.
JSM is built for the one-to-ten-person custom studio, on Shopify, doing a mix of commission, retail, and repair work. That's the specific niche.
| Feature | HubSpot | Studio Tools | DIY Stack | Jewelry Studio Manager |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Built for jewelry | No | Partially | You build it | Yes |
| Shopify integration | Paid tier, fiddly | Weak or absent | Manual | Native |
| Client portal | Generic | Usually absent | You build it | Jewelry-specific |
| Design artefact storage | Basic attachments | Good | Whatever you use | Yes, per-project |
| Valuation / appraisal history | No | Sometimes | Spreadsheet | Yes, exportable |
| Long-running projects | Awkward | Yes | Yes (manual) | Yes, organic milestones |
| Mobile-first | App exists | Rarely | Depends | Yes |
| Pricing (starter) | Free (limited) | $20-50/mo | $10-30/mo total | From $29/mo |
If you are generalist / service business that happens to also sell jewelry: HubSpot. The generic features will serve you well; the jewelry-specific gaps will be real but manageable.
If you are a traditional studio with mostly offline sales: one of the studio-management tools, probably whichever one has the stronger photography and provenance features for your sub-niche.
If you are starting out and revenue is low: DIY stack. Save the cash. Re-evaluate once you are losing a day a week to the stack.
If you run an independent custom studio on Shopify doing commission + retail + repair: try JSM. That is exactly the shape it was built for. We offer a free trial so you can judge the fit without commitment.
Being explicit, because overselling a niche tool is how you end up with angry customers:
Jewelry Studio Manager has a free trial. No credit card required to start. If it fits, great. If it doesn't, we would genuinely rather you use the right tool than the wrong one.
Related reading: Best Jewelry CRM Software in 2026 · Best Shopify Apps for Jewelry Stores in 2026 · Jewelry Valuation Software: What to Look For · How to Set Up a Repair Ticket System for Your Jewelry Shop · JMS Dev Lab — jewellery software.
We build focused software for businesses that off-the-shelf tools don't fit. Get a free, no-pitch review — if buying an app or doing nothing is the right call, we'll say so.