Last month I opened a client's HubSpot and found 400 custom properties. I asked the sales team which ones they used.
They named 12.
Four hundred fields of data, meticulously created over 3 years. Twelve that anyone actually touched. The rest? Digital ghosts haunting every form, every record, every report in their portal.
This $5M manufacturing company had spent $40K in cumulative HubSpot license fees. They had 12 custom pipelines. CRM adoption was sitting at 4%. The VP of Sales had a name for it: "the HubSpot hellscape."
Their sales team had given up entirely. They tracked deals in a shared Google Sheet because HubSpot was — and I quote — "too complicated to bother with." They were three weeks away from cancelling their subscription and going back to spreadsheets full time.
Instead, we deleted 300 properties. And within 8 weeks, their revenue was up 34%.
Here's exactly how — and why deletion might be the most profitable thing you do to your CRM this year.
Here's a pattern I see in virtually every HubSpot instance we audit: somebody set it up with good intentions. They created properties for everything they might want to track. Then someone else added more. Then a marketing agency added their fields. Then a sales manager wanted "just one more dropdown."
Nobody ever deletes anything.
Over 12-24 months, your CRM becomes a property graveyard. Fields nobody fills in. Dropdowns nobody selects. Required fields people put garbage data into just to move past them.
The maths is brutal:
It's not HubSpot that doesn't work. It's the 388 properties nobody asked for that don't work.
Your CRM is a mirror. If it looks messy, that's your process staring back at you.
Most people think CRM bloat is an annoyance. It's actually a revenue problem.
Here's what our manufacturing client's bloat was actually costing them:
1. Lost deals from non-adoption ($180K/year estimated)
When only 4% of your sales team uses the CRM, you have no pipeline visibility. Deals fall through cracks. Follow-ups don't happen. The VP of Sales was flying blind on a $5M business.
2. Wasted time on data entry ($65K/year in labour)
The reps who DID use HubSpot spent 15 minutes per deal on data entry. With 200+ deals per quarter, that's 50 hours per quarter — per rep — typing into fields nobody read.
3. Bad decisions from bad data ($???)
The CEO had dashboards. They looked professional. The numbers were wrong by 30%+ because half the data feeding them was stale, incomplete, or made up. How do you calculate the cost of strategic decisions made on fiction?
When I show founders these numbers, the conversation shifts fast. CRM cleanup stops being a "nice to have" and starts being an emergency.
This is the framework we use for every CRM cleanup. I call it the 70/30 Delete™ because in our experience, roughly 70% of what's in any CRM is waste. The 30% that remains does more than the 100% ever did.
Here's the process:
Pull a full list of every custom property in HubSpot. For each one, answer three questions:
For the properties you keep:
With 70% of the noise gone, rebuild your deal creation form (minimum viable fields only), contact and company views (show what matters, hide the rest), and board views (clean pipeline with clear stages).
The whole process takes 2-3 days for a portal this size. The ROI starts on day one.
For our manufacturing client, here's how the 70/30 Delete played out:
Before: 400 custom properties
After: 97 custom properties
What we kept (97 properties): Core contact fields (name, email, phone, company, source), deal fields directly tied to revenue (amount, close date, stage, owner, product line), properties used in active workflows (lead score, lifecycle stage, last activity date), and properties feeding the CEO's 3 key reports.
What we archived (203 properties): "Nice to have" demographic data nobody queried, historical fields from a previous marketing agency's campaigns, duplicate fields (they had 3 different "Industry" properties), and fields from discontinued integrations.
What we deleted (100 properties): Properties with 0% fill rate, test fields ("Test_field_1", "Mick's test", "DELETE ME"), properties created by a Zapier integration they'd disconnected 18 months ago, and fields that duplicated HubSpot's built-in properties.
Pipelines: 12 → 2 (one for new business, one for existing client expansion)
Workflows: Deleted 14 broken workflows, built 5 new ones that actually ran
Dashboard: Scrapped everything, built 1 dashboard with 6 reports the CEO actually reviewed weekly
I won't pretend this was smooth. The day after the cleanup, I got a call from the ops manager.
"Where's the Industry Classification field?"
"Archived. It had a 3% fill rate."
"But we might need that for a report someday."
"When you need it, we'll bring it back in 5 minutes. Right now it's adding 2 clicks to every contact record for data nobody enters."
The sales team was nervous too. Change always triggers resistance. But here's what happened:
Day 1: Complaints about missing fields. "Where did everything go?"
Day 2: Grudging acknowledgment that deal creation was faster
Day 3: Silence. The good kind. People were just… using HubSpot.
Day 10: The first rep told the VP of Sales: "I actually don't mind updating deals anymore."
That's when I knew the cleanup had worked. CRM adoption isn't a training problem. It's a friction problem. Remove the friction, and people adopt naturally.
Simplicity scales. Complexity dies.
Here's what happened over 8 weeks:
And the revenue? Revenue didn't go up because we did something clever in HubSpot. Revenue went up because the sales team could finally see their pipeline. With 91% adoption, the VP of Sales had real-time visibility for the first time in 3 years.
Three specific changes drove the 34% revenue increase:
The CRM didn't make the revenue. The CRM made the revenue visible — and the team did the rest.
You don't need to hire us to start. Here's a quick audit you can run right now:
Step 1 (5 minutes): Go to Settings → Properties in HubSpot. Filter by "Custom properties." Note the total count.
Step 2 (5 minutes): Sort by "% of records with a value." Flag every property under 20% fill rate.
Step 3 (5 minutes): For your flagged properties, ask: "Does this field appear in any active workflow, report, or dashboard?" If no — it's a candidate for archive.
Your benchmark:
Data before dashboards. Simplicity scales. Complexity dies.
If your HubSpot feels like a hellscape, it's not the tool — it's the 300 properties nobody asked for. Start deleting. You'll be surprised what grows back.
Want us to run this audit for you? We do a free 15-minute CRM health check — no pitch, just an honest look at your portal.