When should you start charging? π°
Jim Morrison
12 replies
Which is more important?
β build traction with engaged users on a free platform..
β prove, early, that a small % of your users will pay..
TL;DR βοΈ... but I'll add some background in a comment if you're curious.
Replies
Jim Morrison@jimbomorrison
NΓΌz
Background: we're launching Charlie
(https://www.producthunt.com/upco...) - our news assistant in two weeks and we've taken a ~novel approach...
β accounts are "burner" first - you don't even need an email..
β registration is free, in any case...
β we haven't built the payments in yet...
β user data is expunged after 14 days...
β dormant "burner" accounts are deleted after 28 days...
The idea is; it makes it super quick & easy to get engaged in the product.
The massive risk to us is that people come, look and leave... but I believe that unless people are really engaging of their own volition - without hooks & tricks - we're just kidding ourselves about our product's efficacy. Is that silly?
@elizabeth_yin1 - I would love to know your thoughts on this - given your experience of nurturing seedling start-ups and having to asses whether to run follow-on funding... π
Share
Many people say charge as early as possible. That makes sense because it's the most important way of validating your startup from the get go. However, the question then becomes what is the right amount to charge.
@absamma Yeah, I totally get what you're saying on the validation front...
I guess ours is not a "single-use" product (like a shop, let's say) - it's a "regular-use" product.
As such, the sheer act of a person getting into the *habit* of using it is massive validation. The way I'm thinking about it is, until we can validate a healthy habit formation, whether or not we can charge for the product is a bit irrelevant, isn't it?
@jimbomorrison I would say yes, especially if you are aiming for a subscription model.
We have learnt it the hard way. The best time to charge is ASAP. Giving the product for free is not getting you users you want, it is just giving you false hopes that product works.
@jimbomorrison Thursday has subscription based pricing. And while we were building that, for a short time it was a single purchase model and that too 'play now, pay later'.
@shahdeepa that's Deepa - that sounds like sage advice. May I ask, is/was your product a single-purchase product or a habit/subscription style product?
Disclaimer: No head for business.
I think traction and engaged users is more useful to get going. Something that shows people coming back, enjoying your platform, finding it indispensable...
Of course, people also have to eat and...keep a roof over their heads so...
I don't think there's any harm in implementing payments early in a freemium model. If users have access to plenty of free content, with a rich enough experience where you don't feel every click almost leads to a paywall.
Cashflow is king in business, and I think it's always worth giving the opportunity to early adopters who want to support a startup. I think it's easy to forget the advocates who actively want to support an early stage business thrive.
@jasonscott yeah, this is a really good point. Having the option is pretty important - https://onesub.io showed that where, probably, most of the paying subscribers are Seedrs investors, local tech-community folks or friends & family...
What worries me from that situation though is it skews our perception of the value we're creating for the other n-million/billion potential customers... while not really actually generating enough revenue to make the tea.