How to choose
your subscription management solution
- Identify the capabilities your business needs
- Gain an in-depth understanding of your provider options
- Receive a personalized subscription profile tailored to you
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What is subscription management?
Subscription management is the process of handling your customers’ subscriptions (including ways you allow them to handle their own subscriptions) to ensure they have a positive experience with your recurring products or services. These software solutions are more than home-grown fixes. They’re a curated assortment of tools and solutions that intertwine automated and manual actions, ultimately empowering merchants to build long-term relationships with their subscribers.
Choosing the right provider for your store all depends on your stage of business growth, type of product offerings, and the preferences of your unique customer base—and what works best for your competitors may not work for your brand.
Ready to identify your perfect solution? Let’s get started.
Which of these options best describes your store and current goals?
It looks like you’re ready to build out your tech stack for launching subscriptions. Let’s dive in!
Are you actually experienced with subscriptions? Select another option above.
It looks like you’re ready to optimize your tech stack and take your subscriptions to the next level. Let’s dive in!
Not currently selling subscriptions, but looking to get started? Select another option above.
Please select an option above to move forward.
1. Business Stage
Why subscription management?
Build & optimize a recurring revenue stream
A subscription management solution is an invaluable way to launch your recurring offerings for the first time. Whether you’re new to the world of ecommerce, expanding rapidly, or mature and looking to scale your operations, choosing the right solution better equips you to meet your goals while increasing your retention and customer lifetime value (LTV).
On average, merchants who offer subscriptions more than double their LTV. For certain verticals, this number is closer to 4–6x LTV.
Increase LTV with subscriptions
$239.44
For this exercise, we analyzed data from 15,000 Recharge brands. We calculate LTV using the following formula:
Subscriptions only, multiply by 1.7
Subscriptions + One time purchases, multiply by 2.3
What can the right subscription management solution do for your business?
Consolidate multiple essential business functions around recurring orders, saving you time and money on the support end
Launch subscriptions more quickly and easily—whether you choose an out-of-the-box-only or API-driven solution
Empower your customers to make changes to their subscriptions, such as swaps, skips, and add-ons
Focus on acquiring new customers and building a loyal subscriber base, setting your brand up for higher retention and customer LTV
Improve subscriber loyalty
As a current subscription merchant, you’re already tapped into the power of recurring revenue. But by optimizing your subscriptions, you can improve your subscriber loyalty, building long-term customer relationships that can take your business to the next level. It might be time to reassess your needs so both your business and customers can get the most out of your subscriptions.
Acquiring a new customer can cost five to ten times more than retaining an existing customer—but optimized subscriptions are uniquely primed for increasing brand loyalty.
What can the right subscription management solution do for your business?
- Increase AOV and LTV
- Reduce churn
- Increase brand awareness
- Gain more detailed customer insights through robust data capabilities
- Save time with automated workflows
- Empower your customers to manage their own subscriptions
How can your stage of growth impact your tech stack?
Step 1Select the business stage that best fits your store.
Newly started
Recently-launched stores often focus on a fast rollout—one they can set up as independently as possible—so they can start acquiring new customers and building up their recurring revenue stream.
Rapidly growing
Already-established stores typically focus on expanding their existing customer base and getting more out of their current customers through churn reduction, LTV growth, and engagement efforts.
Mature
Businesses who are sustaining growth at scale often share the priorities of rapidly growing stores, but with an added focus on business optimization. Automation, workflows, and scalability are priorities, as are more advanced analytics functions that allow greater insight into business health.
2. Elements
Elements of a subscription management solution
There are five main elements of subscription management solutions. Let’s dive into each of these elements to help identify your priorities.
Step 2Star the elements most important to your business.
Transactional SMS is another critical shopper tool that empowers customers to update and manage their orders straight from their mobile device, giving them ultimate flexibility and control.
Other shopper tools include empowering customers to add one-time products to their subscriptions (cross-selling) or skip, swap, or reschedule a delivery. Additional communication features, such as the ability to enable email notifications, also fall under this umbrella.
Other analytics tools include an overview of your customer base (including insights into your customer retention and breakdowns by customer cohorts). They can involve a performance tracking of your product SKUs and variants to facilitate more accurate and seamless inventory management. They may also feature industry benchmarks that help you stack up your business performance against your competitors.
Customer actions tracking tools, which allow you to see how your customers are interacting with their subscriptions, are another important type of analytics tool. Finally, media attributions capabilities provide a breakdown of your customer engagement across different channels so you can more effectively target your efforts.
Create seamless customer experiences
When chosen correctly, a subscription management solution can help your business anticipate and meet your customers’ needs more effectively than ever.
Next, we’ll cover the tech stack needs of different types of subscription merchants.
3. Solutions
Types of subscription management solutions
Each type of subscription management solution has its own unique focus, specialty, and potential risks.
Since you’re currently selling subscriptions online, you may already have one or more ecommerce solution providers in place for certain needs, like email marketing, shipping, or customer service. Based on those providers, you’ll need to choose a new subscription management solution that fits into that larger ecosystem.
Step 3Tell us a bit more about your store—we'll then recommend solution types for your business.
- What best describes the timeline and complexity of your launch?
- Which products will you offer on subscription?
- Which products will you offer on subscription?
- What best describes your business resources for launching subscriptions?
- What best describes your business resources for launching subscriptions?
- What is your level of experience with the ecommerce industry?
- What is your level of experience with the ecommerce industry?
Best for:
May not be fit for:
What they do well:
- Allow merchants to set up recurring billing relatively quickly and easily
- Preferred for very small businesses, especially those who are launching subscriptions for the first time
- Position themselves as “better” and “faster” than the old-school players; relatively newer to the market
Where they struggle:
- Often not built or tested at scale; may struggle to support businesses looking for a scalable solution
- Can lack development tools and support documentation, limiting development and requiring more manual upkeep
- Excel at core features, but can be outpaced by competitors in terms of innovation
- New-school, “changing the game” mentality may carry platform risk
Best for:
May not be fit for:
What they do well:
- Highly-customized, “build-your-own” subscriptions option
- Broad suite of APIs can enable custom subscription use cases (when paired with a strong development team)
- A development team can also build strong integrations with other core ecommerce features
Where they struggle:
- High cost of overhead and maintenance for internal development, operations, and customer experience
- Typically a better fit for larger, more established businesses with a generous budget
- May cause merchants to incur additional costs as their products evolve and their business scales
- Cannot independently deploy specialized use cases; often, merchants will have to rely on external agencies for deployment
- Requires internal expertise with ecommerce or a reliable development partner who can provide this
Best for:
May not be fit for:
What they do well:
- Highly flexible and customizable
- Similar to API-only solutions, but built with the help of an agency or development partner who is experienced with ecommerce
- Typically offer a white-glove support structure—attractive for those with complicated builds
Where they struggle:
- High upfront costs and maintenance fees
- Long development timeline
- Businesses may risk having a one-off build that requires a specialized developer for upkeep
- Endless customization can limit pace of innovation on their core products and pose difficulties with scaling
- Changes are made strictly via additional project engagements, which can further increase cost and limit pacing
Best for:
May not be fit for:
What they do well:
- Built specifically for the digital products and core functions of software as a service (SaaS) businesses
- Tend to be more established and mature than their competitors
- Empower businesses to integrate into a wide range of payment processors, making payment options highly accessible
Where they struggle:
- Lack the product capabilities for businesses specializing in physical products, such as shipping, tax, and related logistics capabilities
- Not on the cutting-edge of research and development in the ecommerce space
Best for:
May not be fit for:
What they do well:
- Holistic solutions, like Recharge, balance an out-of-the-box approach with an API-first foundation
- Popular with subscription box businesses—enable merchants to launch physical product subscriptions quickly; power integrations with a variety of other systems
- Offer out-of-the-box integrations with shipping, taxes, and inventory management systems
- Can easily handle recurring purchases, one-time purchases, and mixed carts with both purchase types
- Allow businesses to offer flexible checkout and delivery choices
- Easily customizable for businesses as they scale; able to maintain pace with fast-growing merchants
- APIs can be built with specialized use cases in mind, empowering development teams to be more creative
Where they struggle:
- Some players may be outpaced in terms of support for niche use cases or new platform adoption
- Require innovation at an API level while maintaining overall product stability
- Require mature development teams, documentation, and processes to consistently deliver value
Recommended solutions
Based on your answers above
Other solution types
Other solution types on the market
Solution types
Solution types on the market—explore and star solutions that match your needs
We also recommend asking the following questions:
- How does this solution fit into my overall tech stack?
- Does implementing a solution fit in with my future plans and product direction?
- If there are reviews of this solution, are they positive? Has this solution passed the requirements of my ecommerce platform?
- How many subscribers do I want to gain, and by when?
4. Integrations
Integration with ecommerce tools
Because subscription management solutions typically don’t cover every unique need of an ecommerce business, brands often need to integrate with more specialized ecommerce tools—like a marketing platform, or cross-sell and upsell applications—to complete their tech stack and create seamless user experiences.
Now, let’s break down the main types of ecommerce tools so you can identify the key players for your business.
Step 4Star the integration categories most important to your business.
Your personalized profile is here!
Ready to determine the right provider for your store? Use the personalized profile below to keep your priorities top of mind as you debrief with your internal stakeholders or attend a sales call.
A store
Meeting your goals while growing your subscriber base and increasing LTV.
Improving subscriber loyalty, reducing churn, and building long-term customer relationships.
A solution for that allows for , seamless integrations, and room to grow.
A solution for that allows for seamless integrations and room to grow.
Your subscription profile
A store
Meeting your goals while growing your subscriber base and increasing LTV.
Improving subscriber loyalty, reducing churn, and building long-term customer relationships.
A solution for that allows for , seamless integrations, and room to grow.
A solution for that allows for seamless integrations and room to grow.
Glossary of terms
Access subscriptions
Access subscriptions, which include memberships, grant exclusive access to discounts, early releases, content, and more (e.g. a subscription streaming service)
AOV
Average order value; a key metric representing the average amount of money a customer spends in a single transaction with a merchant
Cross-selling
A marketing and sales tactic where customers are shown related products or services they can add on to their original purchase
Curation subscriptions
Curation subscriptions provide collections of products—typically chosen by the merchant, but at times selected by customers—that are organized around a certain theme (e.g. a monthly beauty subscription box)
Customer churn
When customers stop using a business’s products or services over a given period of time
Customer portal
A secure hub that gives your customers easy access to all relevant information about their business with you
LTV
Lifetime value; a key metric representing the profit a single customer brings in throughout their customer lifetime with a merchant
Merchant portal
An internal hub only viewable to you as a merchant that allows you to manage multiple aspects of your store, including analytics, product details, discounts, and more
Replenishment subscriptions
Replenishment subscriptions, also referred to as subscribe-and-save offerings, provide the same consumable products in each delivery (e.g. shipments of essential household cleaners)
SEO
Search engine optimization; the process of improving key areas of your web content in order to achieve higher ranking on search engines
Subscription management
The process of handling all aspects of your customers’ subscriptions, including the ways you empower them to manage their own subscriptions
Transactional SMS
A business strategy where merchants open up a line of communication with their customers via text message about their purchases
Upselling
A marketing and sales tactic where customers are shown more premium, higher-priced products or services they can buy instead of their original intended purchase
Erase progress?
This will clear your current selections. Are you sure?