Selling Subscriptions: The Complete Guide to Launching and Managing Memberships

Camille Richon14 min read

Why the subscription model dominates

The subscription model is no longer reserved for SaaS giants. Subscription businesses grew 3.4x faster than the S&P 500 over 12 years, with a CAGR of 16.5% vs 4.8% (Zuora SEI 2025). The global subscription e-commerce market reaches $536.72 billion in 2025.

For independents and SMBs, subscriptions offer three decisive advantages:

  • Predictable revenue: you know how much you'll collect each month
  • Higher customer lifetime value (LTV): a subscriber at €30/month for 18 months = €540 vs a one-off sale at €100
  • Stable cash flow: recurring revenue makes investment and growth easier

In 2024, 68% of consumers subscribed to a new subscription service (Zuora). Demand is there. This guide shows you how to capitalise on it.

Subscription models that work

Membership

Access to a gated space: community, exclusive content, premium resources. Ideal for coaches, trainers, content creators. See our profession-specific guide for independents.

SaaS / Online software

Access to a tool or platform. Monthly or annual billing. The most mature recurring model.

Box / Recurring physical product

Regular delivery of products. The classic e-commerce subscription model.

Premium content (newsletter, courses)

Access to exclusive content in exchange for a subscription. 54% of creators offer paid memberships (Uscreen 2025), and subscriptions are the fastest-growing segment of the creator economy.

Recurring service

Monthly coaching, consulting retainers, maintenance, support. Tools like PayFacile let you bill these services automatically without manual management.

How to price your subscription

Pricing is the most powerful lever in your subscription business. Here are strategies that work:

Value-based anchoring

Don't start from cost, start from perceived value. If your coaching helps a client earn €5,000/month more, a €200/month subscription is a profitable investment, not an expense.

Pricing tiers

Companies with 4+ revenue models see ARPA grow 4.5% faster (Zuora 2025). Offer 2-4 levels:

  • Free / Freemium: acquisition, proof of value
  • Essential: core features, accessible entry price
  • Pro / Premium: advanced features, your most profitable tier
  • VIP / Enterprise: custom, highest price

Annual vs monthly

Offer both. Annual provides better cash flow and lower churn. Typically offer 2 months free on annual to incentivise the switch. The top cancellation reason remains price increases (47%, Zuora) — be transparent and gradual with your increases.

Reducing churn: the key to recurring growth

Subscription growth depends as much on retention as acquisition. Churn splits into two categories:

Voluntary churn (customer decides to leave)

  • Cause #1: insufficient perceived value
  • Cause #2: price increases (47% of cancellations, Zuora)
  • Solution: deliver consistent value, engage through community, offer pauses instead of cancellations

Involuntary churn (payment failure)

  • Represents up to 53% of total churn (Recurly)
  • Payment failures expected to cost businesses $129 billion in 2025
  • Solution: SEPA Direct Debit (2.9% failure vs 10-15% card), automatic dunning, smart retries

Well-configured dunning recovers 50-80% of failed payments (ProsperStack). Recovered subscribers stay for an average of 7 more months (Stripe). See our detailed article on reducing payment failures.

Essential metrics to track

Running a subscription business requires tracking the right metrics:

MRR (Monthly Recurring Revenue)

Your monthly recurring revenue. The #1 metric. Break it down into: new MRR (acquisitions), expansion MRR (upgrades), churn MRR (losses).

Churn rate

Percentage of subscribers lost per month. The B2B SaaS benchmark is about 3.5% annual (2.6% voluntary + 0.8% involuntary). For B2C subscriptions, aim below 5% monthly.

LTV (Lifetime Value)

Average revenue generated by a subscriber over their lifetime. LTV = ARPA / churn rate. If your ARPA is €50 and your churn is 5%, your LTV is €1,000.

CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost)

Cost of acquiring a new subscriber. The golden rule: LTV > 3x CAC. If your LTV is €1,000, don't spend more than €333 to acquire a customer.

Net Revenue Retention (NRR)

If above 100%, your existing base generates more revenue than it loses — a sign of a healthy model.

Tools for managing your subscriptions

You don't need a complex tech stack to sell subscriptions. Here are the main options:

All-in-one solutions (recommended for independents)

PayFacile lets you create subscription products, generate checkout pages, manage customers and track metrics — without code. The platform relies on Stripe for card payments and GoCardless for SEPA Direct Debit.

Specialised billing tools

Stripe Billing, Chargebee, Recurly — for businesses needing advanced customisation but willing to invest in development.

E-commerce plugins

WooCommerce Subscriptions, Shopify — for existing e-commerce stores adding recurring billing. Compare: PayFacile vs Systeme.io.

The choosing criterion: which solution lets you launch fastest, with the least technical friction, while accepting both card AND SEPA?

Launch your first subscription: checklist

  1. Define your offer: what does the subscriber receive each month? Content, access, service, product?
  2. Set your pricing: start with 2 tiers (essential + premium). Add a free tier if you need acquisition volume
  3. Choose your payment methods: card + SEPA to minimise involuntary churn. See our online payments guide
  4. Create your checkout page: logo, clear description, trust badges. See creating a professional payment page
  5. Configure dunning: automatic retry + follow-up email for payment failures
  6. Launch small: start with your existing audience (newsletter, social media, current clients)
  7. Measure and iterate: track MRR, churn, LTV. Adjust pricing and offer based on data

With PayFacile, steps 3-5 take less than 30 minutes. The hardest part isn't the technology — it's defining an offer your customers want to pay for month after month.

See how PayFacile can help

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the difference between a subscription and a membership?
A subscription is a recurring billing model for a product or service. A membership is a type of subscription that gives access to a community, space or exclusive content. All memberships are subscriptions, but not all subscriptions are memberships.
What is an acceptable churn rate for subscriptions?
For B2B SaaS, the annual benchmark is about 3.5% (Recurly 2025). For B2C subscriptions, monthly churn below 5% is considered good. The key is distinguishing voluntary churn (customer leaves) from involuntary churn (payment failure), as the solutions are different.
How can I reduce involuntary churn?
Three levers: offer SEPA Direct Debit (2.9% failure vs 10-15% for cards), set up automatic dunning (recovers 50-80% of failures), and use smart retries. Recovered subscribers stay for 7 more months on average.
Should I offer a free trial?
It depends on your model. Free trials work well when value is demonstrated through usage (software, platform). For services (coaching, consulting), a discounted discovery session is often more effective than a free trial.
How many pricing tiers should I offer?
Two to four tiers is the sweet spot. Companies with 4+ revenue models see ARPA grow 4.5% faster (Zuora 2025). Beyond 4, complexity increases the risk of decision paralysis for prospects.

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