How To Convert A Free User To A Premium User
I was answering the question âWhat are the strategies to convert a free user to a premium user for a SaaS product?â and the answer became an article in itself. At the same time, itâs yet another one of my core fundamentals which I think can impact someone. Below is my answer.
Itâs all about intent.
If your intent is to make as much money as possible as fast as possible (i.e short term), the answer is not for you. Youâll do things that other guys/gurus mention such as âProvide incentive for prospects to sign up for freemium but do not provide too much value so that free version of the product is enough.â â thatâs corny, dull and lacking a long-term vision.
Hereâs something that Iâve noticed within myself. At a point, Iâve realised I love some companies to the point where I feel like theyâre my friend. Theyâve done so much good to me and theyâve been âby my sideâ to a point where I donât have any problem with parting with my money.
Thereâs an emotional connection between me and them. It may sound dramatic but itâs true. When I pay them I do so happily as I support their cause.
Hereâs the answer
Help them grow so you can grow together.
By that I mean the freemium model should offer the client the chance to grow â equality of opportunity â and if it does happen that they grow and become profitable, the SaaS starts charging based on that. In a sense, value-based pricing, or at least as much as it could get with a scalable model.
In other words, open up the doors for a lot of people and then benefit mutually from the winners.
Objection 1
But I donât want to have users on the freemium plan leeching my resources
Now hereâs the catch â Iâd say charge the winners enough so that itâll cover the expenses for those who didnât get it yet (or leeches, because I know that might be going through your mind, especially if youâre a business person).
Charge them enough so that you wonât get mad when you find out about that couple of users that just sucked the benefits of your benevolence and never contributed towards your company.
Objection 2
I canât afford to offer the free plan to so many people
Hereâs another magnificent thing that happens when you open the doors for everyone â word of mouth is on steroids. Youâre on a fast track to word-of-mouth express. Itâs possible you might have heard this comparison before â arguably you can reach 1000 people. And one of these people knows 1000 people. That means youâre a person away from a million. And two people away from a billion.
If your intent is to do good and give chances to everyone to prove themselves, within that network of a billion some of the engagements will include how nice it is that your SaaS is doing them good â whether they pay or not.
Therefore, Iâm pretty confident when I say that the ARR youâll get to in 1â2 years, given the money youâll be burning initially because of the free plan (itâs not the case all the time though) will be significantly bigger than the ARR youâd have by implementing the shitty tactic of
âProvide incentive for prospects to sign up for freemium but do not provide too much value so that free version of the product is enough.â
Give them bloody enough if you can. Because youâll have a customer for life and some of them will become even friends. And then when they win and scale, theyâll be more than happy to pay you. And Iâll state it again: theyâll be happy to pay you amounts of value that will cover for those on a freemium plan.
Why? Simple â you see it everywhere. Millionaires who grew up as orphans donate back to orphanages because without these houses, they couldnât have won. Most of the time itâs more than just THE orphanage they grew up in. Weâre humans and once we accumulate resources, if the intent is good in that person, they want to help the cause. Remember what I wrote above that in my case I wanted to contribute to the companyâs cause?
Objection 3
I really canât afford it because I donât have the money right now â Iâm bootstrapping it, hence no investments
Fair. Charge for what you do, donât offer a freemium plan or do so but only as a trial. But as soon as youâre able to do what I said above, please do it.
The point is this: the more youâre able to give away for free, the more it will come back to you. It wonât make any sense to you unless youâve experienced it yourself but maybe one single reader will simply trust it by heart and she or he will be taken far.
Hereâs another choice of words for sceptics: the more youâre able to give to people, the more youâll be able to ask from them (eventually). Makes sense?
Some practical examples
Iâll give some examples below along with a brief description. Cloud services are more prone to do so given the fact that what they offer is more fungible and is easier to be priced in a âpay as you goâ model.
Dropbox â 2 GB free for anyone. Moreover, get people onboard and weâll give you more. All for free. Help me, help you.
Spotify â free music, no problem. Just ads. If you mind them (i.e. if your time is more valuable than the monthly $10), weâve got you as well.
GitHub â sure, put your beloved code and creations on our platform. Open to anyone. If youâre looking to do more than just a hobby, only then weâll charge you
Firebase â If your database downloads exceed 10 GB/mo, then youâre pretty serious and most probably you can afford to pay for a solution. If not, however, itâs fine, weâll take the risk with you. Letâs see if your idea works, no problem if it doesnât. Weâll swallow it.
Cloudflare (which I absolutely love by the way, even though I donât use their service) â You know what guys, weâll sell you the domains at wholesale price, we wonât get any commission. And if your website is tiny, itâs just a small personal website or a blog that just started, itâs fine. Stay for free. Only later, when you worry about high-performance and security (which is when youâre at a later stage), weâll start charging you.
MailChimp
The bottom line
Opening up the doors for everyone can go this way. One in 10,000 make it through and have a huge impact on the world, which usually is affiliated with resource gathering.
If your intent is to create a win-win environment and give equality of opportunity so that eventually the next Leonardo da Vinci will come from under your rooftop (and he wonât forget that), this is a way to solve the freemium-to-premium user conversion problem.
About Ch Daniel
I run chagency, an experiences design agency that specialises on helping tech CEOs reduce user churn. We believe experiences are not only the reason why users choose not to leave but also what generates word of mouth. Weâre building a credo around this belief.
If Iâve brought you any kind of value, follow me and get in touch here: LinkedIn | Twitter | Email
Iâve also created an infinitely-valuable app for sneaker/fashion enthusiasts called Legit Check that impacted hundreds of thousands over millions of times â check it out at chdaniel.com/app
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Illustration Credits: Marianna Tomaselli, Mike Tomilin