ChatGPT Hack: Optimize WooCommerce for Google Shopping
- •
- 6 min read
Picture your agency’s next quarterly report. Revenue is good. Not great, just good.
You’re chasing new projects, keeping old clients happy, wrangling freelancers. Then you see this article: companies are spending more on SaaS than ever. But! Only a small percentage of that SaaS spend actually goes to tech services.
The rest? Wide open opportunity. Recurring revenue is sitting there while your competitors build subscription models and lock in monthly income streams.
Are you still doing one-off projects while your competitors are spending and tweeting their MRR numbers? Let’s fix that.
“Consumers are spending more on subscriptions year over year. But keeping them engaged with a good subscription management experience is no small feat.”
Tearsheet
Year over year, demand for subscription-based services keeps climbing. And it’s not just consumer streaming or newsletters.
According to Tearsheet’s 2024 analysis, consumers are spending more on subscriptions every year. We get it — keeping clients engaged with a good subscription management experience is the hard part. It’s where most agencies fail – but you won’t, right?
The build-handover-goodbye cycle is dead. Clients don’t want to hire you once and hope for the best. They want continuous value, monthly touchpoints, and the ability to scale services up or down.
B2B clients want ongoing relationships, not transactional projects. They want partners who stick around, not agencies that disappear after launch.
Agencies winning right now have already made this shift.
“Consumers’ preference for monthly payments [63%] over annual payments has wider implications for pricing and, ultimately, underscores the imperative to offer flexible payment schedules as part of a wider seamless UX agenda.”
11fs.com
Honestly, most of your potential clients would rather spread payments monthly than write one massive check upfront. What are you waiting for?
Agencies offering flexible subscription plans — maintenance, updates, content creation, training, support — are seeing steadier income and deeper client relationships.
Let’s say you switch from project-based to subscription model in 2026. First quarter, you have 12 active projects. Twelve months later? Same 12 clients, but now on monthly retainers generating more revenue with better margins. (If you do this within a niche, you’re basically following Josh Nelson’s 7 Figure Agency Model. Have you read the book?)
Bottom line: Clients get flexibility. You get predictable revenue. Nobody’s scrambling at month-end wondering if proposals will close.
“Gen Z and millennials have more subscriptions than older age groups (70% for those 18–44, 63% for those 45–64 and 55% for 65+) [and] prefer to self-serve digitally…”
visa.co.uk
Gen Z and millennial decision-makers are digital natives. They don’t want to schedule calls to change their subscription tier or access support docs.
They want to log in, make changes, and move on with their day.
Borrow from SaaS playbooks: Transparent pricing. Real-time usage stats. Self-service everything that doesn’t require an email or a meeting.
We’ve watched agencies lose clients not because of service quality, but because managing the relationship felt like work. Client had to email to check billing. Email to request an invoice. Email to ask about upgrading.
Three emails just to spend more money with you? That client’s gone at their next renewal.
“The ability to pause and receive loyalty rewards are more likely to keep people subscribed. However, only half of businesses offer pause functionality [something 39% of consumers want].”
circuly
Here’s where a lot of agencies catastrophically drop the ball.
Nearly 40% of customers want the ability to pause subscriptions temporarily. Most service providers don’t offer it. Why not? Amazon offers it for your kitty litter subscription.
So what happens? Client has a slow quarter. Budget gets tight. They can’t pause, so they cancel completely. Now you’ve lost a relationship instead of preserving it for three months.
Are you looking for a way to reduce churn? Offering a pause reduces churn. That could be the difference between sustainable growth and constant client replacement. You’re welcome!
Loyalty rewards work the same way. Thank long-term clients with periodic bonuses, exclusive resources, early access to new services, or surprise audit reports.
Most agencies do nothing to reward loyalty. The bar is embarrassingly low here.
“Three in five (61%) consumers use the same card for all their subscriptions.”
Financial Times
Your invoice should never be the reason a client cancels.
Embrace every major payment method: Apple Pay, Google Pay, CashApp, credit/debit cards, ACH transfers, traditional invoicing, cash in a bag. Make it stupidly-easy to pay you.
Most WordPress membership plugins and SaaS billing tools handle this seamlessly now. You get direct payment control without platforms taking a cut.
Businesses offering multiple payment methods see higher conversion rates than those accepting only credit cards and invoices. It’s not rocket science.
So, is this you? A client tries to sign up for your monthly plan. You only accept credit cards. Their company only does ACH transfers for recurring payments. They go with a competitor who accepts both.
You lost recurring revenue over the payment method? Don’t let that be your story.
“Consumers expect enhanced personalization, so businesses should leverage this to drive loyalty.”
Financial Times
Every login, renewal, support ticket, and feature request tells a story about what clients value and where they’re headed.
Most agencies collect this data and do absolutely nothing with it.
Set up analytics triggers: when engagement drops below threshold, when usage patterns change, when invoices go unpaid longer than usual.
That’s the difference between generic outreach and data-driven relationship building.
Turn “We haven’t heard from you in a while” into “Based on your projects, here’s a service addition that would save you 10 hours monthly.”
“The ability to convert customers not only initially, but repeatedly, can help drive up the lifetime value of that customer and effectively increase the return on that customer acquisition cost.”
PayPal
Don’t just watch your inactive user list grow and shrug.
Inactive subscribers just need a smart nudge to re-engage, upgrade, or start a new project cycle.
The cost of sending these emails? Basically zero. The potential return? Significant.
Automated re-engagement emails for clients inactive 60+ days means money from clients who were paying you nothing.
Start by offering it as an option, not forcing a switch. After project completion, present a maintenance subscription: “We can do one-off updates when needed, or you can get monthly maintenance, priority support, and performance monitoring for $X/month.”
Most clients choose predictability over pay-per-incident. For long-term clients, show the math: “You spent $X on ad-hoc requests last year. A subscription would’ve been $Y and included more.” Data converts skeptics.
Here’s a question your clients are asking: How much should I pay someone to maintain my website?
Start with the services clients already request repeatedly: updates, maintenance, content, performance monitoring, support. Add tiers: Basic (maintenance + support), Pro (+ monthly content), Enterprise (+ strategy calls + priority).
Don’t overcomplicate. Three tiers maximum. Most will pick the middle tier. Make downgrading and upgrading frictionless. If clients feel locked in, they cancel entirely rather than downgrade.
Calculate your average monthly revenue per client over 12 months from project work. Your subscription pricing should match or exceed that, with better margins since work is predictable.
Don’t discount subscriptions to make them “affordable” — position them as premium ongoing partnerships.
If your project rate is $150/hour and you typically work 10 hours monthly per client, start subscription pricing at $1,800-2,500/month depending on services included. Track time initially, adjust as needed.
Build minimum commitments strategically. Month-to-month works for low-touch services. For custom work requiring onboarding, use 3-6 month minimums with month-to-month afterward. Be transparent about why: “The first 90 days include strategy, setup, and optimization; after that, you’re month-to-month.”
Clients understand and appreciate honesty. Also track why clients cancel. If it’s price, your targeting is off. If it’s value perception, your communication needs work. If it’s results, your service needs improvement. Data tells you which problem to fix.
The biggest mistake? Treating subscriptions like projects with monthly billing.
Clients don’t renew because you sent an invoice. They renew because they’re getting ongoing value they can see and measure.
They go silent between invoices.
They don’t track engagement.
They make changes hard.
They offer no flexibility.
Good subscription models prioritize client control, transparent value delivery, and frictionless management over locking clients into rigid contracts.
The subscription economy is already here. Companies are spending more on SaaS and subscription services every year.
If your agency still operates on “one and done” project cycles, you’re leaving recurring revenue on the table while competitors build sustainable monthly income – and go on vacation every year.
The recurring revenue you want is already being spent. Just not with you – yet.
Stop chasing one-off projects. Start building monthly relationships.
Thriving agencies figured it out: 12 months of $2,000 beats one project at $15,000 every time. Better margins, better relationships, better business.
Agencies building subscription revenue aren’t doing anything magical. They’re just systematically converting transactional relationships into ongoing partnerships.
Start this week. Pick three current clients who’d benefit from a subscription model. Present the option. See what happens.
The subscription economy is growing – with or without you. Running subscription services on hosting that makes client management painful? Rocket.net’s performance optimization means your client portals and dashboards load quickly, plus staging environments let you test new subscription tiers and features before rolling them out.
Why You Should Start an Affiliate Program – Affiliate programs beat fake AIO or other SEO hacks any day of the week. So, what do you need to know to start one?
How to Make Your WordPress Agency Stand Out – While most WordPress agencies are doing the same boring stuff, there’s a massive opportunity to differentiate yourself right now!
Grow your business with lightning-fast, secure, and optimized websites that are easy to set up & manage. Top-tier agencies and online businesses choose Rocket.net as their trusted managed WordPress hosting provider – why shouldn’t you, too?