Schematic

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Schematic

Schematic

@GetSchematic

The most flexible billing & pricing engine for SaaS & AI. Create an account: https://t.co/KfgxzTXY0r

Boulder, CO Katılım Ekim 2024
25 Takip Edilen43 Takipçiler
Schematic retweetledi
Ben Papillon
Ben Papillon@ben_papillon·
high praise from a @GetSchematic customer interview today: “your SDK worked” we like things that work
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Atlanta Ventures
Atlanta Ventures@AtlantaVentures·
Ever hear of a company quietly crushing it behind the scenes? Meet @GetSchematic. 😉 Schematic is a usage-based billing platform that helps SaaS and AI companies drive revenue across product-led, sales-led, and hybrid pricing models. Learn more: schematichq.com
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Schematic retweetledi
Fynn Glover
Fynn Glover@fynnglover19·
SaaS and AI founders say they want pricing flexibility. What they really want is: → To launch new plans *w/o* asking developers to stop shipping → To support exceptions for enterprise deals → To automatically drive expansion when a customer reaches a limit That’s why @GetSchematic exists.
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Schematic retweetledi
Fynn Glover
Fynn Glover@fynnglover19·
every day seeing more and more search traffic to @GetSchematic coming from @ChatGPTapp kudos @supabase for having such a fun & instructive pricing page and overall billing experience to explore
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Schematic retweetledi
Fynn Glover
Fynn Glover@fynnglover19·
It feels like B2B SaaS monetization is starting to shift in some really exciting ways. For example, one of our most popular features right now is "timed override"—temporary access to a premium feature that isn’t part of a customer’s plan. A product manager using @GetSchematic can grant time-limited access, letting customers try a feature before they buy. If they see the value, they can upgrade plans or buy it as an add-on—self-serve, no friction. This feature started as a way to give product managers a bunch of flexibility with how they monetize new features they're launching. And now what's interesting is that our customers who are using this feature are requesting a new feature: paywalls. And it’s not just product-led SaaS companies asking for this. Sales-led companies want paywalls too—especially founder-led sales teams. Here's why I think this is happening: At startups, products evolve fast – Founders close a deal, ship a ton of new value within a quarter, and want their product handling upsells while they hunt for new customers. Less buying friction – Customers want to expand their usage without needing a sales call. Better monetization – Customers and product developers want more granular control over how features are packaged, trialed, bundled, and monetized. Back to the shift -- it feels like B2B SaaS is starting to monetize more like e-commerce and B2C SaaS: - Paywalls & gated access - Targeted promos & incentives - Self-serve upgrades/downgrades - Pausing & flexible billing - Personalized pricing & exceptions And from there, you can start to imagine further use cases where product folks can easily embed even more consumer-grade monetization experiences in their apps: - Cart abandonment recovery - Bundling & cross-selling - Loyalty & rewards programs - Referral incentives
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Schematic retweetledi
Burkland
Burkland@BurklandAssoc·
Today on #StartupSuccess, Fynn Glover @fynnglover19, co-founder & CEO of @GetSchematic, shares his expert insights on monetization, customers' willingness to pay, and overcoming common pricing & packaging challenges! 🎙️Available now on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen!
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Giovanni Hobbins
Giovanni Hobbins@giohobbins·
Dogfooding is king. If you're not using your own product, then you are building blind. It's really that simple. We use @GetSchematic daily to launch, track and monetize our features as well as manage our customers access and subscription. Take a look: youtu.be/vMWDiyi_0jE
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Schematic retweetledi
Fynn Glover
Fynn Glover@fynnglover19·
Got off the phone yesterday with a product developer at a fast-growing AI startup that’s been trialing @GetSchematic. I asked him why he intends to use our product. Loved his framing: "All of the features we prioritize should impact growth. And we need the tooling to deliver on this. We’re launching a ton of features, and with you guys, I can run time-bound trials, bundle and unbundle, manage overrides, get feedback and engagement, test paywalls, and build tight feedback loops on business impact." I think this is where SaaS is headed. For years, PLG has been about making product the engine of growth. But most teams still monetize features slowly, painfully, and with way too many stakeholders: - Developers need to deploy the feature. - Product needs to figure out rollout. - Success needs to update access and communicate to the customer. - PMM needs to update assets. - Finance needs to make sure it ties in the billing system. It kills speed. Most teams hacking this together today run into two major blockers: 1/ Feature management tools were built for devops. Great for toggling features on/off, hard to use for monetization. 2/ Billing systems don’t talk to the product. So to run trials, limit and enforce usage-based entitlements, or execute pricing experiments always requires engineering sprints. What gets me hyped about what we're building is that you can start to realize a world in which one enterprising product developer can do all of the above on the fly. - Launch, test, and iterate on features without code changes. - Bundle, unbundle, and monetize inside the product. - Connect feature access directly to billing.
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Schematic retweetledi
Fynn Glover
Fynn Glover@fynnglover19·
We're releasing part 2 of our teardown of @posthog's pricing page and overall billing experience later this week. They do a great job, and there's a lot to learn from them. Here's a quick teaser on what I found really compelling overall. 1. Frictionless developer-led motion – Developers can get started instantly, no credit card required. 2. Add-ons as a revenue driver – They pull users in with a cheap bundle, and then drive expansion with add-ons. 3. They're counter-positioning on price – In other words they're bundling tools across multiple categories and trying to be a lower cost alternative to incumbents in each of the categories they're serving. 4. Pricing as a brand asset – Their pricing page isn’t just functional—it’s a marketing tool. It makes fun of status quo software sales, seeks to commoditize competitors, and delivers a ton of transparency into their pricing philosophy.
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Schematic retweetledi
Fynn Glover
Fynn Glover@fynnglover19·
If you're a founder or product person working on your startup's pricing, this is so good from Michael Dearing & @heavybit heavybit.com/library/video/… A few things it reminds us to consider: 1️⃣ Pricing is about perceived value, not cost. Customers buy when they feel they’re getting more value than they’re paying for. 2️⃣ Behavioral economics beats spreadsheets. Understanding why people buy is just as important as setting the price itself. 3️⃣ Intuition matters. Great pricing decisions blend data with gut instinct, just like great product decisions. If you're working on pricing & packaging in a startup and haven’t seen this talk yet, it’s worth your time.
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Schematic retweetledi
Fynn Glover
Fynn Glover@fynnglover19·
𝗛𝗼𝘄 𝗣𝗼𝘀𝘁𝗛𝗼𝗴'𝘀 𝗽𝗿𝗶𝗰𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗽𝗮𝗴𝗲 𝘀𝗲𝗿𝘃𝗲𝘀 𝗮𝘀 𝗮 𝗯𝗿𝗮𝗻d 𝗮𝘀𝘀𝗲𝘁 Today, we’re releasing Part 1 of our two-part teardown on @posthog's pricing page and billing experience. In Part 1, we look at their pricing page— unsurprisingly for those familiar with the company, this is probably the most original pricing page of any dev tool we'll look at. In Part 2 (coming next week), we’ll break down their full purchasing experience—from onboarding to expansion and retention. But first, the pricing page. Here's what stood out to us: 1. It’s designed like an e-commerce checkout -- Social proof, impulse-driven CTAs, and even product “images” make it feel more like shopping on Amazon than evaluating a B2B tool. 2. They counter-position on price. Against multiple category incumbents. They want to be the cheaper than Amplitude, LaunchDarkly, Fullstory, etc. And instead of charging on traditional MTUs (like Amplitude or Mixpanel), they bill on raw input metrics—making pricing engineer-friendly and predictable. 3. They try to remove friction from adoption by clearly creating a choice: a tool that's cheap and easy to get started with vs. tools that are expensive and hard to get started with. 4. Every aspect of their pricing page is a reflection of their brand. Humor, irreverence, and transparency are baked into every line—down to the “How We Do Sales” page, which actively makes fun of traditional enterprise sales motions. 5. They make their pricing strategy explicit. They literally state that their goal is to be the cheapest option in every category they compete in—and they even invite users to tweet at them if they disagree. This was a really fun one. Full episode in comments.
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Schematic retweetledi
Fynn Glover
Fynn Glover@fynnglover19·
. @posthog's pricing page has all the fundamentals. Plus, it's an exceptional brand asset. We're going deep this week on their pricing page. Next week, we'll go deep on their entire pricing & billing experience.
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