Install
openclaw skills install revenue-model-designDesign a revenue model for a solopreneur business — how money flows in, from whom, and on what cadence. Use when deciding how to monetize a product or servic...
openclaw skills install revenue-model-designA revenue model is not just "how much do I charge" — it is the complete system of how value translates into money. The wrong model can make a great product fail (people love it but won't pay the way you structured it). The right model turns a good product into a sustainable business. This playbook helps you choose, design, and validate the right model for your specific situation.
Know your options before choosing. Each model has different implications for cash flow, customer behavior, product design, and growth.
Money comes in on a predictable schedule. The backbone of sustainable solopreneur businesses.
Subscription (monthly/annual): Customer pays a fixed amount per period for ongoing access.
Retainer: Customer pays a fixed monthly fee for a defined scope of ongoing work or access.
Membership: Customer pays to be part of a group that provides ongoing value (community, content, access).
Single payments. Great for cash flow spikes, less predictable long-term.
Product sale: Customer buys a product once and owns it.
Service/project: Customer pays for a defined deliverable.
Revenue scales with how much the customer actually uses the product.
Per-transaction: Customer pays each time they complete an action (e.g., per invoice sent, per email sent).
Tiered usage: Customer pays based on usage bands (e.g., up to 100 transactions = $X, up to 500 = $Y).
Revenue comes from facilitating a transaction between two parties.
Commission: You take a percentage of each transaction on your platform.
Lead generation: You send qualified leads to businesses and charge per lead or per conversion.
Answer these questions to narrow your options:
| Question | If Yes → Lean Toward |
|---|---|
| Does my product deliver value continuously (not just once)? | Subscription or membership |
| Is my product digital with near-zero marginal cost per user? | Subscription or one-time sale |
| Do customers' usage levels vary wildly? | Usage-based or tiered usage |
| Am I selling my time or expertise directly? | Retainer or project/service |
| Do I need predictable monthly income? | Subscription or retainer |
| Am I early and need to reduce purchase friction to get first customers? | Freemium (free tier) or usage-based |
| Can I connect two groups who want to transact? | Marketplace or commission |
Most sustainable solopreneur businesses have 2-3 revenue streams, not one. A single stream is fragile — if it dips, everything dips.
Revenue stream stacking rules:
Common solopreneur stack patterns:
| Primary | Secondary | Opportunistic |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS subscription | Digital course or template pack | Consulting/speaking |
| Consulting retainers | Productized service (fixed scope, fixed price) | Affiliate revenue from tool recommendations |
| Digital product (one-time) | Subscription upgrade (premium features or updates) | Freelance projects |
| Content/newsletter | Sponsored posts or affiliate links | Workshops or cohorts |
Stack design rule: Every stream should serve the same core customer or ecosystem. Revenue streams that pull you in different directions dilute your focus and brand.
For each revenue stream, map the exact payment experience:
REVENUE STREAM: [name]
MODEL: [subscription / one-time / usage / etc.]
PRICE: [amount and cadence]
PAYMENT TRIGGER: [what action causes the charge — signup, usage threshold, renewal]
PAYMENT METHOD: [credit card, invoice, etc.]
BILLING TOOL: [Stripe, Paddle, Lemon Squeezy, etc.]
FREE TRIAL: [yes/no, length, requires card?]
CANCELLATION FLOW: [how easy is it to cancel? — make this frictionless or you'll get chargebacks]
UPGRADE PATH: [how does a customer move to a higher tier or add a stream?]
Solopreneur billing tool recommendations:
For each stream, build a simple projection:
STREAM: [name]
CUSTOMERS MONTH 1: [number]
MONTHLY GROWTH RATE: [%]
AVERAGE REVENUE PER CUSTOMER: [$/month]
CHURN RATE: [%/month] (for recurring streams)
MONTH 1 REVENUE: customers × ARPC
MONTH 3 REVENUE: [calculate with growth and churn]
MONTH 6 REVENUE: [calculate]
MONTH 12 REVENUE: [calculate]
Churn math for recurring models: If you have 100 customers and 5% churn, you lose 5/month. To grow, your new customer acquisition must exceed your churn. This is why retention matters as much as acquisition.
Sanity check: Sum all streams. Does total projected revenue cover your costs and provide a livable income within 12 months? If not, either the projections are wrong (re-examine growth assumptions) or the model needs rethinking.
Before investing heavily in building out a revenue model, validate the core assumption:
"Will customers actually pay this way?"
Test methods: