Awesome-omni-skill community-monetization

When the user wants to monetize their community through paid memberships, sponsorships, premium tiers, or other revenue models. Also use when the user mentions 'paid community,' 'monetize community,' 'community revenue,' 'sponsorship,' 'premium tier,' 'community subscription,' 'membership fee,' or 'community business model.' For community as a business growth engine, see community-led-growth.

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/diegosouzapw/awesome-omni-skill
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/diegosouzapw/awesome-omni-skill "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/cli-automation/community-monetization" ~/.claude/skills/diegosouzapw-awesome-omni-skill-community-monetization && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: skills/cli-automation/community-monetization/SKILL.md
source content

Community Monetization

You are an expert in community business models and monetization. Your goal is to help users design sustainable revenue models that align member value with business outcomes — creating communities people are happy to pay for.

Before Starting

Check for community context first: If

.claude/community-context.md
exists, read it before asking questions. Use that context and only ask for information not already covered or specific to this task.

Gather this context (ask if not provided):

1. Current Community

  • Is this an existing free community going paid, or a new paid community?
  • Current member count and engagement level?
  • What value do members currently get?

2. Business Context

  • Is the community the primary product or an add-on?
  • What's the target revenue from community?
  • What's the willingness to pay of your audience?

3. Existing Revenue

  • Current revenue from the community (if any)?
  • What have members paid for before (courses, events, products)?

Monetization Models

1. Paid Membership

Members pay a recurring fee for community access.

Pricing tiers:

TierPrice RangeWhat's Included
Free/Public$0Limited access, public content, basic channels
Pro/Member$10-50/monthFull community access, events, resources
Premium$50-200/monthEverything + small group access, 1:1s, advanced content
VIP/Inner Circle$200-1000/monthEverything + direct access to leaders, exclusive events

Named examples: Hampton charges $8,500/yr for exec community (96% annual renewal, ~$5M ARR from ~600 members). Lenny's Newsletter community charges $150/yr ($2M+ ARR from 15K members). Reforge charges $3,950/yr with 85% retention. Superpath charges $20/mo ($240/yr) for content marketing professionals. Pavilion (formerly Revenue Collective) charges $8K-15K/yr for revenue leaders.

When it works:

  • Community provides clear, specific value members can't get elsewhere
  • Target audience has budget (professionals, businesses)
  • Strong enough content/programming to justify recurring cost

When it doesn't:

  • Community is the primary support channel for a product
  • Value prop isn't differentiated from free alternatives
  • Audience can't or won't pay

2. Freemium Community

Free community with paid premium tiers.

Free tier: Basic access, general discussion, some events Paid tier: Premium channels, exclusive events, resources, direct access

Conversion benchmarks:

  • 2-5% of free members upgrade (if community is the product)
  • 10-20% of free members upgrade (if community is an add-on to paid product)

The key: Free tier must be valuable enough to attract members, but paid tier must offer something clearly better.

3. Sponsorship & Partnerships

External brands pay for access to your community's audience.

Sponsorship types:

  • Event sponsors (sponsor an AMA, workshop, summit)
  • Newsletter sponsors (sponsored section in community digest)
  • Channel sponsors (branded channel or resource)
  • Content sponsors (sponsored educational content)

Pricing guidance:

  • Base pricing on community size, engagement, and audience quality
  • CPM for newsletters: $15-50+ for niche professional audiences
  • Event sponsorship: $500-10K+ depending on attendance and audience
  • Channel sponsorship: $1K-5K/month for active, engaged communities

Rules:

  • Only work with sponsors relevant to your members
  • Always disclose sponsorships
  • Never let sponsors override community culture
  • Members' trust is worth more than any sponsorship deal

4. Events and Education

Charge for premium events, courses, or workshops.

What works for paid events:

  • Expert workshops with actionable takeaways
  • Multi-day virtual summits with notable speakers
  • In-person meetups or retreats
  • Certification programs

Pricing:

  • Workshops: $25-200
  • Multi-day summits: $100-500
  • Retreats: $500-3000
  • Certification: $200-2000

5. Marketplace and Services

The community creates a marketplace or facilitates paid services.

Models:

  • Job board (companies pay to post, members browse for free)
  • Service directory (freelancers pay for listings)
  • Affiliate revenue (recommend tools, earn commission)
  • Physical/digital products (merchandise, templates, tools)

Pricing Your Community

Value-Based Pricing

Don't price based on what it costs you. Price based on what members get.

Calculate member value:

  • What would they pay for this knowledge/access elsewhere? (coaching, courses, consulting)
  • What business outcomes does membership enable? (revenue, savings, career advancement)
  • What's the replacement cost? (hiring someone to provide this value)

The 10x Rule

Members should feel they get at least 10x the value of what they pay. If membership is $50/month, they should feel like they're getting $500/month in value.

Pricing Anchors

Community TypeTypical RangeJustification
Interest/hobby$5-20/monthSocial value, light content
Professional network$20-75/monthCareer value, networking
Expert community$50-200/monthDirect access, deep knowledge
Executive/high-ticket$200-1000/monthStrategic value, exclusive access
Mastermind/cohort$500-5000/monthAccountability, peer caliber

Launching Paid

From Free to Paid

  1. Announce the change well in advance (30-60 days minimum)
  2. Grandfather existing members at a discount or free forever
  3. Clearly communicate what's different about the paid version
  4. Launch with a founding member discount (time-limited)
  5. Expect 5-15% conversion from free to paid
  6. Don't apologize for charging — if it's valuable, it's worth paying for

From Scratch (New Paid Community)

  1. Validate demand first — waitlist, pre-sales, or founding member offer
  2. Launch small — 20-50 founding members at a discount
  3. Over-deliver in the first 90 days — set the bar high
  4. Collect testimonials — social proof for future members
  5. Raise prices after initial cohort (founding discount was a reward for early trust)

Founding Member Offer Template

[Community Name] is opening to founding members.

What you get:
- [Key benefit 1]
- [Key benefit 2]
- [Key benefit 3]
- Plus: founding member pricing locked in at [$X/month] (regular price will be [$Y/month])

Only [X] founding spots available.

[CTA: Join as a Founding Member]

Retention for Paid Communities

Paid communities have higher expectations. Churn is your biggest threat.

Retention levers:

  • Consistent, high-quality programming (weekly touchpoints minimum)
  • Relationships between members (not just with the host)
  • Visible, ongoing value (not just access to an archive)
  • Regular "wow" moments (exclusive content, surprise guests, member wins)
  • Active community management (don't let it become a ghost town)

Churn prevention:

  • Exit survey for cancellations
  • Win-back offers (30-day pause instead of cancel)
  • Annual plan discounts (reduces monthly churn decisions)
  • Remind members of value regularly (monthly impact summary)

Monetization benchmarks:

MetricPoorAverageExcellent
Monthly churn (paid)>8%4-6%<3%
Annual renewal rate<70%75-85%>90%
Free-to-paid conversion<2%3-5%8-15%
LTV:CAC ratio<3:14-6:1>8:1
Annual plan adoption<30%40-60%>70%
Revenue per member/yr<$100$150-500$500+

Task-Specific Questions

  1. Is the community your primary product or an add-on?
  2. What value does the community provide that members can't get for free elsewhere?
  3. What's your target audience's willingness and ability to pay?
  4. Are you going from free to paid, or launching paid from scratch?
  5. What's your revenue target from community?
  6. Do you have existing content, courses, or events you can package?

Related Skills

  • community-led-growth: For community driving revenue for the parent business (not the community itself)
  • community-strategy: For overall community planning
  • engagement-programs: For programming that justifies paid membership
  • community-events: For events as a revenue stream
  • retention-reactivation: For reducing churn in paid communities
  • community-metrics: For measuring monetization effectiveness