You know that sinking feeling when you check your business bank account and wonder where all the money went? For heaps of small businesses across regional Australia, the culprit isn't one big expense — it's the slow bleed of software subscriptions that seemed like a good idea at the time.
SaaS (Software as a Service) spending doesn't usually blow out overnight. It creeps in like a slow leak in your roof. One month you're paying $50 for that project management tool, next month it's $80 because you added users, then suddenly you're on the premium plan because you hit some limit you didn't know existed.
The plain English version
SaaS is just fancy talk for software you rent instead of buy. Think Xero instead of desktop MYOB, or Canva Pro instead of buying Photoshop outright. The problem isn't the software itself — most of it's genuinely useful. The problem is how easy it makes it to spend money without thinking.
Here's how the creep happens: You sign up for the basic plan of some tool that'll save you time. Works great for a few months. Then you need one more feature, so you upgrade. Then your team grows and you need more user seats. Before you know it, you're paying $200/month for something that started at $20.
Multiply that across 5-10 different tools (accounting software, booking systems, social media schedulers, website builders, email marketing, inventory management) and you're looking at serious money. I've seen businesses with monthly software bills hitting $1000+ without realising it.
Cafes & pubs — get bums on seats
Your menu, your vibe, your location — showing up when someone searches "cafe near me" or "pub in [your town]".
Get found locallyThe real kicker? Half these tools probably overlap in what they do. You might have three different ways to schedule social posts, or two booking systems running side by side because nobody wanted to do the switchover.
3 things this means for your business
- Your monthly overheads are higher than they need to be. Every dollar spent on redundant software is a dollar that could go toward stock, equipment, or just staying in your bank account for the next slow period. For a tradie, that might mean the difference between buying new tools or struggling through with the old ones. For a cafe, it could be the buffer that gets you through winter.
- You're probably paying for features you don't use. Most businesses only use about 20% of any software's features, but they're paying for 100% of them. That premium email marketing plan with advanced automation? If you're just sending a monthly newsletter, you're wasting money.
- It makes budgeting a nightmare. When your software costs keep creeping up, it's hard to predict what next month's expenses will look like. This makes cash flow planning nearly impossible, especially for seasonal businesses like accommodation or tourism operators.
What to actually do about it
Step 1: Do a subscription audit Grab your bank statements from the last three months and highlight every recurring payment. Don't just look at the obvious ones — some tools charge annually or quarterly. Check your credit card statements too, because lots of businesses put subscriptions there and forget about them.
Step 2: Sort them into three piles
- Essential: You literally can't run your business without this (usually accounting software, maybe your booking system)
- Useful: Makes life easier but you could survive without it (social media tools, advanced analytics)
- What was I thinking: Haven't used it in months or does the same thing as something else
Step 3: Cancel the dead weight Start with pile three. Cancel everything you haven't used in the last month. Yeah, you might have paid for a year upfront — that money's gone anyway, don't throw good money after bad.
Step 4: Downgrade where possible For pile two, check if you can drop to a cheaper plan. Most businesses overestimate what they need. That $100/month email marketing plan might have a $30 option that does everything you actually use.
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Chat with MattStep 5: Look for overlaps Do you really need separate tools for social media, email marketing, and customer management? Heaps of platforms now do multiple jobs reasonably well. It might not be perfect, but it'll save you hundreds per month.
Step 6: Set up a monthly review Book 30 minutes each month to check your subscriptions. Look for price increases (they love sneaking these through), usage patterns, and new charges. Most billing happens on the same date each month, so pick the day after and make it routine.
The free alternatives worth trying Before you pay for anything, check if there's a free option that'll do the job:
- Canva Free instead of Adobe Creative Suite
- Google Workspace Basic instead of premium plans
- Mailchimp Free tier for basic email marketing
- Wave Accounting instead of paid bookkeeping software (depending on your needs)
Your web designer or digital marketing person should be able to help you work out what you actually need versus what some salesperson convinced you to buy. Sometimes the answer is simpler tools that cost less but do the job just fine.
The goal isn't to run your business with zero software costs — that's not realistic in 2024. The goal is to make sure every dollar you spend on subscriptions is actually earning its keep. Your future bank balance will thank you for it.
Who this matters to
Cafes
Point-of-sale systems, staff scheduling, and inventory management subscriptions can quickly add up to more than your monthly coffee supplier costs.
Retail
Inventory management, e-commerce platforms, customer relationship tools, and social media schedulers often duplicate functions across multiple paid subscriptions.
Tradies
Job management, quoting software, and customer tracking tools often overlap in functionality while each charging separately for similar features.
Accommodation
Property management systems, booking platforms, guest communication tools, and pricing software often have overlapping features you're paying for twice.
Pubs & Restaurants
Multiple booking systems, till software, staff rostering, and supplier management platforms can create expensive subscription bloat without realising.
Primary Producers
Farm management software, weather tracking, equipment monitoring, and compliance tools can stack up expensive monthly fees for features you rarely use.
Need help making sense of this?
I help regional businesses figure out what tech changes actually matter. No jargon, just plain English advice.
Have a chat with Matt