Designing free-to-paid conversion flows for SaaS products. Trigger moments, paywall design, value demonstration, upsell vs downsell, win-back flows, churn prevention. Honest about paywall-everywhere (gates everything aggressively), free-forever-trap (no upgrade path surfaces), and value-triggered-upgrade (paywall surfaces at moments of demonstrated value) patterns. Triggers on upgrade flow, paywall, free-to-paid, freemium conversion, trial conversion, plan upgrade, subscription upgrade, win-back flow, churn prevention. Also triggers when free-to-paid conversion is low, when paywalls are blocking the wrong moments, or when upgrade flows are being scoped for the first time.
58
67%
Does it follow best practices?
Impact
—
No eval scenarios have been run
Passed
No known issues
Optimize this skill with Tessl
npx tessl skill review --optimize ./skills/upgrade-flow-design/SKILL.mdA senior product marketing director's playbook for designing free-to-paid conversion flows in SaaS products. Trigger moments, paywall design, value demonstration, upsell vs downsell, win-back flows, churn prevention. The discipline of asking for the upgrade at the moment the user has a reason to say yes.
Most upgrade flows fail in one of two ways. They block meaningful product use behind paywalls so aggressively that users churn before reaching the moment that would justify paying. Or they offer a generous free tier with no upgrade path that ever surfaces; users get everything they need; conversion stays at single-digit percentages indefinitely.
The upgrade flows that work do something different. They surface paywalls at moments where the user has demonstrably gotten value. The user has hit a usage threshold, completed a flow, or otherwise demonstrated they are getting the product's promise. The upgrade ask is honest about what they get next; the user is positioned to say yes because the value is fresh.
The voice is the senior product marketing director who has watched conversion rates double when paywalls were re-timed and watched them collapse when more aggressive paywalls were added. Practical, opinionated about the moments that earn the upgrade ask, willing to call out when the product's free tier is too generous to convert.
When to use this skill: scoping a free-to-paid conversion flow for the first time, auditing paywalls that block conversion or never surface, designing the trigger moments that earn upgrade asks, or deciding plan structure that supports upgrades over time.
This skill spans free-to-paid conversion flows in SaaS products. The growth-tooling distinctions:
lead-magnet-design is top-of-funnel email capture. This skill is free-to-paid conversion in-product.funnel-flow-architecture is the cross-tool funnel architecture. This skill is the upgrade flow specifically.upgrade-flow-design (this skill) is trigger-moment design, paywall presentation, plan structure, win-back, churn prevention.landing-page-copy is pricing-page copy; lives downstream of this skill's plan-structure decisions.pm-spec-writing is the spec for engineers building the upgrade flow.The audience: product marketers, growth marketers, in-house product teams, agencies running SaaS conversion work for clients.
Out of scope: cross-funnel architecture (covered by funnel-flow-architecture); pricing-page copy (covered by landing-page-copy); the engineering implementation; specific Stripe/Chargebee/Recurly/Paddle billing-platform configurations (those stay implementation-side).
Before designing the upgrade flow, decide the free-tier structure.
Freemium (free-forever tier).
When it works: products with strong network effects, or where free users provide product value (data, content, virality).
Free-trial (time-limited).
When it works: products where the value is clear quickly; audiences willing to commit time before paying.
Reverse trial.
No-free (paid-only).
When it works: enterprise products, high-touch sales, products where free would dilute brand or capacity.
The decision is upstream of upgrade flow design. Different free-tier structures warrant different upgrade flows.
Detail in references/free-tier-decision-criteria.md.
The keystone framing.
Paywall-everywhere. Paywall blocks meaningful product use. Free tier exists but is too constrained to demonstrate value. Users churn before reaching the moment that would justify paying. Cost: users who would have paid after seeing value never reach that moment; conversion suffers despite aggressive paywalling.
Free-forever-trap. Generous free tier with no upgrade path that ever surfaces. Users get everything they need; never see why they would pay. Conversion rate stays at single-digit percentages indefinitely. Cost: the team has built a product users like for free; revenue does not follow because the upgrade ask never lands.
Value-triggered-upgrade. Paywall surfaces at moments where the user has demonstrably gotten value. The user has hit a usage threshold, completed a flow, or otherwise demonstrated they are getting the product's promise. The upgrade ask is honest about what they get next. Cost: design effort upfront is significant; conversion typically meaningfully higher than either alternative.
The litmus test. After a user encounters the upgrade flow, can they articulate why they should pay? "Because I just hit my limit on this feature I have used 200 times" is value-triggered. "Because the product told me to pay before letting me use it" is paywall-everywhere. "I have not seen an upgrade ask" is free-forever-trap.
The single most consequential decision in upgrade flow design.
The principle. Paywalls surface at moments where the user has demonstrated they are getting the product's value. The interruption is justified because the user has a reason to say yes.
Strong trigger moments.
Weak trigger moments.
The discipline. Each paywall should answer: what value did the user just demonstrate, and how does the paid plan extend that value?
Detail in references/trigger-moment-design.md.
How the paywall surfaces.
Pattern A: Modal paywall. Full-screen overlay blocks the action; user must upgrade or dismiss.
When to use. Capacity limits, feature gates the user has hit. The interruption is warranted by the trigger.
Pattern B: Banner paywall. Persistent banner at top of page suggesting upgrade.
When to use. Soft prompts; awareness without interruption. Risk of becoming visual noise.
Pattern C: Inline paywall. Upgrade ask embedded in the surface where the trigger occurred.
When to use. Contextual prompts that integrate with the workflow.
Pattern D: Toast or notification. Brief paywall surfaced as a notification.
When to use. Soft prompts; low-priority upgrade asks.
Choice criteria.
Copy and value-prop discipline.
Detail in references/paywall-presentation-patterns.md.
When the user does not accept the primary upgrade.
Upsell. User is on basic plan; ask them to upgrade to higher tier.
Cross-sell. User is paying; offer add-ons or related products.
Downsell. User declined the higher tier; offer a smaller commitment (smaller plan, monthly vs annual, basic vs full feature set).
The downsell discipline. Some users will not upgrade to the proposed tier but will upgrade to something. Downsell captures revenue otherwise lost.
Examples.
Anti-pattern. Aggressive downsell that makes the user feel manipulated. Honest framing: "If Pro is more than you need, here is something that fits."
Detail in references/upsell-vs-downsell-logic.md.
Lapsed users, downgrades, partial-churn.
Win-back triggers.
Win-back patterns.
Discount discipline.
Detail in references/win-back-flow-patterns.md.
The best upgrade flow is the one the user does not need because they did not churn.
Upstream churn signals.
Prevention patterns.
The prevention-vs-recovery economics. Preventing churn is much cheaper than winning back churned users. Invest upstream.
Detail in references/churn-prevention-upstream.md.
The plans that the upgrade flow leads to.
Tier count.
Feature gating.
Discipline. Each tier should have a clear "this is for [X audience] because of [Y]." Tiers without clear audience-fit produce weak conversions.
Pricing-page design. The pricing page is downstream of plan structure but lives close to upgrade flow. Detail in landing-page-copy for pricing-page copy specifically.
Detail in references/plan-structure-patterns.md.
Rapid-fire. Diagnoses in references/common-upgrade-failures.md.
When designing or auditing an upgrade flow, walk these 12 considerations.
The output of the framework is an upgrade flow that earns the user's "yes" by asking at the moment the user has a reason to say yes, with plan structure that fits the audience the product serves.
references/free-tier-decision-criteria.md - Freemium, free-trial, reverse trial, no-free. Choice criteria.references/trigger-moment-design.md - Where paywalls earn their interruption. Strong vs weak trigger moments.references/paywall-presentation-patterns.md - Modal, banner, inline, toast. Copy and value-prop discipline.references/upsell-vs-downsell-logic.md - When primary upgrade is declined, secondary paths.references/win-back-flow-patterns.md - Lapsed users, downgrades, partial-churn re-engagement.references/churn-prevention-upstream.md - Preventing churn before the upgrade flow is needed.references/plan-structure-patterns.md - Tier count, feature gating, audience-fit per tier.references/upgrade-flow-anti-patterns.md - The patterns that look like upgrade flows but degrade trust.references/common-upgrade-failures.md - 9+ failure patterns with diagnoses and cures.The upgrade flows that compound revenue are the ones that ask at the moment the user has a reason to say yes. Not because the paywall blocked them. Not because the upgrade prompt happened to appear. Because the user just did something that demonstrated value, and the upgrade ask connected that value to continued or expanded access.
That is the bar. Below the bar are paywall-everywhere (gates before value, conversion suffers) and free-forever-trap (no upgrade path, conversion never starts). Above the bar are value-triggered-upgrade flows where trigger-moment design, paywall presentation, plan structure, win-back, and churn prevention work together to convert the right users at the right moments.
The discipline is in the design choices. The free-tier decision (freemium, trial, paid-only) sets the funnel shape. Trigger-moment design decides when paywalls earn their interruption. Paywall presentation decides how the ask lands. Plan structure decides what the user is upgrading to. Win-back and churn prevention catch the cases that escaped the primary upgrade flow.
8e70d03
If you maintain this skill, you can claim it as your own. Once claimed, you can manage eval scenarios, bundle related skills, attach documentation or rules, and ensure cross-agent compatibility.