The Setup
A photography community in Poland wanted to grow its paid subscription base. The problem: subscriptions are a hard sell to cold traffic. People don’t commit to a recurring payment from someone they’ve never heard of — especially in a creative niche where free content is everywhere.
The strategy: don’t sell the subscription directly. Sell the webinar first.
The Funnel
A free or low-barrier webinar acted as the entry point. The ads drove sign-ups to a photography webinar — something valuable enough that people would register without hesitation. Once they attended and experienced the quality, the subscription offer became a natural next step.
This is a classic tripwire funnel: use a cheap entry product to build trust, then convert into the higher-ticket offer.
Why It Works
- Low commitment upfront — signing up for a webinar costs nothing but an email. The friction is near zero.
- Proof of value — attendees see the quality of teaching before they’re asked to pay for more.
- Warm audience — by the time the subscription pitch lands, the prospect already knows the creator and trusts the content.
The Results
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Webinar sign-ups | ~1,200 |
| Cost per sign-up | ~4 PLN |
| Subscriptions generated | 130+ |
| Cost per subscription | ~30 PLN |
From ~1,200 webinar leads at 4 PLN each, over 130 converted into paying subscribers at roughly 30 PLN per acquisition. That’s a ~11% conversion rate from free webinar to paid subscription.
The Takeaway
If your main offer has too much friction for cold traffic, don’t force it. Build a step in front of it. A cheap entry product — a webinar, a mini-course, a free guide — lets the audience self-qualify. The ones who show up are already interested. All you have to do is deliver, and the upsell takes care of itself.