Newsletter #59: Mid-Year Tool Stack Refresh
Newsletter #59: Audit Your Stack Before It Audits Your Bank Account
The average solopreneur is paying for 4.7 tools they haven’t used in 30 days. At a blended rate of $25/tool, that’s $117/month — $1,404/year — in pure waste. This issue is a systematic audit you can complete in one afternoon.
The Audit Framework: Cut, Keep, Upgrade
For every tool in your stack, answer four questions:
| Question | Decision Trigger |
|---|---|
| Did I use this in the last 30 days? | No → Cut (unless seasonal) |
| Does it directly generate or protect revenue? | Yes → Keep (evaluate tier) |
| Would losing it cause immediate workflow pain? | Yes → Keep (or find alternative) |
| Am I on the right pricing tier? | Check usage vs. tier limits |
Step 1: Find What You’re Actually Paying For
Use TrackSub for Automatic Discovery
TrackSub ($5/mo or $49/year) connects to your bank accounts (via Plaid, read-only) and automatically identifies recurring subscriptions. It flags:
- Price increases you missed
- Free trials about to convert
- Duplicate subscriptions (two project management tools, anyone?)
- Tools you haven’t logged into in 60+ days
Alternative if you prefer manual: Export the last 3 months of bank statements to CSV. Filter for recurring charges. Categorize each as Essential, Nice-to-Have, or Unknown. The manual approach takes about 45 minutes but costs $0.
Step 2: Calculate ROI Per Tool (Honestly)
For each tool, write down:
Tool: [Name]
Monthly Cost: $[X]
Time Saved: [Y] hours/month
Revenue Attributed: $[Z]/month (if trackable)
Hourly Value: $[Z+time_value] / $[X] = [ratio]
A ratio below 1.0 means the tool costs more than the value it creates. Cut immediately. A ratio between 1.0-3.0 is marginal — look for cheaper alternatives. Above 3.0 is healthy.
The honesty check: Time saved is the most inflated number. If you think a tool saves you 5 hours/month but you’re not actually shipping more output, it’s saving you 0 hours. Measure output, not perceived efficiency.
Step 3: Find Redundancies
Common overlaps we see in audited stacks:
- Notion + Trello + Asana: Pick one project management layer. Consolidate.
- Canva + Figma + Photoshop: Unless you’re a professional designer, you don’t need all three. Canva Pro ($12.99/mo) covers 90% of non-designer needs.
- ConvertKit + Mailchimp + Substack: You have one list. Use one tool.
- Zapier + Make + n8n: Pick the one you actually use. Most people with three automation tools automate nothing with two of them.
Step 4: Explore Bundles and Lifetime Deals
AppSumo: High Risk, High Reward
AppSumo’s lifetime deals can be incredible — we’ve seen $300/month tools sell for $69 one-time. But the failure rate is high. Our vetting framework:
- Green flags: Founded 2+ years ago, regular product updates, responsive support, clear roadmap, transparent pricing page (no “Contact Sales”).
- Red flags: Founded this year, last update 6+ months ago, no public changelog, support responds in 5+ days, lifetime deal is their only pricing.
- The 3-month rule: Only buy a lifetime deal for a tool you’ve needed for 3+ months. Impulse AppSumo purchases account for 40% of the “unused tool” waste we see in audits.
Setapp: The Mac Bundle Worth Considering
Setapp ($9.99/mo) is a curated app store for Mac with 240+ apps. Notable replacements:
- Ulysses (writing) replaces Ulysses subscription ($5.99/mo)
- CleanMyMac X (maintenance) replaces individual utility tools
- MindNode (mind mapping) replaces standalone mind map tools
- Permute (media conversion) replaces online converters
If you use 3+ Setapp-included apps, the bundle pays for itself. The limitation: no Windows or Linux support, and enterprise-grade tools (Adobe, Figma) aren’t included.
The One Tool to Add: A Subscription Tracker
Ironically, the audit itself needs a tool. Add TrackSub ($5/mo) or a simple Notion database to your stack. Update it every time you subscribe to or cancel a tool. The 10 minutes/month this takes prevents the next six months of subscription creep.
Reader Q&A
I just did this audit and realized I’m paying $340/month for tools. My MRR is $2,800. Is 12% of revenue on tools too high?
The benchmark for tool spend as a percentage of revenue:
- Under $5K MRR: 5-8% is healthy, 10-12% is on the high side but acceptable if the tools are directly generating revenue (ad spend tools, CRM, email).
- $5K-$20K MRR: 4-7% — economies of scale should kick in.
- $20K+ MRR: 3-5% — you should be paying for headcount, not tool sprawl.
At $2,800 MRR and $340/mo (12.1%), you’re slightly high. Target $200-225/mo. The fastest cuts: any tool you rated below 1.0 on the ROI calculation, and any redundant pair. Cut 2-3 tools and you’re in the healthy range.
Quick Tip
Negotiate annual billing on your top 5 tools. Most SaaS companies offer 15-20% discounts for annual commitments. Send this email template:
“I’m [name], a solo founder. I’ve been using [tool] for [months]. I’d like to commit to an annual plan. Is there a discount beyond what’s listed on your pricing page?”
A 15% discount on a $340/month stack = $612/year saved, for 5 emails that take 10 minutes each. That’s an hourly rate of $734.
Coming Next
Issue #60: We’re kicking off a new series — deep-dive reviews of single tools with week-long real-world testing. First up: Notion vs. Obsidian for knowledge management.
Issue #59, published 2025-05-13 by CreatorStack Team