Insights from recent episode analysis
Audience Interest
Podcast Focus
Publishing Consistency
Platform Reach
Insights are generated by CastFox AI using publicly available data, episode content, and proprietary models.
Est. Listeners
Based on iTunes & Spotify (publisher stats).
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
25,001 - 50,000 - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
75,001 - 150,000 - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
15,001 - 40,000
Market Insights
Platform Distribution
Reach across major podcast platforms, updated hourly
Total Followers
—
Total Plays
—
Total Reviews
—
* Data sourced directly from platform APIs and aggregated hourly across all major podcast directories.
On the show
Recent episodes
250: How to Start a Subscription Box (8 Steps to Launch Successfully)
Apr 29, 2026
33m 06s
249: Being YOU Is Your Subscription Box Superpower
Apr 22, 2026
19m 32s
Spring Sales: How to Generate Extra Revenue with One-Time Boxes
Apr 15, 2026
21m 44s
248: I Almost Sold My Subscription Box… Until the Numbers Changed Everything with Ciara Stockeland
Apr 8, 2026
54m 38s
5 Ways to Build Your Audience Consistently
Apr 1, 2026
25m 35s
Social Links & Contact
Official channels & resources
Official Website
Login
RSS Feed
Login
| Date | Episode | Description | Length | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4/29/26 | ![]() 250: How to Start a Subscription Box (8 Steps to Launch Successfully) | If you’ve been sitting on a subscription box idea but feel overwhelmed about where to start, this episode is your roadmap. “I have an idea, but I don’t know what to do next.” “I feel stuck.” “I don’t want to do it wrong.” Most people aren’t stuck because they’re not capable. They’re stuck because they’re doing the steps out of order. So in this episode, I’m walking you through the exact 8 steps to go from idea to shipping your first box with clarity and confidence. Step 1: Start With the Person, Not the Product Your subscription box is not about the products inside. It’s about the person you’re serving. Instead of asking, “What should I put in my box?” Start with: Who is this for? What problem am I solving? Because even if it doesn’t feel like a “problem,” it is. People don’t buy products. They buy how those products make them feel: organized, relaxed, confident, seen. If you can clearly describe your ideal customer in one sentence and she immediately feels like, “That’s for me,” you’re on the right track. Step 2: Build Your Audience Before You Launch Don’t wait until your box is ready to find customers. You need people before you have something to sell. Your job right now isn’t to sell, it’s to invite people into the journey. Share behind-the-scenes moments Ask for input (polls, naming, product ideas) Let people watch you build And remember, it doesn’t have to be perfect. It just has to be real. Step 3: Plan Your First 3–6 Months of Boxes Before you buy anything, map out your themes and product ideas for the first few months. Planning ahead: Makes sourcing easier Simplifies your content Creates a more consistent experience for your customers It also keeps you from scrambling every single month. When you know what’s coming next, you make better decisions and you move with more confidence. Step 4: Price for Profit (Not Just Sales) This is a business, not a hobby. Once you’ve planned your boxes, then you start sourcing and you price with intention. A good starting goal is at least a 40% profit margin, with room to grow from there. And don’t forget the hidden costs: Shipping Packaging Fees Replacements Because making sales doesn’t always mean making money. This step is about building something sustainable that supports you long-term. Step 5: Build a Warm, Ready-to-Buy Waitlist Before you launch, you need people who are already excited to buy. That’s what your waitlist is for. Think of it as warming up the room before you make the offer. Use social media to grow your list, and email to nurture it: Share your story Show sneak peeks Reveal themes Take them behind the scenes People don’t just buy the box, they buy into you and connection is what turns interest into action. Step 6: Keep Packaging Simple (At First) Packaging matters but not as much as you think in the beginning. Choose packaging based on what’s going inside the box, and keep it simple and cost-effective. You can always upgrade later. In the early days, your customers care more about what’s inside than the box it came in. Let your product lead, and let your packaging grow with your business. Step 7: Plan Your Launch Before Launch Day A successful launch doesn’t start on launch day. It starts weeks before. Give yourself 2–4 weeks to build excitement: Talk about your box consistently Share sneak peeks and progress Repeat your message (more than you think you need to) Your energy and consistency are what build momentum. Step 8: Pack and Ship Your First Box This is the moment where it all becomes real. Your first shipment will likely be a mix of excitement, chaos, and pride. Keep things simple: Batch your packing Create a basic workflow Do quality checks And document everything. Photos, videos, behind-the-scenes moments all make up the kind of content that fuels your future marketing. Most importantly, celebrate it. Because this is a big deal. Success comes from doing the steps in the right order. Not skipping ahead. Not rushing. Not trying to do everything at once. Just taking the next step. So ask yourself, “What step am I skipping right now?” Because you don’t need everything figured out. You just need to move forward. If you want help mapping out your first six months of boxes, I’d love for you to join me inside my 6 in 60 Workshop. Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 33m 06s | ||||||
| 4/22/26 | ![]() 249: Being YOU Is Your Subscription Box Superpower | If you’ve ever found yourself wondering… “Am I different enough?” “Is my idea good enough?” “Is this niche too saturated?”“ Why would someone choose me?” You’re not alone. I hear these questions all the time, and today I want to shift the way you’re thinking about all of it. Because the truth is: You don’t need a better idea. You don’t need a more unique niche. You don’t need to be more like someone else. You need to be more you. Because being you? That’s your superpower. And the best part is it’s free. Here’s what I see happening behind the scenes. You’re building your subscription box, but you’re also watching everyone else. Their websites, their branding, their content. And instead of getting clarity, you start second-guessing yourself. You pull back and decide to play it safe. You start watering things down. And before you know it, your box starts to feel like it could belong to anyone. And if it could belong to anyone, it won’t stand out to anyone. Subscription boxes aren’t just about products. They’re about experience. People don’t stay subscribed month after month just because of what’s inside the box. They stay because of how it makes them feel and how it connects to their life. And that experience comes from you. When you try to remove yourself from your brand, you remove the very thing that makes it stand out. Your niche isn’t just “self-care” or “books” or “gifts for moms.” That’s just the starting point. Your real niche is that category plus you. There could be ten boxes in the same category, but they each feel completely different depending on the person behind them. So when you think, “Someone is already doing this,” you’re right. But they’re not doing it like you would. And that difference is exactly what your people are looking for. Choose a niche you actually care about.If you’re not excited about it, it will show. And if you are? That will show too. Let people see you. Show up on stories. Share your thoughts. Let your audience hear your voice. People don’t follow products, they follow people. Use your real voice. You don’t need to sound polished or “professional,” you need to sound like you. That’s what creates connection. Think beyond the product. Your box is an experience and that experience should feel like your energy, your style, your perspective. What’s Really Holding You Back? It’s not strategy or time or lack of resources. It’s fear. Fear of being seen. Fear of being judged. Fear of not being “enough.” But you don’t need to be for everyone. You just need to be for the right people. Because the right people aren’t looking for the “best” box. They’re looking for the one that feels like it was made for them. You don’t need to be louder or more polished. And you don’t need to be more like anyone else. You just need to be more you. Because that’s what builds connection. That’s what makes your box stand out. And that’s what keeps subscribers coming back month after month. Join me for this episode of the Launch Your Box Podcast as I break down why being YOU is your biggest advantage, how it shows up in your brand, and what to do this week to start leaning into it. Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 19m 32s | ||||||
| 4/15/26 | ![]() Spring Sales: How to Generate Extra Revenue with One-Time Boxes | Spring is here, and it’s the perfect time to bring in some extra revenue—even if you don’t add any new subscribers. In this episode, I’m sharing two super simple, super effective ways you can generate quick cash flow this season by creating limited-time, one-time boxes your audience will love. These strategies work, whether you want to clear out inventory or make the most of gift-giving opportunities. Spring is the perfect time to launch limited-time boxes to bring in extra revenue and keep your audience engaged. Two of my favorite spring offers are Mother’s Day Gift Boxes and Spring Cleaning Mystery Boxes. They’re easy to curate, fun to promote, and they provide an injection of cash into my business. One-time boxes serve a specific purpose in your business, giving you a quick revenue boost without the need for new subscribers. One-time boxes are: Easy to market–seasonal urgency or limited quantities A great way to re-engage and re-energize your email list Perfect for testing new themes or audiences A low-commitment way for new customers to try your brand One-time boxes require you to temporarily shift your focus from recurring subscriptions to creating hype and excitement around these one-time purchases. Mother’s Day is like Christmas in May for your business. Make the most of this gift-giving holiday and create one-time boxes. Some examples that have worked great for me and members of Launch Your Box include: Self-care for moms Mom’s Night In “Treat Yourself” boxes for moms to buy for themselves (because yes, moms will buy for themselves) Sarah’s One-Time Mother’s Day Box Pro tips: Start promoting in mid-late April Build a waitlist and create urgency Offer themed packaging and gift notes Ship in early May– make order deadlines clear Price one-time boxes similar to your subscription price or average order value (AOV) Turn extra inventory into profit—without running a clearance sale. Mystery boxes: Create FOMO and excitement Let you surprise and delight customers Help clear shelves of inventory and bring a revenue boost to your bottom line Spring Mystery Boxes Pro Tips: Curate using past box items or extra stock Offer 1–2 price points Include at least one high-value item in each box Make value messaging very clear: e.g., “$100 worth of products for $50” Marketing these seasonal boxes doesn’t need to be complicated. Keep it simple and show up. Go LIVE on social media to build excitement and show sneak peeks Email your list—your list is your best sales tool Social media content: unboxings, packing videos, behind-the-scenes Paid ads to warm audiences for last-minute sales Pick one of these seasonal box ideas and:: Set a launch date Build a waitlist Start planning your promo schedule Grab your notebook and join me on this episode as we talk through Mother’s Day Boxes, Spring Cleaning Mystery Boxes, and how to use both to re-engage your audience, boost sales, and build even more excitement around your subscription box business. Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 21m 44s | ||||||
| 4/8/26 | ![]() 248: I Almost Sold My Subscription Box… Until the Numbers Changed Everything with Ciara Stockeland | In this episode, I’m taking you behind the scenes of my business. How I got to the point of wanting to sell, what changed, and how understanding my numbers completely shifted the direction I was headed. I invited Ciara Stockeland, founder of Inventory Genius, onto the podcast and into my business to help me take a real look at my numbers. Ciara works with product-based business owners to help them understand inventory, cash flow, and profit in a way that actually makes sense. If you haven’t heard my earlier conversation with Ciara, you can listen to that HERE. For years, my business looked successful. And like a lot of entrepreneurs, I believed if there’s money in the bank, everything must be fine. But I wasn’t paying close attention to profit margins, inventory value, or cash flow. I knew enough to run the business, but not enough to make strategic decisions about its future. When Ciara and I started working together, we went straight into the numbers. (We joked about it feeling like she was digging through my “panty drawer,” but honestly, that’s exactly what it was.) And for the first time in a long time, I wasn’t guessing anymore. One of the biggest shifts was finally understanding my profit margins. Before this, I wasn’t consistently tracking cost of goods, product level profitability, or subscription box margins. So we added cost of goods to every product in Shopify. We built a monthly subscription box profit spreadsheet. And here’s what surprised me: We didn’t start by raising prices. We started by asking: Where are we overspending? Can we reduce packaging costs? Can we make better buying decisions? At one point, I had about $80,000 in inventory sitting on my shelves. That’s not just inventory. That’s cash, just not in the bank. So I made some big changes: I stopped overbuying inventory. I shifted to just-in-time inventory. I started selling what I already had. And my sales didn’t drop, but my margins improved. When we separated out my revenue streams, something became very clear: Subscription boxes = majority of revenue One-time products = more work, less profit And yet, I was spending most of my time on the part of the business that wasn’t driving the most return. At one point, I thought, “I think I want to sell this business.” We cleaned up the financials, worked with a broker, and got multiple offers. It felt like the right next step. Until it didn’t. During a pause in the selling process, I had space to think. And I realized I didn’t necessarily need to sell the business. I needed to change how it operated. So I made a plan to move to a fulfillment center, simplify my operations, and focus on subscription-based revenue. And when I ran the numbers I discovered I could increase my profit significantly without growing sales. A year ago, I didn’t have the information I needed to make that decision. Now I do. And that’s the difference. If you’re feeling overwhelmed or unsure where to start, focus here: Get a bookkeeper Track your profit margins Add cost of goods to every product Reduce excess inventory Make decisions based on real data You don’t have to overhaul everything overnight. But small, intentional changes can completely shift your business. Sometimes you just need to look at the numbers and let them show you a better way forward. Where to find Ciara: Inventory Genius on Facebook Inventory Genius on Instagram Ciara Stockeland’s Website Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 54m 38s | ||||||
| 4/1/26 | ![]() 5 Ways to Build Your Audience Consistently | Audience building is the key to a successful subscription box launch. It’s also the key to the growth and sustainability of your subscription box business. In today’s episode, we’re talking about 5 ways to build an audience for each stage of the subscription box journey. A reality of a subscription box is that each month will also bring cancellations. They’re simply a part of doing business. And the only way to continue to grow your subscription box business is to continue to grow your audience, to get in front of new people and convert some of those people into subscribers. Focusing on these 5 things consistently is going to help you grow your audience – and you need to grow your audience to grow your business. 5 Audience Building Steps for New Subscription Box Businesses If you’re brand new and don’t have an audience yet, you need to spend time building an audience. I say it all the time. You can’t have a successful launch if you’re launching to no one! Building social media content - get your social pages going and build content on those pages. Get a minimum of 10 posts up right away. See 10 Post Ideas When Starting Your Business Get super consistent. Post daily and work up to twice a day. Share on your personal profile - share from your business page onto your personal page. People in your personal network are part of the audience you’ve already built. Let them help you expand your reach. Set up a page like ad - these ads are simply an introduction to you and what you do. People simply click the thumbs up and then they’re following your business page. This pushes you in front of people you’d never get in front of. Launch Your Box members, find the training inside the “Building Your Audience” module. Video - short video and LIVEs - Let your audience get to know you. Listen to episode 170 to learn how Tracey Phillips built an amazing audience of over 100,000 people by consistently doing LIVE videos. Set up your email CRM - part of building your audience is building your email list. Our favorite email CRM is Klaviyo. 5 Audience Building Steps for Established Subscription Box Businesses If you are selling products, actively building an audience, or already have a subscription box, these 5 steps are for you. Make these a habit. You should be doing them all year round. Run a subscription giveaway - do one at least once a year. Launch Your Box members, find the training inside the “Building Your Audience” module. Create a lead magnet for your ideal customer - build your email list with a lead magnet! This is typically a digital item you give away for free in exchange for someone’s email. Every business needs a lead magnet and should be running one year-round. Get ideas for email opt-in freebies. Run ads - run three types of ads year-round: lead magnet ads, page like ads, product ads. Every legit business needs a marketing budget. You need to run ads. Ads are the best way to get in front of cold audiences. Go LIVE and connect with your audience regularly - get consistent and put it on your calendar so your audience knows when to find you and you are held accountable. Create a consistent social media plan - create a template for posts, a plan for video, and a schedule for switching out ads. 10 Post Ideas When Starting Your Business Episode 170 of The Launch Your Box Podcast Downloadable Email Opt-In Freebie Ideas * These show notes contain affiliate/referral links. I could make a commission at no charge to you if you purchase my recommended products. Please read my disclosure and privacy policy HERE. Subscribe to the podcast on your favorite podcast platform and leave a 5-star rating and a review! Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 25m 35s | ||||||
| 3/25/26 | ![]() The Costs of Starting a Subscription Box | Do you get excited thinking about starting a subscription box but worry about what it will cost to get started? A subscription box is an eCommerce business which means there are start-up costs involved just like with any other online business. These costs can vary depending on what you want to do. You can be profitable from month one, but you have to understand your costs. Understanding them helps you: Price your subscription box Market your subscription box Stay on budget Stay profitable from What are these costs? There are five categories of costs you need to consider. 1 - Product Costs - Product cost is the actual expense of goods for each item you will put in your subscription box each month. Whether you make the items yourself, buy them wholesale, or source them from overseas, these costs will make up the highest percentage of your box costs. When calculating product costs, make sure to include the shipping costs to you. This can have a big impact on your overall product cost and needs to be tracked and planned for. 2 - Packaging Costs - There are so many variables when it comes to packaging costs. You can ship your subscription box in a basic box, custom box, or go without a box and use a poly mailer. Packaging isn’t just about the outside of the box. You also need to consider the cost of stickers, shreds, tissue paper, inserts, tape, etc. - anything you use to get your boxes ready to ship. 3 - Fulfillment Costs - Your fulfillment costs are made up of packing and shipping costs. Both can be difficult to figure out when you’re first starting out. Packing costs include the labor it takes to package each subscription box. Third-party fulfillment companies pack and ship your boxes for you. Shipping makes up the other part of your fulfillment costs. Shipping can be VERY expensive and shipping costs vary widely depending on the destination. 4 - Tech Costs - A subscription box is an eCommerce business. In other words, you need tech in order to run your business. Before you can even get your subscription box up and running, there are several tech pieces you need to have in place. Website Payment Processor Shipping Software Email CRM 5 - Advertising Costs - I always want you to focus on generating organic traffic, but there comes a time when you’ll want to add paid advertising to your marketing plan. Advertising costs range from printed flyers to online ads. These costs need to be factored into your initial and ongoing costs for your subscription box business. Start simple. Scale gradually. Manage your costs. You can start a subscription box and stay profitable… from the beginning. Wondering about the costs of starting a subscription box? Join me for this episode to learn about the 5 main categories so you can confidently price your box and be profitable in month one. Episode 61 - What Can a Fulfillment Center Do for My Subscription Box Business? Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join today! | 25m 48s | ||||||
| 3/18/26 | ![]() 247: What Changed Everything in Her Subscription Box Launch with The Crafty Brick | What happens when a creative business owner stops trying to figure everything out alone, follows a proven plan, and finally gives herself permission to show up more boldly? In this week’s episode of the Launch Your Box Podcast, I sat down with Courtney Brickner of The Crafty Brick to talk about the journey from one-off handmade products to recurring revenue through a subscription box. Courtney is a newer member of Launch Your Box, but in just a few short months, she has gone from exploring the idea of a subscription to launching one, gaining subscribers, and building real momentum. Her story is fun, honest, and incredibly encouraging, especially if you’ve ever poured your heart into launching something that didn’t sell the way you hoped. Courtney shares how she started her business while raising her family, how content creation unexpectedly opened new doors, and how her love of crafting and community eventually led her to create something subscribers wanted every month. What makes this conversation so powerful is that it doesn’t skip over the hard parts. Courtney talks openly about failed launches, the fear of emailing too much, the discomfort of trying a new approach, and what changed when she stopped relying on guesswork and started following a real launch strategy. Along the way, she built a subscription box experience around her audience’s love of creativity, connection, and a little bit of competition. What started as a one-time mystery craft project evolved into The Crafty Challenge Club, a subscription that gives members a monthly project, access to a private community, and a fun reason to keep coming back. One of the biggest takeaways from this episode is that visibility matters more than most business owners think. Courtney realized that in previous launches, she wasn’t necessarily being rejected, many people simply didn’t know what she was offering because she wasn’t talking about it often enough. This time, she showed up consistently. And that consistency made all the difference. She also shares what it looked like to launch with a goal of 40 subscribers, hit 37 in her first launch, and then grow to 50 by month two. More importantly, she talks about what those subscribers really represent: not one-time purchases, but recurring revenue and a business model that finally gives her room to breathe. Courtney and I also dug into the behind-the-scenes shifts that often matter just as much as the sales. We talked about fulfillment systems, simplifying variations, planning content from one box in multiple ways, and learning to think about scalability earlier than most people do. If you’ve been wondering whether your idea could become a subscription, whether you’re talking about your offer enough, or whether it’s possible to recover from a disappointing launch, this conversation will give you both perspective and momentum. In this episode, you’ll hear more about: the role content creation played in growing her audience and visibility how she used a waitlist, live video, and consistent content to build demand the systems and fulfillment changes that are already helping her scale why “do it scared” may be exactly the advice you need right now Courtney’s story is proof that you do not need to have everything perfectly figured out before you begin. You need a solid idea, a willingness to stay visible, and the courage to keep going even when things feel messy. Where to find Courtney: The Crafty Brick on Facebook The Crafty Brick on Instagram The Crafty Brick on YouTube The Crafty Brick Website Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 48m 41s | ||||||
| 3/11/26 | ![]() 5 Simple Steps to Adding a Subscription to Your Product-Based Business | Do you have a product-based business? Are you selling products via an Etsy store, in a pop-up shop or a retail store? Are you selling one-off products online? Adding a subscription box to your existing business is a no-brainer and can offer you so many benefits! Adding a subscription box provides: A stable, predictable revenue stream - recurring payments benefit your business in so many ways, including stabilizing your cash flow. Customer loyalty - subscribers have committed to regularly purchasing products from you. Increased lifetime value (LTV) - do you know the LTV of your customers? My subscribers stay for an average of 18 months, generating thousands of dollars of revenue each. Opportunities for cross-selling and upselling - pair your box items with additional one-off items from your shop. Scalability - packing and shipping 500 of the same thing is much more efficient than 500 different orders. Have I convinced you to add a subscription box to your business? I have 5 simple steps to follow to make it happen. Identify your best customers: Who are they? How often do they shop with you? Take a look at your top 20 customers and dial into who they are. Identify your best-sellers: What categories are your best sellers? What do people buy from you repeatedly? What are people asking for more of? Set your pricing structure: What is your average order value (AOV)? What is the AOV of your top 100 customers? Price your subscription box in that range. Create exclusivity and scarcity: What are the benefits of being a subscriber? Make items only available in the box. Make them only available by subscription. Create FOMO with your customer base - make them want to be part of something exclusive. Create a great user experience: Are your website and the checkout process clear and easy to follow? Make it easy for people to update or cancel their subscriptions. Provide a higher level of customer service - remember your subscribers are the VIPs of your business. A bonus piece of advice, which is really the best piece of advice, is to talk about your subscription box a LOT. If you want to create a business that is 75% recurring revenue instead of depending on one-off sales, you’ve got to make it the main thing in your business. And that means talking about it… a lot! Join me for this episode to learn how having a subscription box can change the game for your business. Predictable inventory, better cash flow, monthly recurring revenue, and more. Follow 5 simple steps to get started today! Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join today! | 27m 40s | ||||||
| 3/4/26 | ![]() 246: 7 Reasons You Should Start a Subscription Box in 2026 | In today’s economy, subscription is still one of the smartest models you can build. Social media reach is unpredictable. Algorithms shift constantly. Ad costs are higher than they were just a few years ago. Customers are more thoughtful with their spending. And if you rely on one-off sales, you know the pressure never really stops. You sell today, and tomorrow you have to start all over again. And that’s exactly why subscription makes so much sense right now. In 2026, most people don’t want more choices. They want fewer decisions. They want someone they trust to curate and deliver something meaningful to them on a consistent basis. That’s what a subscription box does. 1. Recurring Revenue Creates Stability When you have recurring revenue, you’re not waking up every day wondering what needs to sell in order to cover expenses. You can forecast income. You can plan inventory more confidently. You can make decisions from a place of strategy instead of survival. 2. You Don’t Have to Constantly Sell Customers opt into ongoing buying. They don’t have to re-decide every month whether they want to purchase again. That reduces decision fatigue for them and pressure for you. It doesn’t eliminate marketing, but it does reduce the daily grind of chasing one-off transactions. And for many business owners, that shift alone is worth everything. 3. Community Is the Competitive Advantage Subscription naturally creates shared experiences. Whether it’s a book club, a faith-based box, a hobby subscription, or a niche lifestyle brand, subscribers begin to feel like insiders. They anticipate what’s coming. They talk about it. They look forward to it. When someone subscribes, they’re not just buying a product. They’re choosing to be part of something ongoing. 4. Inventory Risk Is Lower Than You Think Instead of buying inventory and hoping it sells, you’re buying based on actual subscriber demand. You’re not guessing what might move off a shelf. You’re fulfilling commitments that have already been made. 5. The Tools Available Today Make It Easier AI can help draft emails, product descriptions, landing pages, and ad copy. Subscription platforms automate billing and renewals. Customer service systems streamline communication. You don’t need to know how to do everything manually. You need to understand how to leverage the tools available. The barrier to entry is lower than it has ever been. 6. You Can Start Smaller Than You Think Starting lean gives you feedback. It builds confidence. It allows you to grow intentionally instead of rushing to scale before you’re ready. 7. Subscription Builds Long-Term Wealth Subscription increases customer lifetime value. It creates predictable cash flow. It builds repeat buying behavior. Over time, it turns your business into an asset instead of a collection of random transactions. That means more stability, more flexibility, and more options for your future. If you’ve been waiting for the “right” time to start a subscription box, I truly believe 2026 is one of the best environments we’ve seen for it. Start researching. Build a waitlist. Validate your idea. Don’t let another six months pass wishing you had started sooner. Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 19m 14s | ||||||
| 2/25/26 | ![]() 245: From Guessing to Growing: The Shift That Doubled Her Subscribers with The Cheerful Baker | In this episode of the Launch Your Box Podcast, I’m welcoming back Lauren Jacobs of The Cheerful Baker. You might remember Lauren as the incredibly talented cookie decorator who leveraged her appearance on the Christmas Cookie Challenge on Food Network to launch a cookie cutter subscription box. For years, she wondered whether her box was best suited for hobby bakers, business owners, or casual decorators. Instead of continuing to guess, she sent a short survey to her subscribers and gathered real feedback. Then she took that survey data, along with her subscriber list and demographic information, and uploaded it into ChatGPT to help her analyze it. What she received back was surprisingly detailed. It identified patterns in age, location, business ownership, and behavior that she had never clearly articulated before. For the first time, she felt confident that she understood who she was actually serving. The results didn’t explode overnight, but they built steadily. She monitored her campaigns inside Ads Manager, allowed them time to optimize, and then made adjustments based on performance. One variation - a chicken-themed design - began outperforming everything else. She turned off the weaker ads and allowed Facebook to allocate the budget toward the winning creative. That single campaign brought in more than 80 new subscribers and nearly doubled her box. What changed was her understanding of acquisition cost and lifetime value. Once she understood how much it cost her to acquire a subscriber and how long that subscriber typically stayed, she stopped viewing ad spend as loss and began seeing it as investment. That shift in mindset removed a tremendous amount of fear. Then she exported four years of Shopify sales data and used ChatGPT to help her identify patterns in growth, seasonality, and subscriber behavior. The analysis revealed something powerful: her subscription had grown an average of 26% every year. It also showed clear seasonal trends in acquisition and cancellations. With that information, she built a subscriber growth forecast for the year. She matched her strongest themes with historically strong acquisition months. She set realistic monthly goals instead of vague annual hopes. And for the first time, she could see the year mapped out in front of her. Lauren’s subscription box has paid for both of her sons’ college tuition and living expenses. Her oldest is graduating this year. Her youngest is halfway through. Her goal was never to build a million-dollar business. It was to send her children into adulthood debt-free. And she has done exactly that. She has also grown into a confident, data-informed business owner along the way. What I love most about Lauren’s journey is that she did not start out organized or analytical. She started by being creative, hopeful, and willing. Over time, she layered in systems, strategy, and data. That progression is available to anyone who is willing to implement what they learn. If you’ve been operating on instinct alone, this episode is your invitation to add structure to your creativity. The combination is powerful. Join me for this episode of the Launch Your Box Podcast and learn how Lauren used surveys, data, and ads to transform her business without losing the heart behind it. Where to find Lauren: The Cheerful Baker on Facebook The Cheerful Baker on Instagram The Cheerful Baker Website Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 29m 33s | ||||||
Want analysis for the episodes below?Free for Pro Submit a request, we'll have your selected episodes analyzed within an hour. Free, at no cost to you, for Pro users. | |||||||||
| 2/18/26 | ![]() Creating a One-Thing of the Month Subscription | Have you considered starting with a one-thing of the month subscription? You should. Why do I say that? Well, my one-thing of the month subscription is easier to manage and more profitable than my fully curated subscription box. And my one-thing of the month subscription has almost double the number of subscribers as my larger, more expensive box. When people start thinking about starting a subscription box, they think about a fully curated box. They dream about the experience they’ll provide their subscribers with all the little touches and a box filled with items that complement each other. But soon, overwhelm sets in. Creating that fully curated experience with all the little touches takes a LOT of work. And all that work and all that overwhelm can turn into not making progress. Instead of starting with a fully curated box, think about starting with one thing. There are several benefits to starting a one-thing of the month subscription. A one-thing of the month subscription: Has the lowest barrier to getting started. Fewer vendors to work with. Lower start-up funds. Packaging that is simple and the same each month! Is easier to fulfill and ship. Has the potential for higher profit margins. Brainstorm what your one item could be by asking yourself: What is your best-selling item? What do people repeatedly buy? What do people constantly ask you for more of? Your one-thing of the month could be: Something fun - a no-frills way for subscribers to treat themselves. Something consumable - subscribers never run out! So many Launch Your Box members have wildly successful one-thing of the month subscriptions. Some of the “one things” their happy subscribers receive include: T-shirts Candles Pizzelles Nail polish Earrings Door hangers Washi tape Start brainstorming what you can turn into a one-thing of the month subscription and move one step closer to launching your subscription. How does a subscription that’s easier to manage and more profitable sound? Join me for this episode to learn more about why you should consider starting a one-thing of the month subscription. Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 20m 31s | ||||||
| 2/11/26 | ![]() 244: Ask Sarah: What’s the Most Costly Mistake New Subscription Box Owners Make? | In today’s Ask Sarah episode of The Launch Your Box Podcast, I’m answering two powerful questions from Launch Your Box member Tabitha Dragonberry, the founder of Funberry Kids. And these are questions I know a lot of you are asking, too. Tabatha’s first question? “What is the biggest mistake new subscription box owners make?” It’s one I see all the time. And it’s one I made myself when I started. Trying to be for everybody. When you try to build a box that pleases everyone, you end up attracting no one. Your messaging gets muddy. Your products miss the mark. And instead of standing out, you blend in. Tabatha and I talked about: Why choosing a narrow niche leads to faster growth The specific ways a too-broad audience creates costly problems, especially with inventory How to make decisions faster and more confidently by knowing who your box is for Tabitha’s second question is just as important as the first. Maybe even more so. She asked: “What should a first year in business really look like?” And my honest answer? Probably not what Instagram is telling you. Your first year isn’t supposed to be your biggest year. It’s supposed to be the year where you learn how to be a business owner. Where you test things. Where you build systems. Where you figure out how to keep showing up, even when the numbers aren’t blowing you away. We talked about: The slow but meaningful signs of progress to look for in your first year Why it’s okay to have small numbers at the start How your mindset shapes your experience, especially in those early months Why success in year one looks more like momentum than massive revenue If you’re in your first year, or gearing up to start your subscription box, I hope this episode helps you stop putting pressure on yourself to get everything right, right away. Growth is possible. But first, you need a strong foundation. Join me for this episode where I clear up the confusion about what to expect in your first year of business and share how to avoid the most common misstep I see new subscription box owners make. Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 18m 25s | ||||||
| 2/4/26 | ![]() 243: Ask Sarah: How Do I Grow on Social Media With No Budget? | In this week’s Ask Sarah episode of The Launch Your Box Podcast, I’m answering a question I hear all the time from subscription box owners who are doing the work - posting consistently, showing up - but still feel like no one’s seeing it. Staci asked: “How else can I get followers on Facebook and Instagram? I’m currently posting on my Facebook page but haven’t done any ads yet because of my budget. What else can I do to get followers for free?” If you’re growing on a tight budget (or no budget at all), this episode is for you. First, Let’s Normalize Where You Are I want you to know this upfront: if you’re showing up and posting but growth feels slow, you’re not doing anything wrong. Organic growth is slower, but it’s absolutely possible. And you are not alone in this stage. Why the Right Followers Matter More Than More Followers Before we talk tactics, I ground this conversation in something important:It’s not about big numbers. It’s about aligned followers. Those people who could actually become subscribers or customers. A small, engaged audience will always outperform a large, disconnected one. 5 Organic Ways to Grow (No Ads Required) 1. Start Conversations in Your ContentInstead of just showcasing your box, invite people to engage. Polls, this-or-that questions, and simple prompts work incredibly well. Example: “Would you rather get Product A or Product B in your next box?” Engagement helps your content get seen. And it’s free. 2. Show Up in Facebook Groups (Strategically)Join 2–3 groups where your ideal customer already hangs out. Don’t sell. Be helpful. When people see your value in comments, they naturally click through to learn more about you. 3. Share on Your Personal Profile (Gently)Your personal network already knows and trusts you so let them in on what you’re building. Share behind-the-scenes moments, your why, or sneak peeks, not just polished product posts. 4. Collaborate with Other Creators or Small BusinessesCollaboration is one of the fastest free growth strategies out there. Joint giveaways, co-hosted Lives, or simple cross-promotions introduce you to the right audience without spending a dollar. 5. Use Reels and Live Video (Keep It Simple)Both Facebook and Instagram prioritize video, especially Live video. Go LIVE while packing boxes, sharing a theme, or answering FAQs. It doesn’t have to be fancy. Bonus: you can repurpose Lives into reels, clips, and stories for extra mileage. You don’t need a huge audience to win. You need trust, consistency, and connection with the right people. Organic growth takes time, but when you stay visible and intentional, you’re building a foundation that lasts. Join me for this Ask Sarah episode where I break down exactly how to grow your audience organically, even with a limited budget and how to focus on growth that actually supports your business. Where to find Staci: Meditation Money Mindset on Facebook Meditation Money Mindset on Instagram Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 30m 05s | ||||||
| 1/28/26 | ![]() 242: Ask Sarah: The Box Reveal Strategy Every Subscription Owner Needs | In this Ask Sarah episode of The Launch Your Box Podcast, I’m joined by Katie of Katie’s Heart and Home. In this episode, I walk her through exactly how I approach LIVE box reveals, why they matter so much, and how I use one unboxing to create weeks (and sometimes months) of content for my business. When you go LIVE to unbox a subscription box, think about three goals: Connecting with your current subscribersSubscribers already have the box, but the LIVE gives you a chance to experience it together. Think of it like a book club. Everyone has the same thing, and you’re gathering to talk about it. Creating excitement and FOMO for new customersIf you never show what’s inside the box, how does anyone know what they’re missing? Box reveals let people see the experience. And that’s what makes them want to join. Creating content for the entire monthOne box reveal fuels emails, social posts, reels, blog content, and website SEO. It’s not “extra work,” It’s smart use of something you’re already doing. I always wait until about 90% of boxes are delivered before going LIVE. Once I know most subscribers have their box, I schedule the LIVE and let people know it’s coming. When you go LIVE: Open with a strong hook right away Share a little about your day to let people join Ask questions early to encourage engagement Start with the hero item and explain why you built the box around it Walk through the box exactly how you curated it Ask viewers to share their favorite item (even if no one is LIVE yet) And yes, sometimes no one is watching LIVE. That’s okay. Still act like they are, because the replay matters just as much as the LIVE moment. An unboxing is so much more than just showing products. Talk about: Why you chose the theme How each item connects to the others What inspired the curation How you wanted subscribers to feel when they opened the box Before you end the LIVE, always tease the next box. Share colors, patterns, or a small sneak peek, but never everything. That curiosity keeps people watching and coming back. From one live unboxing, you can create: A replay post At least two emails A fast unboxing reel Individual product posts Lifestyle photos Blog content SEO-friendly website pages If you have five to seven items in a box, you easily have a week or more of content. And for quarterly box owners, this is how you stretch one box across 90 days. You don’t need anything fancy. A sturdy overhead camera stand A phone or camera Simple lighting Hands-only filming when you don’t want to be on camera For reels, film a quick overhead unboxing, speed it up, add music and text. Quick and easy. A Note for Quarterly Subscription Boxes: Quarterly boxes can feel harder because you don’t have something new every month. But that’s exactly why box reveals matter. When you use one box intentionally, you can: Keep talking about it without repeating yourself Stay visible between shipments Continue inviting people to join or get on the waitlist Build momentum instead of going quiet If you’re not doing box reveals, especially LIVE, you’re missing out on: Deeper connections with your subscribers Visibility for your business Content you already have but aren’t using yet Your subscription box is not just a product. It’s a content engine that supports growth, engagement, and consistent sales. Where to find Katie: Katie’s Heart and Home on Facebook Katie’s Heart and Home on Instagram Katie’s Heart and Home website Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 21m 52s | ||||||
| 1/21/26 | ![]() 241: Ask Sarah: How Do I Manage Cash Flow With a Quarterly Subscription Box? | Growing a subscription box is exciting, but when all your revenue keeps going right back into growth, it can start to feel discouraging. Especially when you’re approaching the milestone you set for yourself to finally pay yourself. In this week’s Ask Sarah episode, I coach Beth, Launch Your Box member and quarterly subscription box owner. She is nearing the two-year mark with her subscription box and feeling the cash flow squeeze that comes with scaling. Beth wants to know how she can build a sustainable business that supports her, not just the box. Beth’s Question “I’d love to hear Sarah talk more about cash flow, especially with a quarterly box. I’ve been growing and it’s been a struggle to pay myself because all my money is going into growth. I planned for it to take two years before I could make money and now I’m almost there.” Overcoming Quarterly Subscription Box Challenges 1. Quarterly Boxes Are the Hardest The truth is that quarterly subscription boxes are the hardest model to run.You’re stretching cash for 90 days at a time, trying to maintain momentum between shipments, and trying to keep subscribers engaged without a monthly touchpoint. A successful quarterly box is not impossible, but it does require an intentional strategy. 2. Acknowledging the Long Game Beth set a realistic two-year growth window. That kind of planning shows she isn’t chasing quick wins. Instead she has been building something meant to last. Now that she’s nearing that mark, it’s time for a mindset shift. A truly successful business has to start supporting the owner, too. 3. Paying Yourself Is a Growth Strategy I reminded Beth of something very important. Something all subscription box owners need to hear. Paying yourself isn’t selfish. It’s what keeps you in the game. Burnout doesn’t grow subscription boxes. Sustainable owners do. 4. Four Practical Cash Flow Options for Quarterly Boxes Option 1: Add One-Time Offers Between Subscription BoxesMystery boxes, seasonal drops, or exclusive add-ons can create a “bridge” between shipments.The key is to choose low-lift, high-margin offers that don’t add stress or inventory risk. Option 2: Introduce a Small Monthly OfferThis could be a low-cost physical add-on or even a digital product that fits your brand.The goal is consistent cash flow without overwhelming fulfillment. Option 3: Pay Yourself First (Even a Little)Create a recurring “pay myself” line in the budget, even if it’s just $100–$250 a month to start.The habit matters more than the amount. Option 4: Consider Shifting to a Bi-Monthly ModelSometimes the subscription model itself needs to evolve. A bi-monthly box can offer more stable billing, easier marketing, and better cash flow, without the intensity of monthly fulfillment. 5. Navigating the Waitlist Challenge If closing subscriptions feels necessary, keep your audience warm with intention, like a VIP email list that gets first access to one-time offers.That way, your waitlist doesn’t go cold while you protect your cash flow. I reminded Beth that reaching the two-year mark she set for herself isn’t the finish line. It’s the beginning of building a business that finally gives back to her. If you’re running a quarterly subscription box and wondering how to balance growth with sustainability, this episode is a must-listen. Join me for this special Ask Sarah episode where we talk honestly about cash flow, quarterly subscriptions, and how to build a box that can finally start paying you. Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 21m 03s | ||||||
| 1/14/26 | ![]() 240: Ask Sarah: The 70% Rule for Subscription Box Content | One of the biggest challenges subscription box owners face isn’t a lack of ideas. It’s knowing what to promote, when, and how to stay focused without feeling like you’re leaving money on the table. In this first episode of our new Ask Sarah series, I’m joined by Launch Your Box member Jenn Klein, founder of The Woodland Hare. Jenn brought a question that so many box owners quietly wrestle with: “Sometimes I feel torn between promoting the subscription box and promoting other items. When I post too many things in one day, they don’t seem to be seen. Should I mainly focus on the subscription?” If you sell both a subscription and one-off products, this episode will bring instant clarity. Why This Confusion Is So Common I started by telling Jenn what I want you to hear too: you’re not doing anything wrong. This tension shows up when you care deeply about your business and you’re trying to make smart decisions. But when everything gets promoted equally, the message can get muddy. And that’s when audiences scroll past instead of taking action. Clarity isn’t about doing more. It’s about choosing a clear direction. Your Subscription Is the Main Character Here’s the core of the coaching I gave Jenn: Your subscription box is your recurring revenue engine. It’s the offer that builds stability, momentum, and long-term growth, so most of your marketing should lead there. That doesn’t mean your shop products don’t matter. It means all roads point back to the subscription. I call this the 70% Rule: About 70% of your content should lead to or support your subscription box. The remaining 30% can spotlight shop items, behind-the-scenes moments, or lifestyle content, as long as it still connects back to the box when possible. How to Promote Other Products Without Losing Focus Instead of promoting everything separately, I encouraged Jenn to think about integration. Your shop products can: Tease what’s coming in a future box Highlight past box favorites Show how items pair together in real life Reinforce the value of being a subscriber (“Subscribers saw this first!”) This is exactly how I approach my own businesses. Even when I’m showing a one-time product, the direction of the post still leads people toward the subscription. A Simple Weekly Content Rhythm We also talked through how to simplify content planning so it feels supportive, not overwhelming. A consistent rhythm might include: Sneak peeks and theme teasers Subscriber photos or unboxings Short educational posts answering FAQs Lifestyle shots showing products in use Clear, confident CTAs to join or stay subscribed The goal isn’t perfection. It’s focus. Coaching Toward Simplicity (and Ease) One of the most important reminders I shared with Jenn was this: You don’t need to be everywhere, doing everything, all the time. When you simplify your focus, your audience knows what to do. And you get to show up with more confidence and less pressure. If You’re Feeling Torn Right Now… Come back to this question: What do I want to grow long-term? Let that answer guide your content, your energy, and your decisions. Your other products aren’t going anywhere. They can support the big picture without stealing the spotlight. Join me for this special “Ask Sarah” episode of the Launch Your Box Podcast and let’s simplify your content strategy so your subscription can grow with clarity and confidence. Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 16m 33s | ||||||
| 1/7/26 | ![]() 239: Inside My Subscription Box Business: Year-End Recap and 2026 Strategy | I’m sharing a real look inside my own subscription box business. Not the highlight reel. The actual numbers, the launches that worked, the one that didn’t, and the decisions that shaped where we’re headed in 2026. The numbers never tell the whole story. But they also never lie. Always start by looking at your numbers. I added 1,300 new subscribers in 2025. What surprised me most? Some of our biggest growth didn’t happen during launches at all. What happened between launches mattered more than I expected. May and September ended up being two of our strongest months. No cart open. No big push. Just momentum doing its job. What made the difference? Staying visible instead of disappearing after launches Treating email like a growth tool, not just a reminder Paying close attention to who was already saying yes That’s also why retention became such a big win this year: I’m ending 2025 with a 94% retention rate People weren’t just buying a box once, they were staying One of my biggest - and somewhat unexpected wins - was my teacher tee subscription launch. My “baby subscription” doesn't always get a lot of attention. I ran a short, focused launch that doubled that subscription in just five days. Revenue told one story. Profit told another. After 8.5 years, I passed $6 million in subscription box sales. A huge milestone that felt great. But 2025 didn’t end up being a record year. Revenue finished 4.8% down compared to the year before Profit margins increased by 12% That shift came from smarter buying, cleaner inventory, and fewer decisions made out of panic. You can be down in revenue and still be building a healthier business. Some things in 2025 were harder than they should’ve been. We ran into backend issues that affected payments, cash flow, and retention. At the same time, social media visibility dropped hard. Content that used to perform just didn’t. If you’ve ever felt like you’re doing everything right and still not seeing traction, you’re not imagining it. This was one of those years where pivoting mattered more than pushing. Where I’m putting my energy in 2026. I’m going all in on what’s already working. That looks like: Growing subscriptions earlier in the year instead of waiting Putting more focus on email and paid ads between launches Cutting tools, products, and offers that don’t earn their keep Letting subscriptions lead instead of chasing one-off ideas When I applied the 80/20 rule, the answer was obvious. Most of the revenue in my business comes from subscriptions. So that’s where the focus stays. Before you plan anything, ask yourself this. As you head into 2026, I want you thinking about three simple questions: What worked - and how can you do more of it? What didn’t - and what are you ready to let go of? Where do you actually want to go in 2026 - and what needs to change to get there? You don’t need more ideas. You need fewer, better decisions. Join me for this episode for an honest look behind the scenes and a grounded way to think about what comes next in your own business. And if you want support along the way, come join us inside Launch Your Box. You don’t have to figure this out alone. Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 26m 35s | ||||||
| 12/31/25 | ![]() Taking Your Side Hustle to a Full-time Gig | Have you thought about taking your subscription box business from a side hustle to a full-time gig? It’s absolutely possible. I did it and so have many members of Launch Your Box. But… Before you quit your full-time job or make any major changes to your business, you need to ask - and answer - some questions. And you need to get really comfortable with your financial details, business and personal. Take your time and get real about what your goals are. Are you currently working 40/50/60 hours a week and want to work less? Do you want to make more income than you have been? The truth is, you can get there. But you’ll need to make a plan and work that plan. Start by asking yourself these four questions: What is the income you need to replace? What is the survival income you need to cover your bare bones expenses every month? What portion of that survival income can be covered by someone else (spouse, parents, roommates)? What is the initial investment you’ll need for your business (products, supplies, packaging, tech)? Understand that your business will need to be profitable before you can pay yourself. That takes time. It took me 9 months before I was able to pay myself a regular paycheck. 8 ½ years later, I pay myself a very nice salary and also pay the salaries of more than 20 employees. Join me for this episode as I take you on my journey from tiny side hustle making $200 a month to where I am now, running two multi seven-figure businesses, answering those questions, knowing my numbers, and making careful decisions every step of the way. Important Links: Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 26m 40s | ||||||
| 12/26/25 | ![]() 238: Turn Your Camera Roll into Sales This Weekend | You don’t need a photoshoot.You don’t need new content.And you definitely don’t need to overthink it. In this Friday Fuel episode, I’m sharing how to turn what’s already sitting in your camera roll into real sales this weekend using photos and videos you’ve already taken. If you’ve been telling yourself you’ll show up “when things are more polished,” this episode is your permission slip to stop waiting and start posting. Your phone is full of content that sells, you just haven’t used it yet. I walk you through exactly what to look for in your camera roll, including: Packing boxes Unboxing moments Stacked shipments Labels, inserts, and flat lays Sneak peeks of inventory Your hands assembling boxes Your workspace mid-ship Even the messy, in-progress moments count. Especially those. Your audience isn’t just buying a box. They’re buying from you. In this episode, I explain why everyday, non-business photos build trust. And how trust leads to sales. Things like: Your morning coffee while prepping orders A walk outside while thinking through next month’s box Your dog hanging out in the office A messy work table before launch A quick post office run Travel photos with a behind-the-scenes caption These aren’t filler posts. They’re connection builders. A Simple 3-Day Posting Plan (Friday–Sunday) I break it down into a realistic, no-stress weekend posting plan using only what’s already on your phone. Friday: Visibility & Light CTA Reel or short clip (packing, organizing, workspace setup) Casual text like: “Packing this month’s box. Want one?” Simple static post with a clear link-in-bio CTA Saturday: Show Value + Build Connection Carousel showing what’s inside the box Stories with behind-the-scenes clips, product shots, polls, or countdowns A quick “can’t wait for these to go out” talking clip if you want Sunday: Urgency + Final Push Reel or story of boxes stacked or ready to ship Static post with a detail shot Clear urgency: “This box ships tomorrow. Last chance to grab yours.” You don’t need to overthink it You just need to scroll through your phone and post Take Action: Pick one photo from your camera roll right now, write a quick caption, and post it before the end of the day. And remember: Real moments sell. Personality sells. Connection with your audience sells. And your camera roll already has everything you need. Join me for this episode, where I’ll show you how to scroll your camera roll, pick a few everyday photos, and turn them into connection, visibility, and real sales this weekend. No new content, no overthinking, just action. Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 10m 42s | ||||||
| 12/24/25 | ![]() 237: 5 Reasons you Should start a Subscription box in 2026 | If you’ve been sitting on a subscription box idea for way too long, this episode is for you. In today’s episode, I’m breaking down 5 powerful reasons why 2026 is an incredible time to start a subscription box. Yes, even if you’ve been watching this space for years and wondering if it’s “too late.” Spoiler alert: it’s not. Not even close. We’ll talk about market opportunity, recurring revenue, loyal customers, and why subscription boxes continue to thrive. Especially for niche, well-positioned brands. I get asked all the time: “Is it too late to start a subscription box?”The truth? The industry is still growing fast, and there is so much room for niche boxes done well. The global subscription box market passed $37 billion in 2025 It’s projected to grow past $100 billion in the next few years You don’t need a subscription box for everyone - just a box for your people. Reason #1: You Don’t Have to Constantly Sell If you’ve ever felt stuck in the daily hustle of: Posting Emailing Promoting Starting over tomorrow Subscription boxes allow you to sell once and get paid month after month, building revenue that compounds instead of resets. In a world where: Organic reach is down Ads cost more Attention is scattered Recurring revenue brings stability and peace of mind. Reason #2: You Build Loyal, Raving Fans Subscribers open more emails and engage more deeply Long-term subscribers turn into your best customers Community is one of the biggest hidden benefits of a subscription box (My average subscriber stays 17 months - and that relationship matters.) Reason #3: The Product Is Already Sold You’re buying inventory after customers have already said yes. Less risk Less waste Easier planning Better cash flow And in 2026, customers want thoughtful, intentional products, not mass-produced clutter. Reason #4: You Get to Create Something You Love In a world full of: Screens Algorithms AI-generated everything A subscription box is different. It’s real. It’s tangible. It’s personal. Whether your box is built around products, creativity, education, or connection, your passion becomes the experience, and your audience feels that. Reason #5: Predictable, Consistent Revenue Feast-and-famine sales cycles are exhausting. Subscription boxes give you: Stability The ability to plan ahead Freedom to hire help or take a break Revenue that doesn’t disappear if one post flops There is nothing like watching renewals hit your account month after month. If you think it’s “too late,” here’s the shift to make: The most successful subscription boxes aren’t broad. They’re specific. People want to feel: Seen Connected Part of something If you’ve been waiting… This is your sign. If you’re ready to move from thinking to planning, I want you to join me for my FREE 6 in 60 Workshop. In just 60 minutes, I’ll walk you through how to plan 6 months of subscription boxes that speak directly to your ideal customer. Whether you’re still brainstorming or ready to launch, this workshop will give you clarity and momentum. Join me for this episode to hear why 2026 is a smart, strategic time to launch a subscription box. And how this business model can give you the stability, freedom, and momentum you’ve been craving. Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 16m 39s | ||||||
| 12/19/25 | ![]() 236: Stop Trying to Be Everywhere: Do This Instead | Feeling like you’re supposed to be everywhere online? Instagram. TikTok. Facebook. Pinterest. YouTube. Threads. It’s exhausting. And for subscription box owners who are already sourcing products, packing boxes, fulfilling orders, and serving customers, it’s simply not realistic. In this week’s Friday Fuel episode of the Launch Your Box Podcast, we’re talking about why trying to “be everywhere” is burning you out and how choosing two primary marketing channels plus email can simplify your strategy, free your time, and help you show up with more clarity and consistency. The Mental Load of “Being Everywhere” Most subscription box owners aren’t just creating content, they’re juggling every part of their business. When you’re told you must be on every platform, it adds guilt, pressure, and overwhelm. Remember: You’re building a subscription box, not applying to be a full-time influencer. Trying to chase every social media trend only spreads your energy thin and keeps you from showing up the way your audience needs you to. Start with Momentum Before you add anything new, look at what’s already working. Are you consistently active on Instagram? Does your Facebook group get good engagement? Do your Pinterest pins get clicks? Are your Stories getting replies? You don’t need to reinvent the wheel. Build on what already has traction.Momentum is one of the most valuable assets in your business. Don’t ignore it to chase something shiny and new. The 2 Channels plus Email Formula Here’s your simple focus formula: Choose 2 Primary Marketing Channels Add Email Marketing Every Week Pick your channels based on: Where your audience already spends time Where you can show up with consistency What feels natural for you to maintain Your mix might look like: Instagram Reels & Facebook Lives Pinterest & Blog posts TikTok & Instagram Stories But no matter what you choose, email is non-negotiable. Your email list is the only audience you own, and it drives launches, waitlist signups, and sales. If a social post flops, nobody sees it.But when you send an email? It lands in inboxes. That’s powerful. Build a Repeatable Routine First Most subscription box owners don’t need more platforms. They need more consistency. Before asking “Where else should I be?”, ask: “Am I showing up consistently here?” “Does my audience know when to expect me?” “Have I built my content muscle yet?” Nail your routine on two channels plus email first. Then you can repurpose or expand once it feels easy. Action Steps Audit your energy and results: What’s working? What’s draining you? Choose your 2 primary channels and commit to them for the next 90 days. Send a weekly email (even a short one). Build the habit. Don’t add more until you’ve built consistency where you already are. You don’t need to be everywhere. You just need to be where it matters consistently. Join me for this episode and find out why doing less can actually help you grow more. Two channels. Plus email. That’s it. And I’ll show you how to make it work. Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 11m 50s | ||||||
| 12/17/25 | ![]() 235: Is Your Messaging Costing You Subscribers? | For many subscription box owners, the silent killer of conversions isn’t a lack of traffic, it’s unclear messaging. Your box might be beautifully curated and full of value, but if visitors can’t understand what it is, who it’s for, and why it matters in 10 seconds or less, they’re leaving. In this episode, Sarah breaks down exactly what strong subscription box messaging looks like, where most subscription box owners go wrong, and how to improve your message across your entire customer journey. Messaging isn’t just your homepage headline. It’s the story you’re telling everywhere: on your sales page, product listing, Instagram bio, emails, checkout page, even your cancellation flow. You understand your subscription box because you live in it, but your customer doesn’t. Clarity must come first. The 3 Core Elements Every Message Must Include Who is it for? What do they get? Why does it matter? 10 Common Messaging Mistakes 1. Messaging That Is Too Vague or Generic 2. Only Listing Features, Not Benefits 3. Trying to Appeal to Everyone 4. Unclear or Missing Homepage Headline 5. Sales Page Lacks Structure or Detail 6. Misaligned Visuals 7. Weak CTA Language 8. Assuming People Already Know What Your Subscription Box Is 9. No Emotional Connection or Transformation 10. Inconsistent Messaging Across Platforms Conduct an audit to evaluate your own message. Look at your: Homepage (especially above the fold) Sales page Product page Instagram bio About page Checkout flow Emails - especially your welcome sequence Subscription confirmation and cancellation flow By the end, you’ll know exactly where your message is strong, and where it’s confusing your customer. 5 Action Steps to Improve Your Messaging This Week Rewrite your homepage header Add hooks to your sales page headings Strengthen your product page with specifics and visuals Create a simple voice guide for consistency Get outside feedback from someone who isn’t familiar with your box Great messaging isn’t about being clever. It’s about being clear. If your ideal customer can land on your page and instantly think, “Oh, this is for me,” you’ve done your job. Listen to this episode to learn the 3 parts of strong messaging, the 10 mistakes that cost you subscribers, and the simple steps you can take this week to improve your conversions. Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 27m 28s | ||||||
| 12/12/25 | ![]() What’s Really Holding You Back? (And Why You’re More Consistent Than You Think) | Are you telling yourself you're "just not consistent"? That your schedule is the problem? That if life would just calm down for a minute, you’d finally make progress in your business? I’m calling you out (with love)in this week’s Friday Fuel episode of The Launch Your Box Podcast. Because I’ve been there, too. And what I’m sharing in this 10-minute mindset reset might be exactly what you need to break through. It all started with a stat I heard at a conference. Only 1.9% of women-owned businesses ever reach a million dollars in revenue. That number stopped me in my tracks. And it got me thinking about why so many subscription box businesses stall out before they ever really start. Inside this episode, I’m walking you through the four barriers that are actually holding you back, and the simple shift that can move you forward starting today. Get honest about what’s actually distracting you. Stop chasing new strategies and start following the roadmap you already have. Take back control of your numbers, including your profit margin. Rethink the story you’ve been telling yourself about consistency. Here’s the truth: You’re already consistent. You just haven’t chosen to be consistent in your business. Yet. And that changes now. Ask yourself: What’s distracting me from growing my business? Which of the 4 barriers is holding me back? What’s ONE thing I can do every day for the next 7 days to show up differently? You don’t need a 10-step plan. You need one simple action, on repeat. Listen now and let’s make that shift together. Because million-dollar momentum doesn’t start with a perfect plan. It starts with showing up. Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 11m 26s | ||||||
| 12/10/25 | ![]() Using Mystery Boxes to Reduce Inventory Before Year End | “Don’t bring that stale inventory into 2023!” - Sarah Williams Inventory is one of the biggest challenges product-based businesses face. Too much, not enough… and what happens if it doesn’t sell? Now, during this buying season, is the perfect time to liquidate any old or stale inventory you have sitting on your shelves. One of my favorite ways to move product and get old inventory off my shelves is by selling Mystery Boxes. They’re new, fresh, and fun for your customers and a GREAT way to reduce inventory without putting clearance tags all over everything. Whether you made a bad buy (been there), overbought for your subscription box (yep, been there, too), or you’ve just had a slower year than last year and need to move some product quickly, Mystery Boxes are a great strategy. The goal is to get your money back. Don’t focus on making a large profit or even a profit at all. Focus on getting the cash you spent on the items back in your bank account and getting space back on your shelves. The excitement of a Mystery Box is not knowing what’s inside! Mix items from past subscription boxes with items never in boxes. Make subscribers aware they might receive something they already have. These are not curated experiences like your subscription box. They are filled with items at a great value. Create different price points. Choose different size boxes, fill them up, and price them. These Mystery Boxes won’t all be the same. If you have 20 of one item and 30 of another, you can still make 50 boxes. Just make sure the items you’re putting in the boxes have a similar size and value. Get excited about these Mystery Boxes and start teasing your audience about a week before you’ll start selling them. Go LIVE, let your audience see how excited you are, and show them one of the boxes and how FULL it is! Talk about the value! Do you have inventory you need to liquidate? It’s time to let go of old product and start fresh in the new year. Join me for this episode to learn how to create your own Mystery Boxes and start liquidating! Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 23m 15s | ||||||
| 12/5/25 | ![]() Too Many Ideas? Here's How to Pick ONE Box to Launch | Have a million subscription box ideas, but no idea which one to launch? You’re not alone. So many aspiring subscription box owners get stuck right here. Spinning in indecision. Afraid to choose the “wrong” idea. And waiting for clarity that never comes. In this Friday Fuel episode of the Launch Your Box Podcast, I’m sharing a simple framework to help you move from overthinking to deciding. Because the truth is, clarity doesn’t come from thinking harder. It comes from taking action. If you’ve been stuck in idea overload, this is the mindset reset you need. Instead of chasing the perfect idea: 1 – Acknowledge that “too many ideas” is a form of fear.Coming up with a long list of ideas feels productive. But really, it’s a sneaky way to stay safe. You can’t launch five boxes at once – and you don’t need to. You just need to pick one. 2 – Use the 3 C’s to filter your subscription box options.I walk you through a simple framework to help you evaluate your ideas and find the one with the clearest path forward. Choose the idea you can build momentum around now. 3 – Let go of the pressure to pick the perfect subscription box idea.Your first box doesn’t have to be your forever box. It just has to be the one you start with. And the faster you start, the faster you learn. 4 – Make the decision and move forward.Action builds confidence. Once you’ve chosen your direction, commit. Focus on progress, not perfection. Your Friday Fuel Challenge: Pick ONE idea and talk about it this week. Share a post, send an email, or start building your waitlist around it.Because clarity follows action. And one focused idea is how you’ll finally launch your box. Need help planning your first 6 boxes once you’ve picked your idea?Join my FREE 6 in 60 Workshop at 6in60workshop.com Join me in all the places: Facebook Instagram Launch Your Box with Sarah Website Are you ready for Launch Your Box? Our complete training program walks you step by step through how to start, launch, and grow your subscription box business. Join the waitlist today! | 10m 22s | ||||||
Showing 25 of 312
Sponsor Intelligence
Sign in to see which brands sponsor this podcast, their ad offers, and promo codes.
Chart Positions
3 placements across 3 markets.
Chart Positions
3 placements across 3 markets.

