
Digitally
The Digitally – Digital Products app by Conversion Pro Plus helps Shopify store owners sell and automatically deliver digital products such as ebooks, software, videos, PDFs, license keys.
About
Digitally is a Shopify app that helps merchants sell and automatically deliver digital products such as PDFs, eBooks, software, license keys, videos, courses, and download links. It handles everything from uploading files to instantly sending them to customers after purchase.
Workflow Upload your digital product Add your files, license keys, promo codes, or custom download links into the app’s library. You can upload files directly or bulk import license keys through CSV. Configure delivery settings Set rules for each product, including: Download limits Expiration dates Sample files Email templates Branded download pages Automatic or manual license-key delivery Customer places an order Once a customer buys the product on Shopify, the app automatically fulfills the order and prepares the digital delivery. Instant delivery to the customer The customer immediately receives: An email with download links or license keys Access on the Shopify thank-you page Access from the order status page Delivery happens automatically within seconds. Track and manage downloads The merchant can monitor: Which files or keys were delivered Remaining license-key inventory Download activity and limits Product performance through analytics
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2722 dispatches from hundreds of founders, pulled from the week's best podcasts.
Day One got bought by Automattic — raised almost zero outside capital. He just listened to his users, didn't care about vanity metrics, grew really nicely, and got a fantastic exit out of it.
Zero-capital, user-obsessed bootstraps can achieve premium exits
The Day One acquisition by Automattic is Eric's proof that you do not need VC money to build a highly valuable CSS business. The journal app grew quietly by serving its locals obsessively, never chased press, and exited on the strength of genuine long-term retention. This validates the locals-first strategy: build a product so useful to the right people that valuation follows without needing headline growth metrics.
the revenue per user on the web only paywall variant D was $1.96 on the inapp purchase only that was $29... it's about a 6% drop in proceeds on the web versus the inapp purchase
Web payments at 30% Apple cut is a ~6% wash vs IAP — not the 30% windfall expected
RevenueCat's 4-variant live experiment on Dipsy found web-only checkout netted ~$1.96 per user vs ~$2.03 after Apple's 30% cut on IAP — a 6% gap, not the 30% windfall developers expect. The reason: web flows convert fewer trials despite lower fees. For apps on Apple's 30% standard rate, web billing is worth testing but not the slam dunk the fee savings suggest.
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