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Checklist6 min readUpdated May 18, 2026

How to Prepare for Creem Review as an Indie SaaS Founder

A practical checklist for explaining your product, pricing, and support clearly before a Creem onboarding review.

How to Prepare for Creem Review

Creem is attractive to founders who want a broader revenue workflow, but the website still shapes the onboarding conversation. The fastest way to prepare for review is to make the site look complete, supportable, and honest about what the business sells.

Explain the product directly

Reviewers should understand what the customer buys in one pass through the homepage and pricing page. If the site leans too heavily on aspirational copy, the business may feel less grounded than it really is.

Tighten pricing and billing language

Founders should make plan structure easy to understand. That includes billing cadence, cancellation timing, and whether any plans are annual or usage-based. Billing clarity lowers the odds of follow-up questions.

Add the missing trust pages

Privacy, terms, refund or cancellation details, and support links all help the site look operationally real. A reviewer is more likely to trust the company when customers can find these pages without friction.

Make support visible

Creem-ready sites should make it easy to understand how customers reach support. A visible support page or support email is usually enough. The key is to avoid the impression that the company is hard to contact once money changes hands.

Checklist before applying

  1. Rewrite vague homepage copy.
  2. Clarify recurring billing and plan logic.
  3. Add or update trust pages in the footer.
  4. Publish a visible support path.
  5. Review all public pages for consistency.

Why this helps

Most founder sites are closer to approval-ready than they think. The biggest gaps are usually not technical. They are copy, structure, and missing policy links. Clean those up first, and the onboarding discussion starts from a stronger baseline.