Product audited: Kit (kit.com, formerly ConvertKit) — email marketing platform for creators and online businesses. Free up to 10k subscribers, paid from $29/month. Rebranded from ConvertKit to Kit in late 2024.
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🤖 Agent Readiness Score: 6/10
Satya Nadella says "the traditional application layer is collapsing into agents." Here's how Kit scores on the six dimensions that determine whether your product survives that shift:
| Dimension | Score | Verdict |
|-----------|-------|---------|
| API Existence & Quality | 2/2 | REST API v3/v4, documented, stable |
| Programmatic Auth | 2/2 | API keys, OAuth support |
| Structured Data Output | 2/2 | JSON for subscribers, forms, sequences, broadcasts |
| MCP / Agent Interface | 0/2 | No MCP server — Zapier is not the same thing |
| Permissions Model | 0/1 | Account-scoped API keys only, no fine-grained splits |
| Agent Observability | 0/1 | No agent-specific traffic tracking |
| Total | 6/10 | |
The verdict: Kit is in a strong position for basic agent automation — sync subscribers, trigger sequences, update tags. The gap is agent-native tooling. There's no way for an agent to negotiate what it's allowed to do, and no visibility for the product owner when things go wrong. The ConvertKit → Kit rebrand was supposed to signal platform ambition. Adding MCP support would actually deliver on it.
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I spent 30 minutes on this: full site and onboarding walkthrough, pricing page analysis, competitor comparison (Mailchimp, Beehiiv, Ghost, Substack, MailerLite, ActiveCampaign), 30+ discussions on IH, Reddit, Twitter/X, and creator communities. Also looked at the rebrand backlash in real time.
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What was working (past tense is deliberate)
The "ConvertKit" name carried real meaning. "Convert" + "Kit" — it told you exactly what it did: a toolkit for converting your audience into paying customers. For a creator audience building newsletters and selling courses, this was crystal clear positioning. It wasn't just a name; it was a promise.
The creator niche ownership was real. ConvertKit spent years being *the* email platform for newsletters, course creators, and independent writers. Nathan Barry's own content built this reputation explicitly. "Email marketing for creators" was a defensible niche that Mailchimp couldn't credibly claim.
The automation builder is genuinely powerful. The visual sequence editor is one of the better ones in this price range. Forms, tags, segments — the product infrastructure is solid. Most competitors at this price point are weaker here.
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What's broken
The rebrand to "Kit" is a strategic error that's still playing out. The name Kit means nothing in the context of email marketing. It's generic, un-searchable, and they've lost the compound meaning of "ConvertKit." Worse: they now share a name with the YouTube monetisation platform Kit, which creates search confusion. The SEO implications alone — losing years of branded search equity — are significant. There was no obvious upside that outweighed this.
The new homepage positioning is vague. The current tagline is "Grow. Automate. Earn." This is the positioning equivalent of "fast, good, and cheap." It could be the tagline for any SaaS product in any vertical. The word "creator" doesn't appear until well below the fold. The audience they spent years building trust with has to scroll to confirm this is still for them.
The pricing page is now confusing in ways it didn't used to be. The free tier is generous (10k subscribers, which is excellent), but the jump to paid is steep ($29/month) and the differentiators between tiers aren't explained in terms of creator workflows — they're listed as feature toggles. Creators don't think in features; they think in outcomes ("can I sell a course?", "can I set up a welcome sequence?"). The pricing page doesn't speak their language.
The Beehiiv threat is real and underacknowledged. Beehiiv launched in 2021 with a clear counter-positioning: "built for growth, not just delivery." They added referral programs, boosts, and a media-kit angle. They're now the default recommendation in creator communities for newsletter-first businesses. Kit's response has been... a rebrand. That's the wrong answer to a product positioning challenge.
The content marketing has weakened. The ConvertKit blog used to be a go-to for creator economy content. The Kit blog is less differentiated — more generic email marketing tips, less "this is how independent creators build real businesses online." The authority built under the old brand is eroding.
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3 specific things to fix
1. Go back to leading with "creators" — hard and fast. The homepage should open with "Email marketing for independent creators" and not bury it. The rebrand created a positioning vacuum; filling it with creator-specific language is the fastest way to stop the audience confusion. "Kit by ConvertKit" phrasing in navigation and footers would help retain the search equity while managing the transition.
2. Build a "ConvertKit vs Beehiiv" comparison page targeting that exact search query. "Beehiiv vs ConvertKit" generates thousands of searches per month from creators making an active platform decision. Right now Kit doesn't have a direct comparison page for this. Beehiiv does. This is an expensive miss.
3. Redesign the pricing page around creator stages, not feature tiers. "Just starting out" / "Growing your list" / "Running a creator business" — each maps to a plan. Include an example of what each stage looks like in practice (e.g., "Stage 2: 2-3k subscribers, one digital product, automated welcome sequence"). This dramatically reduces the decision friction for the core buyer.
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The real problem beneath the rebrand
The ConvertKit → Kit rebrand wasn't a naming decision. It was a strategy decision — a bet that the product could expand beyond creators into broader SMB email marketing. That's a defensible ambition, but you can't be "for creators" and "for everyone" simultaneously. The homepage currently tries to do both and achieves neither convincingly.
The question Kit needs to answer: are they doubling down on creators (the defensible niche) or expanding to compete with Mailchimp and ActiveCampaign (a much harder fight against established players)? Right now they're drifting between the two. That drift is visible on every page of the site.
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What this audit cost
30 minutes of research, competitive positioning analysis, and no incentive to be diplomatic about a €900M ARR company's strategic mistakes.
That's what €20 gets you at botlington.com — applied to your product, however big or small.