Software has a quiet way of piling up. A trial here, a “we should try this” there, and suddenly your business is paying for dozens of tools — many overlapping, several barely used. Industry estimates put wasted SaaS spend at roughly 30% of the total, which adds up fast. Here is a practical audit to take back control.
Step 1: List every subscription
Pull your card and bank statements for the last three months and write down every recurring software charge, with its monthly cost. Most teams are surprised by how long the list is — and by tools they forgot they were paying for.
Step 2: Tag each tool by job
Next to each tool, write the single job it does: CRM, email, design, writing, analytics. The moment two tools share a tag, you have found possible overlap — and a candidate to cut or consolidate.
Step 3: Score usage honestly
Mark each tool as daily, weekly, monthly, or rarely. Anything in “rarely” that isn’t critical is a cancellation candidate. Be honest — the sunk cost of a tool you “might use” is rarely worth the monthly fee.
Step 4: Consolidate where you can
Many platforms now bundle features you are paying for separately — a CRM that includes email, or a design tool that handles social scheduling. Replacing three narrow tools with one capable platform often cuts cost and reduces the integration headaches.
Step 5: Rebuild intentionally
Once you’ve trimmed, design the stack you actually want rather than the one that accreted by accident. Our ready-made stacks show lean, compatible combinations with their real monthly cost, so you can benchmark your spend against a sensible baseline.
Run this audit twice a year and SaaS sprawl never gets a chance to take hold.