Why Sell Templates Instead of Just Building Automations
Something shifts in most automation freelancers’ heads around the third or fourth nearly identical client project. You build a lead-routing workflow for a real estate brokerage, get paid, move on. A few weeks later a marketing agency asks for almost the same thing — different CRM, same logic, same forty hours of rebuilding from a blank canvas, because the contract only covered that one client. That repetition is usually the moment people start asking why they keep reselling the same forty hours instead of building the workflow once and charging for it again and again.
That question is the entire case for selling templates alongside — not instead of — selling implementation hours. A service trades time for money in a straight line; a template is an asset that keeps earning after the work is finished. The economics on the service side aren’t bad: independent AI automation consultants in the US typically bill $150–350 an hour, specialists at agencies push past that, and boutique automation agencies land $5,000–$50,000 per project. The broader Upwork pool for AI automation work averaged $85–120 an hour in early 2026. None of that is small money — but every dollar of it requires another hour on the clock.
A template doesn’t care whether you’re on a client call, asleep, or burned out on automation entirely. It keeps selling. That said, the honest version of this conversation needs a reality check most “make money with n8n” posts skip: search the n8n template space on Gumroad and you’ll find a graveyard of bloated $5–$20 mega-bundles promising “8,000+ workflows” or value “worth $1,000+” that mostly sit unbought beyond a handful of curiosity purchases. The market isn’t short on supply. It’s short on templates that solve one specific, well-documented business problem instead of dumping a JSON folder on someone and calling it a product.
This guide is the practical version: what actually makes a template sellable, what fifteen specific automation ideas are realistically worth in 2026, where to list them, and the packaging decisions that separate a $29 download from a $400 one.

What Makes an n8n Template Worth Buying?
Nobody buys a workflow because the node graph looks clever. They buy it because something is currently costing them money or time, and the template makes that cost disappear. Six categories account for almost everything that actually sells.
Lead generation: businesses will always pay to fill the top of the funnel faster than a human researcher can, which is why scraping-and-enrichment workflows are the most consistently requested category on every marketplace covered in this guide.
Content marketing: publishing cadence is chronically understaffed relative to ambition, so anything that turns one piece of content into five without hiring a writer has an easy ROI story.
Customer support: support headcount is one of the first costs a scaling business tries to flatten, and a triage workflow that handles the easy 60% of tickets is a number a founder can put directly into a budget conversation.
CRM automation: reps hate data entry, managers hate not knowing what happened on a call, and a workflow that closes that gap solves two people’s problems with one build.
Reporting: weekly or monthly reporting is one of the most copy-paste-heavy tasks in any agency or marketing team, and it’s also the easiest to demo convincingly in a two-minute video.
Sales automation: anything that shortens the gap between “prospect shows interest” and “proposal in their inbox” has a direct, provable effect on close rate, which makes it one of the easier categories to price confidently.

How Much Can You Charge for an n8n Template?
Pricing in this space tracks pretty closely with how much configuration and documentation a buyer actually needs, not how technically impressive the workflow looks on the inside.
| Template Type | Typical Price | What Buyers Expect |
| Basic | $19–$49 | A single JSON file, maybe a short readme |
| Professional | $50–$149 | Setup guide, documented API requirements, basic support |
| Advanced | $150–$500 | Video walkthrough, prompt templates included, onboarding call |
| Agency Bundle | $500+ | Multiple connected workflows, white-label rights, ongoing support |
Real listings back this up. A bare-bones 8,000-template JSON pack sells for around $10 and has racked up 311 sales mostly on volume and curiosity. A more curated pack with documentation jumped from $15 to a $100 list price once it built up 194 sales and social proof. At the top end, a 50-workflow bundle marketed as individually worth $600–900 each lists for $147 — the seller is explicitly pricing the bundle below the sum of its parts to make the offer feel obviously worth it.
Three factors move price more than anything else. First, specificity — a workflow built for “dental practices running Google Ads” sells for more than the same logic labeled “marketing automation,” because the buyer doesn’t have to do translation work in their head. Second, documentation — a setup guide and a short walkthrough video routinely double what a bare JSON file can charge, because they remove the single biggest reason buyers ask for refunds. Third, how directly the workflow touches revenue or cash flow — sales and CRM templates consistently price higher than productivity-flavored ones, because the buyer can draw a straight line from the automation to a number on a P&L.

15 Best n8n Templates to Sell
These fifteen made the cut because each one solves a recurring problem with a clear, identifiable buyer — not because they’re technically interesting to build. A few of them show up across multiple marketplaces already, which is a feature, not a red flag: proven demand means you’re not guessing about whether the problem is real, only about how well you solve it.
1. AI Lead Generation Workflow
What it does: Scrapes a source like Google Maps, Apollo, or LinkedIn Sales Navigator, enriches each contact with AI-generated context, scores fit against a buyer profile, and pushes qualified leads into a CRM or spreadsheet.
Who buys it: Marketing agencies, B2B SaaS founders, and freelance lead-gen resellers who currently pay a VA or a data subscription to do this by hand.
Why businesses pay for it: Manual prospecting research realistically costs $1,500–$2,500 a month in VA time once you include enrichment and data hygiene. A workflow that runs nightly and only needs occasional QA replaces that line item outright.
Typical selling price: $79–$249 standalone; $300+ when bundled with API key setup support.
Opportunity level: High demand, but also the most copied template on every marketplace, so a generic version competes purely on price. Picking a specific niche (dental practices, e-commerce brands doing $1M+ in revenue, etc.) is what lets you charge the top of the range.
Example use case: An agency runs one instance of the workflow across twelve retainer clients, each paying $97/month for a steady feed of pre-qualified leads instead of staffing a researcher.
2. LinkedIn Outreach Automation
What it does: Sequences connection requests, drafts personalized opening messages with AI based on the prospect’s profile, schedules follow-ups, and flags replies for a human to take over.
Who buys it: B2B sales reps, recruiters, and consultants who sell services through LinkedIn rather than paid ads.
Why businesses pay for it: LinkedIn is still the highest-intent B2B channel available, and manual outreach eats two to three hours a day that most solo operators don’t have.
Typical selling price: $99–$249, frequently sold with a rate-limiting guide since LinkedIn actively restricts automated bulk actions.
Opportunity level: Medium-high. The upside is real, but buyers increasingly expect documentation on safe sending limits because account restrictions are the most common support complaint in this category.
Example use case: A solo recruiter runs candidate outreach for three open roles at once without hiring a sourcer.
3. AI Content Repurposing Workflow
What it does: Takes one long-form asset — a blog post, podcast transcript, or YouTube video — and uses AI to rewrite it into LinkedIn posts, a Twitter/X thread, a newsletter section, and short-form captions.
Who buys it: Solo creators, content agencies, and in-house marketing teams that publish more than they can realistically write from scratch.
Why businesses pay for it: Content teams are almost always understaffed relative to their publishing calendar, and repurposing is exactly the kind of mechanical rewriting AI handles well.
Typical selling price: $49–$149.
Opportunity level: High buyer volume, but it’s also the single most “tutorial-famous” use case in the entire n8n ecosystem, so differentiation has to come from output quality and platform-specific formatting, not the concept itself.
Example use case: A newsletter writer turns one weekly issue into a five-platform content calendar without adding a social media hire — a version of this exact workflow already sells on Gumroad for around $11.
4. Meeting Notes to CRM Automation
What it does: Pulls a call transcript (from Fireflies, Otter, or a similar tool), extracts action items, deal-stage signals, and next steps with AI, and writes the structured fields directly into the CRM.
Who buys it: Sales teams, agencies, and consultants whose CRM hygiene depends on reps remembering to log calls.
Why businesses pay for it: CRM data entry is one of the most universally disliked admin tasks in B2B sales, and managers know exactly how much pipeline visibility they lose when it’s skipped.
Typical selling price: $129–$349, priced higher because CRM-specific field mapping requires real configuration per buyer.
Opportunity level: High and durable. Because the setup touches a specific CRM schema, buyers are less likely to expect a free version, which protects margin better than more generic templates.
Example use case: A 12-person sales team gets back roughly five hours per rep each week that used to go into manual CRM updates after calls.
5. AI Customer Support Assistant
What it does: Triages incoming tickets against a knowledge base, answers straightforward questions automatically, drafts replies for review on harder ones, and routes anything ambiguous to a human.
Who buys it: E-commerce stores, SaaS companies, and service businesses with a support queue that grows faster than headcount.
Why businesses pay for it: Support staffing is one of the first costs a growing business tries to flatten with AI, and the case for automating first-response triage is easy to make to a non-technical buyer.
Typical selling price: $199–$499, usually sold with a setup call, since every business’s knowledge base and tone are different.
Opportunity level: High ceiling but the most hand-holding of anything on this list — sellers who skip onboarding support see the most refund requests in this category.
Example use case: A small SaaS company cuts its average first-response time during off-hours from several hours to under five minutes.
6. Automated Proposal Generator
What it does: Pulls discovery-call notes or a form submission and drafts a tailored proposal or quote document, then routes it for e-signature.
Who buys it: Agencies, consultants, and freelancers running sales processes built around proposals rather than instant checkout.
Why businesses pay for it: Proposal turnaround time correlates directly with close rate — the longer a prospect waits, the more likely a competitor gets there first.
Typical selling price: $99–$299.
Opportunity level: Medium. Genuinely valuable, but the buyer pool is narrower than lead-gen or content templates since it only applies to service businesses that sell through proposals.
Example use case: A marketing agency cuts proposal turnaround from roughly two days to about twenty minutes.
7. SEO Content Workflow
What it does: Takes a keyword or topic brief, pulls competitor content for gap analysis, drafts an outline and first pass with AI, and formats the SEO metadata block.
Who buys it: Content agencies, affiliate publishers, and in-house marketing teams running consistent publishing schedules.
Why businesses pay for it: Content production cost is usually the single biggest line item in an SEO operation, and even modest time savings per article compound fast across a weekly publishing cadence.
Typical selling price: $149–$399 — buyers in this space understand content economics well enough to pay for genuine time savings rather than novelty.
Opportunity level: High, and one of the more durable categories since publishing volume rarely goes down once a team commits to content marketing.
Example use case: A publisher runs ten articles a week with one editor doing quality control instead of three writers doing first drafts.
8. Competitor Monitoring System
What it does: Tracks competitor pricing pages, ad libraries, job postings, and changelogs, then summarizes what changed with AI and posts it to Slack.
Who buys it: SaaS founders, e-commerce brands, and marketing teams that want to react to competitor moves quickly.
Why businesses pay for it: Competitive intelligence is valuable, but almost nobody actually checks ten competitor sites by hand every day, so the information arrives late or not at all.
Typical selling price: $99–$249.
Opportunity level: Medium-high. Easy to demo convincingly, since you can show a real competitor change in the first five minutes of a sales call.
Example use case: A SaaS founder catches a competitor’s pricing change the same day instead of hearing about it from a churned customer.

9. AI Email Sequence Builder
What it does: Generates and schedules a nurture sequence from a product or audience brief, drafts subject line variants for testing, and syncs everything to the email service provider.
Who buys it: E-commerce brands, SaaS marketing teams, and course creators who need ongoing nurture content.
Why businesses pay for it: Email remains one of the highest-ROI marketing channels, and sequence writing is a recurring bottleneck that rarely gets prioritized until revenue is already being left on the table.
Typical selling price: $79–$199.
Opportunity level: Medium. The category is crowded with generic AI copywriting tools, so a template that’s tightly scoped to one platform (Klaviyo, ConvertKit) sells better than a generic one.
Example use case: A course creator launches an evergreen welcome sequence without hiring a copywriter for the first draft.
10. E-commerce Review Monitoring
What it does: Pulls new reviews from Amazon, Shopify, and Trustpilot, flags negative sentiment for urgent response, and summarizes recurring themes weekly.
Who buys it: E-commerce brands and the agencies that manage several client storefronts at once.
Why businesses pay for it: Response speed to negative reviews affects both customer retention and marketplace visibility, and most teams only catch a bad review after the damage is already public.
Typical selling price: $99–$249.
Opportunity level: Medium, with a particularly strong fit for agencies running this once across eight or ten client stores from a single dashboard.
Example use case: An agency monitors review sentiment across multiple Shopify clients without anyone manually checking each storefront.
11. Local Business Lead Finder
What it does: Scrapes Google Maps or Yelp for businesses matching specific criteria — no website, low review counts, outdated listings — then enriches contact details and scores the opportunity.
Who buys it: Web design agencies, marketing freelancers who sell to local SMBs, and outbound sales reps.
Why businesses pay for it: This is the backbone of cold outbound for anyone selling to local businesses, and manually qualifying targets this way is some of the most tedious prospecting work there is.
Typical selling price: $79–$199, often sold as the entry-point template that funnels buyers into higher-ticket implementation work.
Opportunity level: High. It’s also one of the most consistently requested templates on Gumroad, where listings specifically advertise scraping leads without paying for third-party API access.
Example use case: A freelance web designer builds a list of qualified local outreach targets in one afternoon instead of a week of manual research.
12. YouTube Content Automation
What it does: Monitors competitor or niche channels, summarizes new uploads with AI, and generates content ideas plus SEO-optimized titles and descriptions.
Who buys it: YouTube creators, agencies managing creator clients, and operators running multiple niche or faceless channels.
Why businesses pay for it: Ideation and metadata optimization are constant, low-glamour work that creators consistently underinvest in relative to filming and editing.
Typical selling price: $79–$199.
Opportunity level: Medium. The “faceless YouTube automation” niche is crowded with hype-driven products, so credibility and a real demo matter more here than feature count.
Example use case: A creator running three channels keeps a steady idea pipeline without a dedicated research assistant.
13. AI Research Assistant
What it does: Takes a topic, company, or person and pulls from multiple sources — news, public filings, social activity — to produce a structured research brief.
Who buys it: Consultants, analysts, sales teams doing account research, and content teams needing background quickly.
Why businesses pay for it: Manual research is expensive when billed by the hour, and AI compresses the legwork dramatically when the sourcing is handled carefully.
Typical selling price: $149–$399.
Opportunity level: Medium-high, but this is the template most likely to produce confidently wrong output if the source-citation logic isn’t built carefully, so reliability matters more than speed here.
Example use case: A B2B sales team preps account research before a high-stakes call in minutes instead of the better part of an hour.
14. Invoice and Payment Automation
What it does: Generates invoices from project-tracking data, sends payment reminders on a schedule, reconciles payments in accounting software, and flags overdue accounts.
Who buys it: Agencies, freelancers, and small service businesses managing recurring or project-based billing.
Why businesses pay for it: Unpaid invoices and manual reconciliation are recurring cash-flow headaches, and the fix touches money directly, which makes it an easy business case to justify.
Typical selling price: $99–$299.
Opportunity level: Medium. Less flashy than the AI-heavy templates on this list, but demand is durable since every service business eventually deals with this exact problem.
Example use case: A five-person agency cuts its bookkeeper’s monthly reconciliation time roughly in half.
15. Recruiting Automation Workflow
What it does: Screens incoming resumes against a job description with AI scoring, schedules interviews automatically, and sends status updates to candidates.
Who buys it: Recruiting agencies, HR teams at scaling companies, and staffing firms.
Why businesses pay for it: Recruiters drown in resume volume, and candidate communication is the most time-consuming part of the job that has nothing to do with actually evaluating talent.
Typical selling price: $199–$499.
Opportunity level: High — several bundled template packs found during research specifically call out an automated hiring workflow as one of their premium, higher-value inclusions.
Example use case: A staffing agency processes a much larger volume of applicants per role without adding headcount to the screening team.
Mini Case Studies
The solo builder who turned five templates into recurring income
A developer writing under the byline Ravindu Himansha documented on Medium how a $19 social-media-automation template, listed almost as an afterthought, led to five total n8n templates across multiple marketplaces generating a reported $3,200 a month roughly nine months later. The figure is self-reported and unaudited, so treat it as a data point about trajectory rather than a guarantee — but the pattern it describes (one cheap template validating demand, then expanding the catalog) matches what shows up across the higher-traction Gumroad listings researched for this article.
The blogger claiming $47K from three workflows
A separate Medium post, published under the rentierdigital byline, claims a developer earned $47,000 in a year reselling the same three workflows across multiple channels rather than building a constant stream of new ones. Like the figure above, this is a self-published, unverified claim and shouldn’t be treated as a benchmark. What’s useful is the underlying strategy it describes: list the same proven templates across your own site, Gumroad, and Lemon Squeezy simultaneously instead of spreading thin across dozens of half-finished products.
What productized agencies outside the n8n world prove about the model
The clearest documented proof that “package the repeatable work” beats “keep quoting custom projects” doesn’t come from n8n specifically — it comes from the broader productized-services world that automation builders are now following. Many Pixels, a design agency, launched in 2017 on a flat monthly fee instead of custom quotes and grew to more than 40 designers and multi-million-dollar annual revenue using that same fixed-price, repeatable structure from year one. Video-editing service VideoHusky reportedly built a $1.2 million-per-year business on an identical model: no custom proposals, just a clear package and instant checkout. Automation freelancers packaging client work into sellable templates are running the same playbook one step earlier in the value chain.
Where to Sell n8n Templates
n8n’s own workflow library
n8n’s official template library hosts over 10,000 community workflows, but it’s built on a give-first culture borrowed from open-source norms — submissions are free, and the only monetization path is the n8n Cloud affiliate program, which pays a 30% commission for twelve months on any Cloud subscriptions your template indirectly drives, not a fixed fee for the template itself. It’s genuinely useful for visibility and credibility, but it isn’t a storefront, and n8n’s own community forum confirms builders regularly ask where to sell outside of it for exactly this reason.
Best for: credibility and discovery, not direct revenue.
Trade-off: free pricing expectations are baked into the audience, so a paid listing here feels out of place.
Gumroad
By far the most active marketplace for n8n templates in practice — every pricing tier in this guide’s table has real, current listings on it. Gumroad charges a flat 10% on direct sales (30% if a buyer finds you through its Discover recommendation engine) and has operated as a full merchant of record since January 2025, meaning it handles global sales tax and VAT on your behalf.
Best for: fastest setup and the largest existing pool of buyers actively searching “n8n templates.”
Trade-off: the lowest-price end of the market is heavily saturated with generic mega-bundles, so standing out takes a sharper niche and better copy than the competition.
Lemon Squeezy
A close alternative that charges roughly 5% plus $0.50 per transaction and also operates as a merchant of record, automatically handling VAT and tax compliance. Margins are slightly better than Gumroad at most price points, and the checkout experience is generally considered more polished.
Best for: sellers who want better margins than Gumroad without building their own checkout.
Trade-off: smaller existing buyer traffic for automation-specific searches than Gumroad.
Your own website
Selling through your own checkout (Stripe directly, or a tool like Lemon Squeezy white-labeled into your site) keeps the most margin since you’re only paying card processing fees instead of a platform cut. The catch is that you’re responsible for all of your own traffic — nobody is browsing your personal site the way they browse Gumroad’s search results.
Best for: established freelancers and agencies with existing audiences or client relationships.
Trade-off: zero built-in discovery, so this works best as a second channel rather than a first one.
Niche n8n-specific marketplaces
A newer wave of dedicated marketplaces has emerged specifically for n8n: n8n Markets lists 850+ templates and also lets buyers hire vetted experts, ManageN8N’s Template Marketplace adds version control and download analytics for sellers, and AutomationWorkflows.io was built explicitly to let builders resell client-tested workflows across n8n, Make, and Zapier on commission.
Best for: reaching buyers with higher intent who are already comparison-shopping automation specifically, rather than browsing Gumroad’s general digital-products catalog.
Trade-off: smaller audiences than Gumroad for now, since these marketplaces are still building traffic.
Upwork and agency websites
Templates rarely work as standalone listings on Upwork, but agencies routinely use them as a sales funnel: a $49–$99 template builds trust and demonstrates competence, then funnels buyers toward a $5,000+ implementation engagement. On an agency’s own site, the same template often works better as a lead magnet or a low-tier offer that sits next to higher-priced retainer packages than as a primary revenue source.
Best for: agencies that already have service offerings and want templates to support sales, not replace it.
Trade-off: weak as a pure passive-income play on its own.

How to Package Templates for Higher Prices
The workflow itself is rarely what justifies a higher price. Documentation is. A JSON file with no explanation assumes the buyer already knows n8n well enough to debug your specific node configuration, and most buyers — especially the business-owner buyers who pay the most — don’t.
Setup guides: a clear, numbered list of which API keys and credentials the buyer needs, where to get them, and what each one costs monthly, removes the single most common point of friction after purchase.
Video walkthroughs: even a five-minute unedited screen recording showing the workflow running end to end measurably reduces support requests and noticeably increases perceived value, because the buyer can see the outcome before they’ve finished setup.
Onboarding and support: offering a short setup call as an add-on is one of the cleanest ways to turn a $49 template into a $249 package — it’s effectively selling the implementation hours separately from the asset itself, which mirrors how agencies already price configuration work for clients.
Prompts: since most modern templates route through an OpenAI or Claude node somewhere, sharing the actual prompt text — not just “connect your API key” — is increasingly what separates a premium template from a JSON dump. Buyers want to be able to tune tone and behavior without reverse-engineering your prompt logic.
API instructions: list every external service the workflow depends on along with rough monthly cost estimates. Buyers who get surprised by an unexpected Pinecone or embedding bill after purchase leave the worst reviews, even when the workflow itself works perfectly.

Common Mistakes
Building overly complex automations: a fifteen-node workflow that handles every edge case sounds impressive but is harder to support, harder to explain in a sales video, and more likely to break when a connected app changes its API. Simpler, narrower workflows sell better and generate fewer refund requests.
Selling generic workflows: anything labeled “Ultimate Bundle” or marketed as “worth $1,000+” with no specific buyer in mind is competing purely on price, which is exactly the race to the bottom visible across the lowest-priced Gumroad listings researched for this article.
Poor documentation: a workflow with no setup notes is, in practice, a refund request waiting to happen — and refunds on platforms like Gumroad don’t return the platform’s cut, so they cost more than they look like on paper.
No onboarding: API key and credential setup is consistently the number one reason buyers can’t get a template working, and it’s also the easiest problem to solve with a short guide or video.
Underpricing: listing a template at $5–$15 to “test demand” trains buyers in that niche to expect commodity pricing, and it’s notably common across the pay-what-you-want listings found during research, several of which still sit at a $0 default price months after launch.
Targeting technical users instead of businesses: n8n’s own user base is technical, but the business owner who doesn’t know what a webhook is, and just wants leads to stop falling through the cracks, is usually the better-paying buyer. Demos and copy written for that second person consistently outperform ones written to impress other automation builders.
Conclusion: Are n8n Templates Still Worth Selling in 2026?
Yes, with a caveat the easy-money posts tend to skip: the easiest money already left the building for generic templates. The wave of $5–$20 mega-bundles flooding Gumroad proved that volume alone doesn’t sell — specificity does. The sellers actually generating consistent, repeatable income are the ones who picked one expensive, recurring business problem, documented the solution like a real product, and sold the outcome rather than the mechanism.
That distinction matters more than anything else in this guide. “Stop losing leads overnight” sells. “n8n workflow with OpenAI and a Pinecone vector store” doesn’t, even when it’s the exact same automation under the hood. Businesses buy outcomes, not workflows, and the most successful sellers in this space have built their entire pricing and packaging strategy around that one fact.
FAQ
Can you make passive income selling n8n templates?
Yes, though “passive” undersells the ongoing work — most sellers still spend a few hours a week on support, updates when connected APIs change, and customer questions. Self-reported case studies describe ranges from a few hundred dollars a month for a single template up to several thousand a month once a seller has multiple proven templates listed across more than one platform.
Where can I sell n8n workflows?
Gumroad currently has the most active buyer traffic for this specific niche, Lemon Squeezy offers slightly better margins with similar setup effort, and dedicated marketplaces like n8n Markets and ManageN8N reach a smaller but more qualified audience. n8n’s own template library is free-only and works better for credibility than direct sales.
How much do n8n templates sell for?
Realistic ranges run from $19–$49 for a basic single-purpose workflow up to $500+ for an agency-grade bundle with documentation, white-label rights, and support. Most individually-sold templates with decent documentation land somewhere in the $50–$250 range.
Do I need coding skills to create n8n templates?
No, n8n is a visual, no-code-first platform, though comfort with APIs, webhooks, and basic JSON helps when something doesn’t connect cleanly. The bigger skill gap for most sellers isn’t building the workflow — it’s writing documentation clear enough for a non-technical buyer to actually use it.
What are the most profitable n8n workflows?
Templates that touch revenue or cash flow directly — lead generation, CRM automation, recruiting, and customer support — consistently price higher than purely productivity-flavored templates like content repurposing, because buyers can draw a direct line from the automation to a number on a budget.
Is the n8n marketplace worth using?
Worth using for visibility, not for direct revenue. The official library only monetizes through the Cloud affiliate program, so most sellers treat it as a free credibility-builder that links out to a paid listing elsewhere.
Can agencies sell private template libraries?
Yes, and it’s an increasingly common move — agencies that have built a strong template catalog for internal client work often package a curated, private version of it for other agencies or for clients who want to self-serve simpler automations rather than paying for a full implementation engagement.




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