There’s a moment in every school year when someone, usually a department head, subject coordinator, or even a classroom teacher, realises they no longer have access to a tool they’ve relied on. Perhaps it was overlooked in a renewal cycle, buried in an email thread, or simply never re-evaluated for continued impact. What follows is often a frantic scramble: emails to finance, requests to IT, and sometimes an urgent appeal to senior leadership to restore access. In some cases, the process is straightforward. But in others, it can mean days or even weeks of disruption while budgets are checked, purchase orders are processed, and decisions are made.
This happens more often than we’d like to admit. Schools, despite their best intentions, often struggle with subscription management. Licenses expire without warning(or the person receiving the warning is not directly impacted by it), accounts are lost in budgetary spreadsheets, and valuable tools go underutilised while new ones are requested. Meanwhile, staff who genuinely rely on certain digital resources are left frustrated, forced to find workarounds or shift their teaching plans altogether.
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The problem isn’t just about forgetting to renew, it’s about the lack of a structured system to evaluate and track the tools we invest in. With so many stakeholders involved; teachers, department heads, IT teams, finance departments, and school leadership, subscriptions often fall into a grey area where no single person is responsible for ensuring they remain both active and useful. Schools that centralise their subscription budgets still face challenges, as tracking usage, renewals, and licensing agreements requires time and attention that many educators simply don’t have.
As a Key Stage 1 teacher and leader, a parent of two boys, and someone involved in computing education and subscription decisions in schools, I’ve seen firsthand how challenging it can be to manage these digital resources effectively on top of all your other responsibilities. Whether it’s an early years phonics app, a computing curriculum or digital citizenship platform, or a whole-school assessment tool, the problem remains the same:
- Cost: Are we spending wisely, or are we paying for services we no longer need?
- Value: Are these tools truly enhancing and thus improving our teaching and learning, or are they just “nice to have” add-ons?
- Impact: Do we have evidence that students and teachers are benefiting from these tools in measurable ways? Can we quantify and measure the impact?
A well-managed subscription strategy can be transformative, offering high-quality resources, engaging learning experiences, and streamlined workflows. However, without a clear framework to assess and maintain these subscriptions, schools risk falling into a cycle of reactive decision-making, renewing tools simply because they’ve always been there, subscribing to new ones without fully utilizing what they already have, and allowing valuable resources to lapse without a second thought. This also links to the Professional Development provided in-house on available services, but on that later!
It’s time to rethink our approach to school subscriptions, moving beyond short-term fixes and toward a systematic, sustainable strategy that maximizes both investment and impact.
The Hidden Challenge of School Subscriptions
Many schools subscribe to a growing number of digital platforms, often spread across different budgets. The IT department might handle software licenses such as Google Workspace for Education, Adobe Creative Cloud and others, CAPEX budgets held by leadership might handle SIS costs such as iSams or Verracros, while the English and Maths leads secure subject-specific platforms. The library might subscribe to a digital reading service like Overdrive as well as a Library Management system such as Oliver, and the Exams team could be managing assessment and reporting tools. In schools with a single, centralised subscription budget, there’s still the challenge of keeping track of renewals, available licenses, and actual usage, which is only complicated by the size of the school in question and the number of staff.
This fragmented approach leads to:
- Lost Access: Renewals can slip through the cracks, leading to service disruptions just when teachers and students need them.
- Duplicate Subscriptions: Different departments may unknowingly subscribe to similar services, wasting budget on overlapping tools.
- Underutilised Resources: Some tools see heavy use for the first few months but fade into the background once the initial excitement wears off.
- Endless Email Chains: Staff members have to re-request licenses, leading to administrative headaches.
A Smarter Approach to Subscription Management
To bring more structure to this process, I propose the SUBS framework, a simple yet effective way for schools to evaluate and manage their subscriptions more strategically. Before renewing or purchasing a new tool, decision-makers should ask:
S – Suitability
Does the subscription meet our current and future needs?
- Does it align with the curriculum and learning objectives?
- Is it age-appropriate and accessible for all learners?
- Does it integrate with existing platforms we use?
- Will teachers receive adequate training and support?
U – Usage
Are we actually using this tool effectively?
- How many staff members and students are engaging with it regularly?
- Are teachers incorporating it into their lessons, or is it sitting idle?
- Are there analytics or reports that show measurable usage trends?
B – Budget & Benefit
Does the cost justify the impact?
- Is this subscription providing clear value for money?
- Are there cheaper or free alternatives that offer similar benefits?
- Is it duplicating the function of another paid tool?
- What would be the impact if we canceled it?
S – Sustainability
Can we maintain this long term?
- Is there a clear plan for renewing and managing licenses?
- Do we have a review cycle to reassess its necessity?
- Is there a risk of vendor price increases making it unaffordable?
- Can we phase out underused tools without disrupting learning?
Creating a Review Cycle
To avoid last-minute renewal panic, schools need a structured review cycle that ensures every subscription is evaluated at least once per year. Ideally, this should happen one term before renewal so there’s time to assess the tool, collect staff feedback, and negotiate pricing if necessary.
A simple three-step process can help:
- Survey Usage: Gather data on how often the tool is being used and by whom.
- Evaluate Impact: Check if the tool is achieving the intended learning outcomes.
- Decide & Act: Either renew, replace, or phase out the tool based on evidence.
The SUBS Evaluation Rubric: A Data-Driven Approach to Subscription Management
While the SUBS framework provides a structured way to assess digital tools, schools need a clear, objective method to translate these considerations into action. A rubric can help quantify the evaluation, ensuring decisions are based on evidence rather than assumptions or convenience.
Why a Rubric?
A weighted rubric helps schools:
✔ Compare subscriptions fairly, avoiding bias or personal preference.
✔ Make data-driven renewal decisions, balancing cost, impact, and sustainability.
✔ Spot underused or redundant tools, preventing unnecessary spending.
Weighted SUBS Subscription Evaluation Rubric
Each question is scored on a 1-5 scale, where:
- 1 = Very Poor / Not Meeting Needs
- 5 = Excellent / Strong Alignment
Each question has a weight multiplier, reflecting its importance in the final decision.
Category | Evaluation Questions | Score (1-5) | Weight | Weighted Score |
S – Suitability | Aligns with curriculum & learning objectives | x3 | ||
Age-appropriate & accessible for all learners | x2 | |||
Integrates well with existing platforms | x2 | |||
U – Usage | Staff and students actively use it | x2 | ||
Teachers integrate it into lessons regularly | x3 | |||
Usage reports, survey responses, or analytics show engagement | x2 | |||
B – Budget & Benefit | Cost justifies impact | x3 | ||
Is there a cheaper or free alternative? (Reverse Scoring: 5 = No alternative, 1 = Many alternatives) | x2 | |||
Would cancellation negatively impact learning? (Reverse Scoring: 5 = High impact, 1 = No impact) | x3 | |||
S – Sustainability | Can we continue funding this long-term? | x2 | ||
Do we have a structured review process before renewal? | x1 | |||
Vendor pricing is stable and predictable | x2 | |||
TOTAL WEIGHTED SUBS SCORE | Max: 160-200 |
Making Sense of the Scores
Once all factors are assessed, the total weighted score guides decision-making:
Total Weighted Score | Decision |
90+ | Renew – Essential tool with strong impact and value. (High score, clearly justifies renewal. Represents a strong majority of max score.) |
70-89 | Consider Renewing – Good, but reassess costs or training. (Good score, but warrants a closer look at cost or if training could boost usage.) |
50-69 | Review & Reassess – Possible redundancy; explore alternatives. (Moderate score, signals need for serious review and exploring other options.) |
30-49 | Phase Out – Low impact or cost concerns; gradually discontinue. (Low score, suggests phasing out is appropriate.) |
Below 30 | Immediate Discontinuation – Not worth maintaining. (Very low score, tool is clearly not effective or valuable.) |
If you would like to get access to the detailed pre-formatted Google Sheets with calculation formulas included of this You can navigate here: Link
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A structured review cycle combined with a quantifiable evaluation process ensures that schools invest in impactful, cost-effective, and sustainable subscriptions. By applying the SUBS framework through your own evaluation(either supported by, or not) this rubric, decision-makers can make confident, strategic, data-backed choices, leading to better learning outcomes and smarter financial management.
Some Final Thoughts
Managing school subscriptions shouldn’t be a chaotic process filled with last-minute emails and wasted budgets, or worse double subs and underused licenses. By implementing a clear framework like SUBS, schools can make informed, strategic decisions about which tools to keep, which to reconsider, and which to phase out.
Ultimately, the goal is simple: ensure every subscription serves a meaningful purpose, is actively used, and contributes to learning in a way that justifies its cost. Schools don’t need more digital clutter; they need intentional, impactful choices that truly enhance the educational experience.
And at the end of day; Enhance student learning, not provide a digital pacifier for sub-standard teaching or planning. But more on that next time!
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