Swell vs Polar
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Swell's feed is marketing copy, not changelog signal.
The visible changelog stream is dominated by website navigation copy, customer story headlines, and category descriptions rather than release notes. Items like Try for free Log In, product-page taglines, and case studies for Spinn Coffee or Infinitas Learning are scraped marketing content. There is essentially no shipping signal to read from these entries.
Without real release content visible, no trajectory can be drawn from this feed. What can be inferred is positioning: emphasis on B2B, internationalization, and customizable storefronts suggests Swell is targeting headless commerce buyers who want flexibility, but that's a marketing-page reading, not a roadmap reading.
The next observable signal will likely be more of the same marketing-page captures unless the changelog source URL is corrected. A genuine product update is not predictable from what's here.
Polar fills out the merchant-of-record toolkit B2B SaaS actually needs — meters, multi-currency, team accounts.
Polar's recent run is a focused buildout of B2B billing primitives that compete directly with Stripe Billing and Lago. Meter Units add value-multiplier support so usage metrics can be ingested in raw counts and priced in customer-friendly units. Pending subscription changes are now visible in both dashboard and customer portal. Multi-currency product pricing lets merchants set per-currency prices on the same product. Team Member Management for B2B brings owner/billing-manager/member roles. Every entry appears duplicated in the feed.
Polar is no longer just an indie-developer monetization tool — the recent surface reads like a serious B2B SaaS billing platform. Usage-based pricing primitives (meters with custom units), multi-currency, scheduled subscription changes with customer-portal visibility, and B2B team management collectively close the gap with the standard checklist enterprise buyers compare against. The trajectory is clear: target SaaS companies that previously had to choose between Stripe Billing's complexity and a smaller-but-simpler tool.
Expect more usage-based primitives — tiered metering, prepaid credits, free-tier graduation flows — given the meter-unit foundation just landed. Tax-handling improvements (more jurisdictions, automated reconciliation reports) are likely next given the multi-currency push. SOC 2 / SAML enterprise checklist items will probably become visible too if the B2B push continues.
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