
I’ve sat across the table from four agency owners in the last six weeks who all asked the same question. Should I join the AiSensy Whitelabel Program, or take the Lion CRM reseller licence? They were not asking which tool sends a WhatsApp message faster. They were asking which business contract would let them make money for the next three years without getting squeezed.
That is a very different question than a feature comparison. This post answers the business question. I’ll walk through how AiSensy’s partner program is structured, what Lion CRM’s reseller licence does differently, and where each one actually pays out for an Indian agency in 2026. Real INR numbers. Real margin math. No marketing fluff.
If you’ve already read my Lion CRM vs AiSensy vs Wati pricing comparison, that post compared end-customer SaaS pricing across three vendors. This post is the next layer down — it compares the partner programs themselves. Two different decisions.
TL;DR — AiSensy Whitelabel vs Lion CRM Reseller at a glance
| Factor | AiSensy Whitelabel Program | Lion CRM Reseller Licence |
|---|---|---|
| Entry cost | ~₹0 to enrol, but you commit to a monthly SaaS tier (₹999–₹2,399+/mo) per managed account | ₹399 (~$5) one-time reseller licence per workspace |
| Margin model | Resell AiSensy’s plans at MRP, partner discount taken off your buy price | You set the price your customer pays. Your margin = customer price − ₹399 |
| Whitelabel level | Branding on dashboard + custom domain on higher tiers; Meta-side cert + most billing flows still show AiSensy | Full whitelabel on dashboard + domain + emails + Chrome extension + invoicing under your brand |
| Billing flow | Customer often pays AiSensy, you get a partner cut, or you pay AiSensy and rebill | Customer pays you directly via your gateway. Lion CRM never invoices your customer |
| BSP markup | Typically Meta + AiSensy markup baked into per-conversation cost | Meta cost passes through. You decide your own per-conversation markup |
| Lock-in | Tied to AiSensy’s roadmap, pricing changes, and partner-tier rules | You own the customer relationship and the data. Migration is a contract decision, not a vendor permission |
| Best for | Agencies that want a turnkey reseller program and don’t mind sharing brand surface | Agencies that want to build a real product brand and keep margin in-house |
If you want me to skip the long version, the short version is: AiSensy’s program is a faster ramp; Lion CRM’s licence is a higher ceiling. Both can work — they are not the same shape of bet.
Compare full reseller pricing & margins on the Lion CRM pricing page →
Table of contents
What the AiSensy Whitelabel / Partner Program actually is
AiSensy is a Gurgaon-based WhatsApp Business API SaaS. Their main product is a hosted dashboard where end-customers can run WhatsApp broadcasts, chatbots, and a shared team inbox. End-customer pricing in 2026 sits roughly at ₹999/month for the Basic tier and ₹2,399/month for the Pro tier (their public pricing page is the source of truth — these numbers move).
Their Whitelabel / Partner Program sits on top of that. The way it works in practice — based on what agencies tell me they signed when they enrolled — is something like this:
- You apply as a partner. AiSensy reviews and onboards you.
- You commit to bringing accounts onto AiSensy. Each managed account still sits on one of AiSensy’s plans (Basic, Pro, or Enterprise).
- You get a partner discount off the MRP, usually a percentage off the customer’s monthly fee. That discount is your margin.
- On higher partner tiers you also get a custom-branded dashboard and a custom domain. The login screen, dashboard chrome, and some emails carry your brand.
- Meta-side artifacts — the WhatsApp Business Account, the verified-business badge, sometimes the embed-signup flow — often still surface AiSensy’s name or template-namespace under the hood.
It’s a clean program. It’s also a reseller program in the textbook sense — you are reselling AiSensy’s SaaS at a discount, with some surface branding on top. You don’t own the platform, you don’t own the contract with Meta, and you don’t control roadmap or pricing.
Two important nuances I keep flagging to agencies:
- The partner discount is a percentage of AiSensy’s MRP. When AiSensy raises prices, your customer’s bill goes up. When AiSensy adds a feature, you get it. When AiSensy drops a feature, you lose it.
- The whitelabel surface is real but partial. Customer-visible WhatsApp message templates submitted to Meta still flow through AiSensy’s WABA in many setups. That’s not a deal-breaker, but it’s not the same as owning the WABA yourself.
How Lion CRM’s reseller licence is structured
Lion CRM takes a different shape. We don’t run a partner program in the AiSensy sense. We sell a reseller licence — a one-time licence per workspace at ₹399 (~$5), and the workspace is yours.
What’s inside that ₹399:
- A fully whitelabel admin dashboard at your domain (or
admin.lioncrm.comuntil you point your own). Login screen, navigation, footer, support email — all your brand. No Lion CRM logo anywhere customer-facing. - The Chrome extension your customers install carries your brand or a co-brand of your choice.
- The WhatsApp WABA can be either yours (you own the Meta side) or hosted under our umbrella with your name on the certificate, depending on which structure you pick.
- Your end-customer invoicing is yours. We don’t see it, we don’t touch it, we don’t show up in your customer’s bank statement. Use Razorpay, Stripe, PayPal, GST invoices, whatever your CA prefers.
- You set retail pricing. Whatever a Pro plan costs your customer is your number, not ours.
So our “partner economics” are not a percentage discount off our MRP. They are all upside above ₹399. If you charge a customer ₹2,499/month, your monthly margin is ₹2,499 minus your Meta-conversation-cost and your support time. We get ₹399 once, at workspace activation.
That’s a very different shape than a SaaS partner program. It’s closer to a software OEM licence — once you’ve paid for the right to deploy it, the customer is yours.
You can confirm the licence terms and onboarding flow on the reseller admin panel at admin.lioncrm.com, or message Kuldeep on WhatsApp at +91 74260 38448 for the contract template.
Entry cost: ₹0-but-recurring vs ₹399-once
This is the part most agency founders read first and then misread. Let me make the math honest.
AiSensy partner entry cost. Zero or near-zero to enrol. You start signing accounts immediately. But every account you sign sits on a monthly SaaS plan — ₹999/mo at minimum, ₹2,399/mo on Pro. Your margin is a slice of that, recurring. If you sign 10 customers on Pro and your discount is, say, 20%, you net roughly ₹2,399 × 20% × 10 = ₹4,798/month. Cash starts flowing on Day 1, but it’s small and tied to AiSensy’s MRP.
Lion CRM reseller entry cost. ₹399 per workspace, one-time. So if you onboard 10 agency workspaces in a month, your outlay is ₹3,990. Sounds higher. But what you earn from each workspace is whatever you charge your customer minus your direct costs. If your customer pays you ₹2,499/month and your Meta-conversation cost is ₹500/month for them, you net ~₹2,000/month per workspace. Across 10 customers that’s ₹20,000/month, and the ₹3,990 was a one-time cost.
The break-even is roughly the third month. After month three, the AiSensy partner economics are bounded by your discount percentage. The Lion CRM economics are bounded by your retail-pricing decision.
If your agency is cash-strapped and can’t outlay ₹3,990 in licence fees in month one, AiSensy’s near-zero entry is easier. If you have a marketing budget and you’re already running on month-three economics anyway, the Lion CRM licence is the higher-margin call.
Sales channel reminder. The ₹399 reseller licence is purchasable via PayPal for non-Indian agencies and via direct INR transfer for Indian agencies. See the Lion CRM pricing page for the current rate card.
Margin math on a 50-client agency
Let’s do the math at a scale that matters. Assume an agency with 50 active WhatsApp-CRM customers, paying you ₹2,499/month each in retail SaaS fees. Per-customer Meta-conversation cost averages ₹500/month. Per-customer support time costs you ₹200/month in salaried support-rep time.
On the AiSensy Whitelabel Program (20% partner discount, illustrative):
- AiSensy MRP per customer: ₹2,399/month (Pro)
- Your buy-price after 20% discount: ₹1,919/month
- You collect ₹2,399/month from customer (or close to MRP — many partner contracts cap your retail close to MRP)
- Per-customer margin: ₹2,399 − ₹1,919 − ₹500 Meta − ₹200 support = ₹(220 – 500) ≈ a thin margin, often net-loss if Meta cost runs hot
- 50 customers: roughly break-even to ₹10,000–15,000/month margin if you tighten support and Meta cost
The brutal truth: on AiSensy’s partner pricing, your margin is mostly the partner discount. If Meta-conversation cost or support load goes up, you eat the variance.
On the Lion CRM reseller licence (₹399 each, one-time):
- Your buy-price: ₹399 once, not monthly
- Customer pays you: ₹2,499/month, ₹2,999/month, or ₹3,499/month — whatever you priced
- Per-customer margin: ₹2,499 − ₹500 Meta − ₹200 support = ₹1,799/month
- 50 customers: ~₹90,000/month margin, after Month-1 break-even on licence fees
The ₹1,799-per-month-per-customer figure is your gross margin floor. You can raise prices, you can package add-ons (analytics dashboards, custom report builds, monthly strategy calls), and every rupee of that goes to you because Lion CRM is paid in full at activation.
These are illustrative. Your numbers will move with your retail pricing decision, your support efficiency, and which Meta-conversation category your customers’ message mix lands in. But the shape of the math is right: AiSensy’s program economics tie you to AiSensy’s MRP; Lion CRM’s licence economics tie you to your own retail decision.
See the full whitelabel margin model — Lion CRM reseller pricing →
Whitelabel depth — what your customer actually sees
A real test: a customer logs in for the first time. Where do they see your brand and where do they see the platform’s?
AiSensy Whitelabel (higher partner tier):
- Login page: your brand
- Dashboard chrome (header, navigation): your brand on higher tiers
- Email notifications: usually your brand
- Helpdesk articles, knowledge base links: often AiSensy’s
- WhatsApp template approval messages: come from Meta, but the namespace and verified-business badge route through AiSensy’s WABA in many setups
- Mobile app (if used): AiSensy-branded in most cases
Lion CRM Reseller:
- Login page: your brand
- Dashboard chrome: your brand
- Email notifications: your brand
- Helpdesk articles: your brand (we hand over the content, you put it on your domain)
- WhatsApp template approval: under your own WABA if you ran your own Meta onboarding, or under our umbrella with your name on the certificate
- Chrome extension: your brand or co-brand
I’ve watched a Pune agency demo Lion CRM to a Tier-1 corporate buyer and the buyer never knew there was a vendor underneath. That demo wins deals. With an AiSensy partner-tier whitelabel, the same demo would have had small flickers — a footer link, a template namespace, an admin email — where the buyer might ask who’s behind this? For agencies that sell to enterprises, those flickers cost contracts.
For agencies that sell to SMBs, the difference matters less. SMB buyers don’t audit the WABA namespace. They look at the dashboard, click around, and decide if it works.
BSP cost, Meta markup, and conversation pricing
This is the second math layer most agencies miss. WhatsApp messages cost money on Meta’s side — there’s a per-conversation fee that varies by country, category, and template type. Every WhatsApp CRM has to charge customers for this somehow.
AiSensy’s model. AiSensy bundles a per-conversation markup into their plan tiers, or charges per-conversation usage on top of the SaaS plan. The Meta cost passes through plus an AiSensy margin. As a partner, your customer’s conversation cost has both Meta’s cut and AiSensy’s cut baked in — you don’t see the raw Meta number, and you can’t adjust the markup.
Lion CRM’s model. Meta’s per-conversation cost passes through at cost. We don’t take a per-conversation margin from you. You decide whether to bill your customer at-cost, at-cost + 10%, at-cost + 25%, or to bundle 10,000 conversations into a plan tier. That decision is yours.
The agencies I see making the highest margins are the ones who run their own per-conversation pricing model — they charge ₹0.85 per marketing conversation when Meta charges ₹0.65, and they pocket the ₹0.20 difference across millions of messages. On AiSensy’s partner program you don’t get to play that game. On Lion CRM’s reseller licence you do.
This is also where the Wati whitelabel program comparison becomes relevant — Wati’s setup is similar to AiSensy on this axis. Most full-SaaS partner programs bake the BSP markup in.
Billing flow — who owns the invoice
Who sends the invoice to the end customer matters more than founders expect, because it determines who owns the customer relationship.
AiSensy partner billing (typical):
- Option A: Customer pays AiSensy directly. AiSensy pays you a commission. You don’t issue the invoice.
- Option B: You pay AiSensy at your partner-discounted rate. You issue your own invoice to the customer at retail. This works on higher partner tiers but adds reconciliation overhead.
In Option A, the customer’s bank statement shows AiSensy. The customer’s GST invoice is from AiSensy. If the customer chooses to leave AiSensy and move to another platform, the relationship resets.
Lion CRM reseller billing:
- You issue your own GST invoice to your customer.
- Customer pays you. The money lands in your Razorpay/Stripe/PayPal account.
- We don’t see the invoice and we don’t appear in the customer’s bank statement.
For agencies that want to build sale-able recurring revenue (anyone who has thought about a future exit), owning the invoice means owning the LTV stack. That asset compounds.
Talk to the Lion CRM whitelabel team on WhatsApp — Kuldeep, +91 74260 38448
Lock-in and migration risk
What happens when you want to leave?
Leaving AiSensy’s partner program. Your customers’ data sits in AiSensy’s database. Their message history, templates, automations, and chatbot flows are inside AiSensy’s platform. Migrating means exporting what’s exportable (contact lists, broadcast history) and re-building what isn’t (active chatbots, custom integrations, agent permissions). For 50 customers, that’s a multi-week migration, often paid out of agency margin. Customer churn during migration is real.
Leaving Lion CRM as a reseller. You own the workspace. You have admin access to your customers’ data. You can take a database dump or use the API to mass-export. Your WABA — if it’s under your Meta business — stays with you. Migration is still work, but it’s a database-and-domain operation, not a re-onboarding operation. We hand you the backup and the migration path; we don’t gate it.
This is why I tell agency founders: read the exit clause first, not the onboarding clause. AiSensy’s partner contract is reasonable, but the operational reality of leaving is heavy. Lion CRM’s licence is structured so the operational reality of leaving is also reasonable — because we don’t think a reseller licence should be a one-way door.
Onboarding speed: AiSensy partner vs Lion CRM reseller
How fast can you take a brand-new agency from sign-up to first paying customer?
AiSensy partner timeline:
- Day 1–3: Partner application review and approval
- Day 4–7: Partner-tier setup, custom-branded dashboard provisioned
- Day 8–14: First customer onboarding via AiSensy’s standard flow
- Day 15–30: BSP verification (if customer needs their own WABA), template approvals
Lion CRM reseller timeline:
- Day 1: Pay ₹399 licence fee, get reseller workspace at
admin.lioncrm.com(or your domain) - Day 2–3: Configure your branding (logo, colours, email-from, domain)
- Day 4–7: Onboard first customer — provision their workspace under your reseller, set up their WABA
- Day 8–14: First customer’s template approvals via your own WABA
I’ve watched a Jaipur agency go from licence purchase to first paying customer in nine days flat on Lion CRM. AiSensy’s official ramp is usually two to three weeks because the partner approval gate adds days at the front.
That’s a tactical difference. For agencies in a hurry, the speed matters. For agencies that want to take time to brand carefully, the speed difference doesn’t change much.
Story: Ahmedabad real-estate agency (joined AiSensy, switched)
A Maninagar-based real-estate marketing agency joined the AiSensy Whitelabel Program in late 2025. They onboarded 22 builders in the first quarter. Their problem showed up in Q2.
The agency was charging each builder ₹3,500/month for the WhatsApp CRM piece. AiSensy’s Pro tier (their buy-price after a 22% partner discount) came to roughly ₹1,871/month per account. Meta-conversation cost ran ₹600–₹900/month per builder, depending on broadcast volume. Net margin per builder: ₹3,500 − ₹1,871 − ₹750 = ₹879/month, sometimes less when broadcasts spiked.
Then AiSensy raised the Pro tier MRP by ~7%. The agency’s partner-discounted buy-price went up. The agency could not raise the ₹3,500/month they charged builders (the builders had signed annual contracts at that rate). Margin compressed to ~₹600/month per builder, and on some it was negative.
They swapped to Lion CRM in March. Per-builder margin went to ₹3,500 − ₹399 (one-time licence) − ₹750 Meta = ₹2,750+ per builder, recurring. The licence break-even hit in month two. They didn’t raise prices on the builders — same contracts. They just kept more of every rupee.
The lesson: when a vendor’s pricing changes, partner-discount margins flex against you. Licence-fee margins don’t.
Story: Pune digital agency (Lion CRM from Day 1)
A Baner-based digital agency we onboarded last year went straight to Lion CRM. They run 17 D2C-brand customers — fashion, accessories, supplements. Their retail pricing is high: ₹4,999/month per brand, because they bundle WhatsApp CRM with monthly campaign-strategy calls.
They picked Lion CRM because they wanted to look like a software company, not a reseller. The reasoning was straightforward: their D2C buyers are well-funded brands who research vendors. A flicker of another company’s brand in the WABA template namespace would have started a different sales conversation.
Per-customer margin: roughly ₹4,200/month after Meta cost and strategy-call labour. On 17 customers that’s ₹71,400/month margin, and the founder told me he’s tripled the retail price he can charge by virtue of looking like a product.
He paid ₹399 × 17 = ₹6,783 in total licence fees ever. That’s his entire vendor outlay. Month-1 P&L paid that back roughly four times over.
Story: Gurgaon fintech consultancy (ran both)
This is the most useful story because the same team ran both programs side by side for six months.
A Cyber Hub fintech consultancy onboarded 11 NBFC customers — small-ticket lenders who needed loan-collection WhatsApp flows. They started with AiSensy’s partner program because the platform’s compliance posture (template-approval workflow, audit logs) was already in place and the NBFCs wanted that turnkey trail.
Six months in, they realised the customer-acquisition arm was profitable (3 new NBFCs per month) but the unit economics on each customer were poor. AiSensy’s per-conversation rate plus the partner discount left them with ~₹800/month net per NBFC. Across 11 customers that was ~₹8,800/month — not enough to justify the founder’s time.
They kept their existing 11 NBFCs on AiSensy for the year (contracts ran out at different times). For new customers, they bought a Lion CRM reseller licence and onboarded NBFC #12 onward on Lion CRM. Same retail pricing. Margin per new customer: ~₹2,400/month, 3× the AiSensy number. They added 9 more NBFCs across the next year. Today, AiSensy is their legacy book and Lion CRM is their growth book.
If you’re considering both, this is the honest answer: AiSensy’s compliance scaffolding is easy to plug into for regulated verticals — it does some heavy lifting. Lion CRM is what you graduate to when the margin matters more than the scaffolding.
Story: Jaipur D2C-skincare reseller (Lion CRM swap)
A Pink-City reseller had been on an AiSensy partner tier with 8 small skincare D2C brands. The reseller’s monthly take-home from the WhatsApp piece was ~₹14,000 — under his target. He told me he was considering quitting the WhatsApp side of his business.
We did the math together at his Vidhyadhar Nagar office in February. On Lion CRM, with the same 8 brands at the same retail price of ₹1,999/month, his monthly take-home would be ~₹11,800/month right out the gate (lower than AiSensy in month one because of the ₹399 × 8 = ₹3,192 licence outlay), but ~₹13,000+/month from month two onward and growing as he added brands.
The kicker was the upside cap. On AiSensy, even if he doubled brand count to 16, his take-home would roughly double to ~₹28,000/month. On Lion CRM, at 16 brands, his take-home would land closer to ₹30,000/month and he could raise retail to ₹2,499/month for new brands without affecting his cost base. So upside was higher and uncapped by a vendor MRP.
He swapped in March. By May he was at 12 brands and ₹24,800/month net. He told me the swap unlocked the upside he couldn’t see on the partner-program model.
Which program wins on which metric
| Metric | Winner | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Speed to first cheque | AiSensy | Near-zero entry cost, partner discount kicks in Day 1 |
| Time-to-first-customer | Lion CRM | ₹399 licence is fast to buy; AiSensy partner approval adds days |
| Whitelabel depth | Lion CRM | Full brand surface, your WABA, your invoicing |
| Compliance scaffolding | AiSensy | Mature template-approval workflow, audit trail out of the box |
| Per-customer margin at scale | Lion CRM | Licence is one-time; partner discount is recurring against MRP |
| Pricing flexibility | Lion CRM | You set retail; AiSensy partners are often capped near MRP |
| Conversation-cost margin | Lion CRM | Meta cost passes through at cost; AiSensy bakes a markup in |
| Lock-in / migration | Lion CRM | You own the data and the customer relationship |
| Roadmap dependency | AiSensy hits both ways | Faster feature delivery, but you don’t control direction |
| Brand perception (enterprise buyers) | Lion CRM | No vendor flickers on dashboards or namespaces |
| Cash-flow predictability | AiSensy | Recurring partner commission is steady |
| Total Year-1 P&L on 30 customers | Lion CRM | ~₹6 lakh higher in our worked example (above) |
There’s no single winner. That table is honest. It says: pick AiSensy if speed and cash-flow predictability matter more than ceiling. Pick Lion CRM if you’re building a brand that’s going to outlast your current customer cohort.
Claim your whitelabel reseller workspace at admin.lioncrm.com →
Decision tree — pick AiSensy Whitelabel, Lion CRM, or both
Walk this top-to-bottom. First clear answer is your answer.
- Do you need to start signing customers this week with zero cash outlay? → AiSensy.
- Do you sell into enterprise customers who will ask who runs the platform? → Lion CRM.
- Do you want to set your own per-conversation pricing and pocket the markup? → Lion CRM.
- Do you need a turnkey audit-trail / compliance workflow for regulated verticals (NBFC, healthcare)? → AiSensy, or Lion CRM with your own compliance overlay.
- Do you want the customer’s bank statement to say your brand, not the platform’s? → Lion CRM.
- Are you planning to sell or merge the agency in 3–5 years? → Lion CRM (LTV stack is yours).
- Are you OK if vendor price changes flow through to your buy-price? → AiSensy is fine; otherwise Lion CRM.
- Do you have a marketing-budget runway of at least ₹50,000 for the first month? → Lion CRM is well within budget. If your runway is <₹5,000 for the first month, start with AiSensy.
The fintech-consultancy story above ran both — that’s a valid answer too. Use AiSensy as a fast on-ramp for the first cohort while you set up Lion CRM properly. Switch growth-customers to Lion CRM once the licence economics dominate.
Related guides
- Lion CRM vs AiSensy vs Wati: Whitelabel Pricing 2026
- Wati Whitelabel Program Cost vs Lion CRM
- Whitelabel WhatsApp CRM Pricing Models for Agencies (2026)
- How to Price a Whitelabel WhatsApp CRM: Cost-Plus vs Value-Based
- Whitelabel WhatsApp CRM Margins: What Resellers Actually Make
- Whitelabel WhatsApp CRM SLA Tiers for Resellers
- WhatsApp CRM Resources — Pillar Guide
FAQ
Does AiSensy have a whitelabel program?
Yes. AiSensy runs a Whitelabel / Partner Program where approved partners resell AiSensy plans at a percentage discount off MRP, and on higher partner tiers get a custom-branded dashboard and domain. Meta-side artifacts like template namespaces typically still route through AiSensy’s WABA in most setups.
How much does AiSensy Whitelabel cost to join?
Public enrolment is near-zero, but every managed account sits on one of AiSensy’s monthly SaaS plans (₹999/month Basic, ₹2,399/month Pro, or higher). Your margin is the partner discount off that monthly fee, not a fixed enrolment cost. Check AiSensy’s current partner page for exact tier rules.
What’s the difference between AiSensy’s whitelabel and Lion CRM’s reseller licence?
AiSensy’s whitelabel is a partner discount model — you resell their SaaS at a percentage off MRP, with branding on top. Lion CRM is a licence model — you pay ₹399 (~$5) once per workspace and the customer relationship, retail pricing, and invoicing are yours. AiSensy = thinner recurring margin, faster ramp. Lion CRM = higher per-customer margin, one-time cost.
Can I migrate customers from AiSensy to Lion CRM?
Yes. Contact lists and broadcast history export from AiSensy via their CSV / API tools. Chatbot flows and automations have to be rebuilt on Lion CRM. The WABA can move if it’s your Meta business asset. The Lion CRM whitelabel onboarding team has run migrations like this — typical timeline is 2–4 weeks for a 10-customer book.
Does Lion CRM mark up Meta’s per-conversation cost?
No. Meta’s per-conversation cost passes through to you at cost. You decide whether to bill your end-customer at-cost, at-cost + a markup, or to bundle conversations into a tier. The margin between Meta-cost and what you charge your customer is yours.
Which is better for a small agency in India with under ₹10,000/month marketing budget?
For an India-based agency with under ₹10,000/month marketing budget, the Lion CRM reseller licence is usually the better economic call — the ₹399 one-time fee fits inside that budget and the margin per customer is higher. AiSensy is better only if you specifically need the compliance / audit trail scaffolding for a regulated vertical from Day 1.
Where can I buy the Lion CRM reseller licence?
Pay ₹399 (~$5) via PayPal at the Lion CRM pricing page, or for India-based payments via direct INR transfer. Once paid, your workspace at admin.lioncrm.com activates within an hour. For volume reseller deals (10+ workspaces), message Kuldeep on WhatsApp at +91 74260 38448 for a bundled rate.