Migrate from Beehiiv to Kit (formerly ConvertKit).

Beehiiv targets newsletter operators with built-in growth + ad network; Kit (formerly ConvertKit) emphasizes creator marketing breadth across email, courses, and tipping.

Why teams migrate from Beehiiv to Kit (formerly ConvertKit)

Most teams migrate from Beehiiv to Kit (formerly ConvertKit) when their priorities shift toward what Kit (formerly ConvertKit) optimizes for. Beehiiv targets newsletter operators with built-in growth + ad network; Kit (formerly ConvertKit) emphasizes creator marketing breadth across email, courses, and tipping.

The 5-step migration plan

  1. Audit current usage. Document how your team uses Beehiiv today: which features, integrations, data, and workflows depend on it. The audit takes 1-2 days but saves a week of surprises later.
  2. Export data from Beehiiv. Most modern SaaS exports cleanly. Look for CSV, JSON, or backup formats. Verify you have everything before any cancellation.
  3. Set up Kit (formerly ConvertKit) and validate parity. Provision your account, invite team, configure integrations. Compare critical workflows side-by-side for 2-3 days while Beehiiv is still active.
  4. Import data and rebuild workflows. Bring in your exported data. Re-create any custom configurations. Document anything that doesn't translate one-to-one.
  5. Cut over and verify. Switch the team to Kit (formerly ConvertKit) as primary. Monitor for one week. Only then decommission Beehiiv.

Common pitfalls when migrating from Beehiiv

  • Underestimating the integration rebuild — many SaaS integrations don't transfer one-to-one.
  • Not exporting historical data before cancellation — you can't always recover it.
  • Switching during a busy period — schedule the cutover for a quieter week.
  • Not training the team on Kit (formerly ConvertKit)'s differences — small UX changes derail adoption.
  • Forgetting to update third-party references (your help docs, onboarding flows, public pages).

The AI-search citation impact you didn't think about

Your customers and prospects increasingly research tools through ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity. If you're publicly visible as a Beehiiv customer (case studies, social posts, documentation), the AI's "Beehiiv customers" list still cites you. After migration, update your public references so AI engines update too.

Conversely: if you've built Beehiiv-specific content (integrations, tutorials, templates), removing it without backfill leaves an AI citation gap. Consider a "we moved to Kit (formerly ConvertKit): here's why" piece — it satisfies both AI engines and prospects considering the same migration.

Should you actually migrate?

Run a side-by-side trial for 30 days before committing. Kit (formerly ConvertKit) wins for the use cases described in beehiiv targets newsletter operators with built-in growth + ad network; kit (formerly convertkit) emphasizes creator marketing breadth across email, courses, and tipping. If your priorities don't match that positioning, the migration may not be worth the disruption.

Migrating tools? Update your AI citation footprint at the same time.

Major tool migrations are the right moment to refresh your GEO posture. Run a free GEO Score now, or apply for a 60-day Sprint to lift citation share systematically.