Built for downloadable bundles
Use Zwely for ZIP files, sample packs, drum kits, MIDI, presets, stems, sound libraries, beats, loops, and bonus files.
Zwely is built for music producers and creators who need a fast checkout, private file delivery, launch discounts, and clean order records for every digital audio download.
Use Zwely for ZIP files, sample packs, drum kits, MIDI, presets, stems, sound libraries, beats, loops, and bonus files.
Create launch codes, customer-specific offers, and limited-use discounts without changing the checkout button.
Order and product analytics help you see which packs sell, which domains send traffic, and how discounts affect revenue.
Selling sample packs, preset packs, stems, drum kits, loops, MIDI files, and sound libraries is a little different from selling a normal download. The files are often large, launches are time-sensitive, and buyers expect the link to arrive immediately after checkout.
Zwely gives producers, sound designers, and creators a focused way to sell audio packs from their own website with embedded checkout, secure file delivery, discounts, order records, and customer exports.
People looking for sample packs or presets usually arrive with intent. They heard a demo, watched a production video, opened a launch email, or clicked from a social post. At that moment, the checkout should feel fast, polished, and directly connected to the pack they want.
A generic store page can work, but it often adds friction. The buyer has to leave the landing page, find the product again, create an account, or wonder whether the ZIP file will show up. For audio packs, a smooth embedded checkout can keep the momentum from the demo to the purchase.
Zwely is useful when you want the product page to stay in your control. You can write the story behind the pack, show audio demos, list included formats, and place the checkout button right where the buyer is ready.
Audio products are commonly delivered as ZIP files because buyers need folders, samples, presets, artwork, or documentation together. That makes delivery clarity important. The customer should know what they bought, where the download button is, and whether the link has an expiration or download limit.
Zwely's delivery email settings help you explain that clearly. You can set download expiration text and a maximum download count so the email matches your policy. If you want a generous support-friendly setup, use more downloads. If you want a tighter release flow, keep the limit lower.
For buyers, the experience stays simple: checkout, email, download. For you, the order gives support context if someone loses the email, hits a limit, or asks which pack they purchased.
Audio pack launches often depend on urgency. You might run an early-bird code for newsletter subscribers, a creator code for an affiliate-style promo, a limited offer for the first week, or a discount for people who bought a previous pack.
Zwely's discount codes are meant for this kind of workflow. You can create codes and connect them to the product without rebuilding the checkout experience. That means the same embedded button can support full-price sales, launch promos, and targeted campaigns.
This is especially useful during a launch. The pack, demos, and checkout can stay stable while your discount strategy changes behind the scenes as you learn what buyers respond to.
A buyer who purchases a drum kit today might want a preset pack next month. A customer who downloads a free starter kit might become a paid buyer later. That's why customer records matter for audio sellers; the catalog can grow over time, and your best buyers are often repeat buyers.
Zwely creates customer records from checkouts and claims. You can see which products someone bought and export customers when you need to analyze launch performance or move data into another system you own.
This is not about turning every music product into a complicated CRM. It's about not losing the basic relationship between the buyer, the pack, and the order.
The checkout is only one piece of the sale. A strong sample pack page usually includes audio demos, a clear list of included files, compatibility notes, licensing terms, and a direct explanation of who the pack is for. The checkout button should appear after the buyer understands the value, not hidden in a distant store.
Zwely gives you the commerce layer so you can spend more energy on the page itself. You can use your own design, embed your own media, write your own copy, and let the button handle payment and delivery.
That combination is useful for buyers because they can hear the product, understand the formats and licensing, and buy while the pack is still fresh in their mind.
Start with one product and one clean download. Name it clearly, upload the ZIP, set the price, customize the delivery email, connect Stripe, and place the checkout button on the page that already has the demo. Then test the checkout experience before sending launch traffic.
After launch, review orders, discounts, product analytics, and customer records. If buyers ask the same support question repeatedly, update the product page or delivery email. If a discount drives real sales, keep it. If visitors are listening but not buying, make the demo, included files, or usage terms clearer.
A good digital delivery system should make the launch feel more controlled, not more complicated. That's the role Zwely plays for audio packs.
Sample pack buyers often care about what they are allowed to do with the sounds. Can they use the loops in commercial beats? Can they redistribute presets? Are stems royalty-free? Is attribution required? These questions can affect conversion because producers do not want licensing surprises after checkout.
Explain usage rights in plain language, and use the delivery email to point buyers back to the product or terms if needed. Zwely handles the checkout and delivery records while you give serious buyers the clarity they need before they use the sounds.
Audio products are emotional. Buyers want to hear the drums, presets, textures, loops, or stems before they buy. Include demos, example tracks, or a short walkthrough that makes the pack feel real.
Zwely lets that content stay on your own page. You can use your preferred audio player, video embed, waveform preview, or launch story, then place the checkout button next to the moment where the buyer is convinced.
The ZIP file should be as thoughtful as the checkout. Clear folders, readable filenames, included documentation, and obvious preset installation notes reduce buyer frustration. A great pack can still feel messy if the downloaded folder is confusing.
Before uploading the final file to Zwely, open it like a buyer would. Check the folder names, file formats, and instructions. Then use the delivery email and product page to set expectations about what is inside.
Many audio products launch through collaborations: a producer partnership, a sound designer feature, a private list, or a limited drop. In those cases, you may not need a large public store. You need a focused page and a checkout that can handle the burst of attention.
Zwely fits that kind of campaign because the checkout button can live on the collaboration page, while discount codes and product analytics help you understand how the launch performed.
Audio buyers may lose a download email, ask about compatibility, hit a download limit, or need help installing presets. The faster you can connect their email address to the order and product, the faster you can help.
Zwely keeps that support path practical. You can look up the order, confirm the product, review the customer record, and understand whether the delivery workflow did what it should.
Yes. Zwely is designed for digital downloads such as ZIP files, sample packs, presets, stems, and bundled audio assets.
Yes. You can create discount codes and track which orders used them.
Yes. Free products are useful for starter kits, sample previews, and email capture.
Yes. After checkout, Zwely sends the delivery email according to your email settings.
Start with one product, one button, and one clean delivery email. You can add more polish when the product is already moving.