When a client cancels their GrowthManager subscription, the hosted pages and the managed infrastructure supporting them, including SSL, AI crawler directives, and automated weekly updates, are no longer maintained or served by GrowthManager. Pages hosted on GrowthManager's infrastructure go offline because the hosting is part of the managed service rather than a standalone product you own independently. If you have pages on a custom domain you control, the domain itself remains yours, but the page content and hosting environment are tied to the GrowthManager service. Lead data captured through the lead management dashboard should be exported before cancellation to ensure continuity in your pipeline. Businesses considering cancellation should weigh the impact on existing AI citations, since pages that go offline will eventually drop from the citation pools that platforms like Perplexity and Google AI Overviews maintain.
Businesses evaluating any managed service want to understand what they own and what disappears if they decide to stop. For AI-optimized pages hosted on custom domains or branded subdomains, the stakes include active citations in ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity that may be driving inbound traffic and leads.
Understanding the offboarding situation before you sign on is a reasonable part of due diligence, especially when those pages are embedded in your AI search visibility strategy.
