Let's add a few:
Rich folks investing in fairly safe, modest return situations and then napping for 20 years or 40 years to come out with a nice nest egg (a bit of a risk, but maybe not so much). Or speculating into precious metals or real estate and 'timing out' to let value accumulate.
Shipping key operatives (various corps and governments) around so they just go from op to op with minimal downtime and keep sharp. Also means they have longer total time in service if you don't need constant op tempo.
'Break glass in case of emergency' on planets - first responders, replacement political and military leaders, whomever you might need if things go south suddenly or a serious incident happens to threaten a colonies viability. Frozen watch isn't just for Navy ships.
Now, this next one would assume that if we can store a person without damage, we can do the same with less complex organics: Wine and spirits being kept in a wine cellar (after the normal aging) - the product won't go off and you'd be able to enjoy the wines your grandfather did.... and you could charge big money in restaurants that could pull out old vintages.
Seed banks could use cryo to keep their seed stock viable for generations. Virus banks (so as to have a virus around if one needs it to build new vaccines or to weaponize if one is a government of bad intent) as well.
The simple one: Time capsuling with high fidelity. Random crap you leave for descendants or just whoever finds the thing.
Storing fauna from other planets (such as LV-426). Not always a good idea if they wake up.
Transfer of any perishable substances like meds or other biologics that need shipped to someplace. In fact, there may be a whole biological suspension containers in the shipping industry - have their own battery (for the expected durations) - sort of a super freezer.
Storing Pfizer vaccines.
That's all I got....