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by boogies
1491 days ago
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> Running it on the desktop is far inferior, because a great advantage of QBO is the ability for several people, distributed worldwide, to work on the same account at the same time. Is there any reason the desktop version couldn’t do that if Intuit wanted it to?
(I imagine they just artificially limit it to encourage customers to ditch indefinite license purchases in favor of monthly SaaSS subscriptions, ie. it has little to do with technical advantages of the web and much to do with the profit advantages of software that stays on Intuit’s servers.) |
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I think there is also some circular logic when looking at the pricing models for SaaS products. Customers use them because they are the best, but they are very likely the best because they have constant revenue from subscriptions.
So maybe you paid $100 for photoshop and used it for 3 years but now you pay $10/month for photoshop which is more expensive but that’s all more money going in to the product. And with a business tool, the better it is, the more money users make using it. So it’s worth paying more for a better product.