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by cush
724 days ago
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> I don’t want a quote. I want pay-per-usage. That's good for you. Your very specific example is one that seems to worked out for you in your very specific case. My point is that sometimes usage isn't so easily measurable and is multi-variate. You might not be able to calculate the cost with simple multiplication, especially when there's many SKUs. Say you offer 100x services, but the customer only needs 10 of them. Are they going to look through the list of your 100 offerings, mapping their requirements to what you offer and hoping the math works out? Probably not. It's way easier to talk to an expert at the company and understand if the product is a good fit and get a proper quote. A good sales meeting saves both sides so much time and money. > And giving a customer a quote so they don’t have to understand the product? That just sounds like a bad idea all around… You've fallen into the classic HN trap of assuming that everyone that uses software is also a software developer. Sometimes, you're selling to the HR rep or a CxO. They don't have to understand the implementation details of the product to understand whether it meets their needs and if it is a good investment. If you have to go deep into API calls while explaining the price, you're going to lose the sale. |
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I could list several big SaaS names where you always seem to end up in the same place: SSO is bundled with a bunch of other stuff you don’t need; at renewal time user counts always ratchet up, regardless of actual active users; increases in unit price of things you do need are “compensated” with “discounts” on things you don’t need or calculated off a nonexistent price that was never an option in the first place.
It has nothing to do with selling me what I need. If I ask if it can do what I need, frankly much of the time the answer is a lie, or close to it. Or the answer is “we don’t know, but sign the contract and we’re sure Professional Services can take care of it for you”.
Yes, if you actually want to use the APIs it’s even more of a disaster, but that’s not what I’m talking about.