Pricing a Software Product
prostoalex writes "Eric Sink from SourceGear shares his experience on software pricing. Whether you're developing open-source or proprietary software, the money has to come into the business in some form, and the article suggests several strategies as well as the pitfalls for managing software pricing. Sink claims it's tough to compete on price, dangerous to run seasonal promotions and almost impossible to avoid criticism on being over-priced."
Sometimes I place more value on the service I get that on the product itself (software or not). A lot of software is moving to a hosted environment, and a lot of companies are starting to like the idea. Now you can use your service from your mobile device as well as at the office. So, instead of charging for the software, charge for the hosting. Develop and open source the product, then charge people to use the service in your hosted environment.
being a subscriber might give the complaint more weight, as well.
Well, my other account is a subscriber. But considering that when I posted a complaint about it both the IP's I post from (home and work) were banned from posting anything and my karma quickly going from the good/excellent threshold to terrible, I'd say that it doesn't carry any extra weight at all. I had been a constant subscriber since subscription had become available too.
Thank goodness for proxies, I guess.
I've just signed legislation that'll outlaw Russia forever. We'll begin bombing in five minutes.