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SaaS Pricing Manifesto

38 points| priyadarshy | 4 years ago |help.sunsama.com

8 comments

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Flashtoo|4 years ago

If you do content marketing, make it easy to convert. It's not possible to get to your product landing page or homepage from this post - I can't escape help.sunsama.com even though I was eager to know what your product is.

xtracto|4 years ago

I just clicked the hamburger menu and then the logo to go to their homepage.

qwertyuiop12|4 years ago

No. I don’t want a world with subscriptions for all.

Sure, it’s the best for the product, but it is stupid pay a sub for something like a calendar. Think if you pay for system tools like file manager, custom configurations…

sokoloff|4 years ago

I also tend to dislike subscriptions, but some things are more natural as subscriptions than one-time purchases.

My cell phone service feels entirely sensible as a subscription. In other cases, either could be sensible and which is “better” is subjective. I used to spend a lot more buying CDs than I spend now on music services and my casual music experience is way better now and I wouldn’t want to go back.

For a productivity tool, I’m okay with recurring billing and then it’s just a matter of the price. I’d rather pay $100 once than $20/mo, which is a little content-free as it’s close to saying “I can’t find a bond paying 791% annual interest”.

beingflo|4 years ago

I understand where you're coming from, but this seems to be a web app with sync across team members etc. So there is recurring infrastracture cost to the provider, of course they charge a subscription. As the article point out, they want to provide sustainable pricing.

cercatrova|4 years ago

> Priced for sustainability, not for future salvation

> We've seen too many productivity products fail because they fail to make money even though they grew their free user base fast. We think building a business that grows quickly, in hopes of future salvation from venture capitalist or an acquisition creates bad incentives for us and a sub-par product for our customers.

Ironic because they're funded by YC so at some point they'll have to IPO or get acquired. Or, well, they don't have to but investors will expect an exit.