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By Jo Best
Posted on ZDNet News: Mar 23, 2004 2:48:00 PM

Good news for tech buyers--it looks like pressure from consumers is having an effect on vendors and the way in which they price their software.

According to the latest report from analyst house IDC, The Future of Software Licensing, it's all the licensing world is changing, with consumers pushing sellers to prove how much their software is really worth to businesses.

Of the license buyers surveyed, 70 per cent say that they strongly believe it's up to the vendors to put more emphasis on demonstrating the business value of software--and 72 per cent of vendors agreed. The end result, IDC believes, is that more than half of vendors will be making changes to their pricing models in the next year.

One of the major changes that buyers can expect to see is a change from 'up front' payments to a subscription model, where users pay over time rather than all in one go. It's a model that's more popular with vendors than spenders - 43 per cent of sellers and 23 per cent of buyers thought that most software would be sold as subscription by 2010.

It seems that the buyers have little faith in tech sellers making the licensing environment better for them, though--70 per cent thought that managing their licensing would get more not less complex in the future. And with those customers handling an average of more than 40 software contracts, it's a headache that most customers could do without.

It's just such discontent and drive for simplicity that will bring major changes in the licensing environment, according to Amy Mizoras Konary, IDC's program manager for software pricing, licensing and delivery.

"Software vendors generally agree that traditional licensing models are no longer suitable in today's environment. The software market will move toward licensing models and practices that increase the predictability of vendor revenues, make it easier for customers to manage and comply with software-license contracts and clearly establish the business value of software," she said in a statement.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 21 Talkback(s)
It's Not Even Obsolescence . . .
but an expiry date. In addition to renewing your insurance policy every year, you would likely need to renew your word processing policy, and your spreadsheet policy, and your database policy . . . while the software was sitting on your hard drive.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: PCcritic Posted on: 03/24/04 You are currently: Logged In as: a Guest  | Login | Terms of Use
Nothing is free  Hamburger Engineer | 03/23/04
Or, you could do like Microsoft did with SoftImage 3D  Yen_z | 03/23/04
Nothing is free - Granted  bchesmer | 03/23/04
Read the article  IT_User | 03/23/04
bitty has a new alias  zd-spam | 03/23/04
Ok...  BitTwiddler | 03/23/04
Notice where they're shifting the problem  Chad_z | 03/23/04
Paying over time or doing time?  bjbrock | 03/23/04
Do you pay for food?  Hamburger Engineer | 03/23/04
stealing ???  bchesmer | 03/23/04
Get real!  TechDiva_z | 03/23/04
lol - maybe he wants a subscription to Mcdonalds(NT)  JWatson77 | 03/23/04
some even buy water at $1 a bottle  JWatson77 | 03/23/04
bitty takes another cheap shot  zd-spam | 03/23/04
Incredibly dim aticle  KeithRisler | 03/23/04
Thank You PolarUpgrade ...  markdoiron | 03/23/04
no worries  JosePinchero | 03/23/04
Why vendors want to go to subscriptions  vferrara | 03/23/04
It's Detroit revisited  IT_User | 03/23/04
It's Not Even Obsolescence . . .  PCcritic | 03/24/04
subscriptions mean  JWatson77 | 03/23/04

What do you think?

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